Find DNS HostName from IP Address in LAN
Hey all. I have written a program that s开发者_JAVA百科equentially scans certain parts of a LAN for computers (code will be provided). However, when I run this code, it only returns the DNS HostName of the computer it is running on. I looked into using WMI, but I cannot, as I will not always have priveleges to the computers being found. Is there any other way to find a local computers HostName?
using System;
using System.Net;
using System.Net.NetworkInformation;
using System.Text;
namespace CheckLocalNetwork
{
class PingCheck
{
public static string fullip;
public void CheckSequentialIP()
{
IPHostEntry IpEntry = Dns.GetHostEntry(fullip);
Ping pingSender = new Ping();
PingOptions options = new PingOptions();
options.DontFragment = true;
string data = "a";
byte[] buffer = Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes(data);
int timeout = 120;
PingReply reply = pingSender.Send(fullip, timeout, buffer, options);
if (reply.Status == IPStatus.Success)
{
Console.WriteLine("Address: {0}", reply.Address.ToString());
Console.WriteLine("Host Name: {0}", IpEntry.HostName);
Console.WriteLine("RoundTrip time: {0}", reply.RoundtripTime);
Console.WriteLine("Time to live: {0}", reply.Options.Ttl);
Console.WriteLine("Don't fragment: {0}", reply.Options.DontFragment);
Console.WriteLine("Buffer size: {0}", reply.Buffer.Length);
Console.WriteLine("");
}
}
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Console.WriteLine("Press enter to search for ip adresses that begin with 192.168.1");
Console.ReadLine();
for (int endofip = 1; endofip < 101; endofip++)
{
fullip = "192.168.1." + Convert.ToString(endofip);
PingCheck checkfullip = new PingCheck();
checkfullip.CheckSequentialIP();
}
Console.ReadLine();
}
All help is much appreciated.
Hmm - your code sample behaves as expected on my machine - i.e. it returns the hostname of the machine being scanned.
To investigate your problem deeper, have you tried using nslookup to check the ip addresses resolve?
Microsoft Windows [Version 6.1.7600]
Copyright (c) 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
C:\Users\Rob>nslookup <-- type this at a command prompt
Default Server: mydns.mydomain.co.uk <--- these two lines indicate the dns server being used to resolve your queries
Address: 192.168.0.1 <----|
> 192.168.0.5 <---- type in the ip address of one of the machines in question
Server: mydns.mydomain.co.uk
Address: 192.168.0.1
Name: myworkstation.mydomain.co.uk <---- this is the hostname, as reported by the DNS using a reverse lookup
Address: 192.168.0.5
If this doesn't return the machine name, then you may have a name resolution issue that is not related to your code.
If this all looks ok, then it might also be worth enumerating the IpEntry.Aliases
collection. Are there any entries here, and do they make sense?
Finally - is the code you have above exactly the code that is going wrong for you, or is it a "distilled" example? The reason I ask is that the documentation for Dns.GetHostEntry
states
"When an empty string is passed as the host name, this method returns the IPv4 addresses of the local host."
I also notice you're holding "fullip" in a static. If this is not the exact code that is causing the problem, especially if this runs multithreaded, is there a chance you are not initialising "fullip" before the Dns.GetHostEntry
is called?
I may be way off, but I thought is was worth giving a brain dump of what occured to me as I looked at your problem :)
[EDIT:] - your comment to kdt has clarified something I misunderstood. I thought you were saying you always got back the hostname for your local machine, no matter which machine you "scanned" - which is very odd behaviour. In fact I think you are saying you just get back IP addresses for other machines (their IP address), and only get a hostname for your local. Disregard my last bit about the threading and the empty argument.
This is far more easily explained - your machine is almost certainly just not able to resolve the machine names - I expect my nslookup test I suggested will not return the machine names either.
In order to resolve these IP's to host names, your machine needs a DNS that has entries for these machines, or to have them in its local hosts file; your machine isn't actually asking the remote machine for its name when you do this call so it won;t be able to find it out without help from one of its usual name resolution paths.
It works for me, because my local DNS really does have entries for all the machines on my network, resolving their host names to ip addresses and vice-versa.
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