joker5893 Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 Does anyone know of a program that will alert you real time that someone is getting an IP address of your router. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VaKo Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 You might be able to do something with SNMP. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
joker5893 Posted October 25, 2007 Author Share Posted October 25, 2007 I should prolly rephrase my question seeing how it made no sense this morning cuz i wasn't up yet. So i have this guy that keeps connecting to my wireless and i want to be able to see when he connects like in real time. I know i should just secure my wireless but i'm too lazy right now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VaKo Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 Sercure your fucking wireless then? If you want to get a real time pop-up of him connecting you'll need to put a lot more effort into it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
joker5893 Posted October 25, 2007 Author Share Posted October 25, 2007 Haha, i know i'm going to secure it soon, i just wanted to play with his computer Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
moonlit Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 Haha, i know i'm going to secure it soon, i just wanted to play with his computer You don't get to have fun before you do the work. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sparda Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 You could monitor for DHCP requests. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SomeoneE1se Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 there's a program for XP that does this... good luck on finding it I can't anymore I do remember it came bundled with anther program called 'air horn' or something like that ... you got really lucky airSnare Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
K1u Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 ZoneAlarm firewall, will tell you about any incoming and outgoing connections. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hsncorrosion Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 I aggree with the others, You need to just secure it, and it would take more time for have a real time system than to just protect it. I'm considered lazy as all hell here or (noobish) and even I secured my wifi and without asking, its easy and fast Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
digip Posted October 26, 2007 Share Posted October 26, 2007 ZoneAlarm firewall, will tell you about any incoming and outgoing connections. Not if the requests are made to the router and not his pc. ZoneAlarm only shows logs forwarded from the router that will pertain to his IP address. As far as I know, you would have to be logged onto the router and check DHCP connections under the router status panel. Depending on what router you have these will be in differnt places, but you could write a little html to logon to the router and refresh the stats page every so many seconds and you could then see when he logs on. Or, if you ave a browser like Opera, leave that DHCP Status page open and use the auto refresh page function built into the browser. It will update it based on the time you tell it to check. Then just check it to see when someone else logs on. This is an example of my routers stat page and it can be set to refresh at the intervals set by Opera. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joerg Posted October 26, 2007 Share Posted October 26, 2007 And use at least WPA and not WEP Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SomeoneE1se Posted October 26, 2007 Share Posted October 26, 2007 ZoneAlarm firewall, will tell you about any incoming and outgoing connections. Not if the requests are made to the router and not his pc. ZoneAlarm only shows logs forwarded from the router that will pertain to his IP address. As far as I know, you would have to be logged onto the router and check DHCP connections under the router status panel. Depending on what router you have these will be in differnt places, but you could write a little html to logon to the router and refresh the stats page every so many seconds and you could then see when he logs on. Or, if you ave a browser like Opera, leave that DHCP Status page open and use the auto refresh page function built into the browser. It will update it based on the time you tell it to check. Then just check it to see when someone else logs on. This is an example of my routers stat page and it can be set to refresh at the intervals set by Opera. this right here is why to sniff for the local IP and then set your own IP so you wont show up in the dhcp table Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
metatron Posted October 26, 2007 Share Posted October 26, 2007 Does anyone know of a program that will alert you real time that someone is getting an IP address of your router. If your on Windows I remember that a app called Look@LAN can be set to continuously scan your network, every time something new appears a alarm goes off, I think it can also email you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
digip Posted October 26, 2007 Share Posted October 26, 2007 this right here is why to sniff for the local IP and then set your own IP so you wont show up in the dhcp table I am on a wired ethernet connection, not wireless. If you know a way to hide from a direct connection to the router while still able to have internet access, I would be glad to know. ;) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
puredistortion Posted October 29, 2007 Share Posted October 29, 2007 Just use nmap and then have it scan for new IP's on the LAN. nmap -sP <IP range> this will give you a list of the IP' s in the range and there MAC address. So you could take it a step further and run namp in a script parse the outpu and report via email or something any macs that should not be on the LAN. Another thing you could do is parse your DHCP log. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SmoothCriminal Posted October 29, 2007 Share Posted October 29, 2007 this right here is why to sniff for the local IP and then set your own IP so you wont show up in the dhcp tablethis right here is why to sniff for the local IP and then set your own IP so you wont show up in the dhcp table I have Static DHCP set up so they would have to sniff my MAC address to, and change their comp. name. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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