Cisco Access Points start out with 0040.96 ************************************************************ Spencer Wood, Network Manager Ohio Department Of Transportation 1320 Arthur E. Adams Drive Columbus, Ohio 43221 E-Mail: Spencer.Wood@dot.state.oh.us Phone: 614.387.0710/Fax: 815.361.0714/Pager: 866.591.9954 ************************************************************* "Steven M. Bellovin" <smb@research.att.com> Sent by: owner-nanog@merit.edu 11/09/2001 11:29 AM To: Andrew Brown <atatat@atatdot.net> cc: Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu, Art Houle <houle@zeppo.acns.fsu.edu>, nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: wireless traffic In message <20011109104400.A6249@noc.untraceable.net>, Andrew Brown writes:
Does anybody know where I can locate a list of MAC address prefixes
that
belong specifically to wireless NIC cards? I am looking for a method of discovering what devices on my network are wireless devices.
Power down the wireless hub and see who calls? ;)
Seriously though - your wireless hub/transmitter may have a queryable arp table that will tell you what's not using the wire....
i've used/seen cards with these prefixes:
00:e0:29 - smc 00:02:2d - orinoco/wavelan cards (lucent/agere)
I'm sending this via a Lucent card with prefix 0:60:1d. A glance at my ARP table for a wireless-only segment shows 0:4:dd, 0:3:6b, 8:0:20, 0:0:c, 0:c0:b7, 0:d0:b7, 8:0:6a, and more. --Steve Bellovin, http://www.research.att.com/~smb Full text of "Firewalls" book now at http://www.wilyhacker.com