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Shenzhen Dericam Technology Co., Ltd H201C User Manual Choose “Dericam H201C RTSP”, then input IP address or DDNS name. The default RTSP port is 554. If you have more than one camera, please fix the port with different number. If you are interested in ordering and the product is not offered online, please call 800.MACTOOLS for assistance. 3.1 Search IP camera in LAN After software installation, please activate the search tools ipcamtools.exe. When GUI comes up, please click 'refresh' button. The program will search the network cameras, and display the searched IP address, port number, equipment ID number, P2P ID, device name, the machine's dynamic domain name, the wireless address and MAC address.
If you haven’t already done so, please run the Malwarebytes Support Tool and then attach the logs in your next reply: NOTE: The tools and the information obtained is safe and not harmful to your privacy or your computer, please allow the programs to run if blocked by your system. Search Tool Download for All cameras System Version Size Download upload date Windows PC v1.0.3 12MB 2015.9.01 Mac/OS v1.0.0 9MB 2015.9.01.
Active7 years, 6 months ago
I have many IP cameras on the same LAN network. I want to get MAC address and port number of each camera, although I don't know ip address of them. Furthermore, if the ip and port of a camera is changed, how to detect it?
I've also searched on internet about this problem. Most of people responded using some of the Window functions such as SendARP () or using command line 'arp -a'. But if do it, then get all MAC address of the LAN network that regardless of the camera's or the computer's.
Please help me!
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closed as off topic by casperOneMar 8 '12 at 18:39
Questions on Stack Overflow are expected to relate to programming within the scope defined by the community. Consider editing the question or leaving comments for improvement if you believe the question can be reworded to fit within the scope. Read more about reopening questions here. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
3 Answers
I would start with a port scanner such as nmap and look for information that will identify your IP cameras.
If all of your cameras are the same, you may be able to detect them by the OS information returned.
You might also be able to do a banner grab to determine the port:
Use C++ to parse the nmap output. Change the network address range to fit your network.
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Josh SiokJosh Siok
Dericam App Download
Do your IP cameras broadcast any identifying information, e.g with mDNS packets? Maybe you can catch these broadcasts. Google for 'mDNS' or 'Zeroconf'.
KazKaz
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Are all of the cameras you are looking for made by the same company? If so, the MAC addresses may all share a common prefix that was assigned to that company, or do they support HTTP or some other protocol you could use to probe the camera to identify it as well?
If they don't share similar MAC addresses, you can still use other methods to find all the cameras.
One way I might approach the problem:
You may find that the cameras support some drew010drew010
SNMP commands that you could use as an identifying factor. In the worst case, you could send an HTTP packet to the IP address and see if the host responds with the webpage for the camera assuming each one has an embedded web server. Chances are, there is at least one protocol you could use to identify the cameras out of all of your network devices.
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Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged c++ip-camera or ask your own question.
Active7 years, 6 months ago
Best Search Tool For Mac
I have many IP cameras on the same LAN network. I want to get MAC address and port number of each camera, although I don't know ip address of them. Furthermore, if the ip and port of a camera is changed, how to detect it?
I've also searched on internet about this problem. Most of people responded using some of the Window functions such as SendARP () or using command line 'arp -a'. But if do it, then get all MAC address of the LAN network that regardless of the camera's or the computer's.
Please help me!
TTGroupTTGroup
1,58688 gold badges3131 silver badges6565 bronze badges
closed as off topic by casperOneMar 8 '12 at 18:39
Questions on Stack Overflow are expected to relate to programming within the scope defined by the community. Consider editing the question or leaving comments for improvement if you believe the question can be reworded to fit within the scope. Read more about reopening questions here. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
3 AnswersDericam Software
I would start with a port scanner such as nmap and look for information that will identify your IP cameras.
If all of your cameras are the same, you may be able to detect them by the OS information returned.
You might also be able to do a banner grab to determine the port:
Use C++ to parse the nmap output. Change the network address range to fit your network.
Josh SiokJosh Siok
Do your IP cameras broadcast any identifying information, e.g with mDNS packets? Maybe you can catch these broadcasts. Google for 'mDNS' or 'Zeroconf'.
Dericam For WindowsKazKaz
40.7k77 gold badges7373 silver badges110110 bronze badges
Are all of the cameras you are looking for made by the same company? If so, the MAC addresses may all share a common prefix that was assigned to that company, or do they support HTTP or some other protocol you could use to probe the camera to identify it as well?
If they don't share similar MAC addresses, you can still use other methods to find all the cameras.
One way I might approach the problem:
You may find that the cameras support some
SNMP commands that you could use as an identifying factor. In the worst case, you could send an HTTP packet to the IP address and see if the host responds with the webpage for the camera assuming each one has an embedded web server. Chances are, there is at least one protocol you could use to identify the cameras out of all of your network devices.
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drew010drew010
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