Author Topic: my ip  (Read 3651 times)

Offline zeritou

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my ip
« on: October 05, 2004, 09:57:04 AM »
i am on an ether-net network (please excuse my use of redundancy), the ip of this network is 207.28.57.2 (or atleast thats what it tells me).

i know that whichever computer im on has a specific ip within the network. how do i find it?

if it helps im on "DELL2" (stupid school naming sys)
and my proxy address is 192.168.1.1
http://www.showmemyip.com gives me 207.28.57.2 but it gives that for every other comp
« Last Edit: October 05, 2004, 09:57:57 AM by zeritou »
how to insult a klingon:

qatlh Quch Hab ghaj no'ra'
vaj HabHa''a' je 'uSDu'lIj joj

wich translates roughly to:

how come you guys never had those for head bumps in the first staktrek series and do you guys have bumps like that on your genitals too?

Offline PlayingOutpost0-24

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my ip
« Reply #1 on: October 05, 2004, 10:43:34 AM »
IT SHOULD GIVE THAT IP FOR EVERY COMP... EVER HEARD "LOCAL AREA NETWORK"? I HAVE 3 COMPUTERS CONNECTED TO IT AND ALL HAS THE SAME IP :P
anyways, open mIRC, and type "$ip" and press <tab>...
Great news for OP2 fans... OP3 in progress.
Official Site
Outpost 3: A New Power progress
OP3:NP Discussion

Progress in OP3:NP[/size][/font]
PLANNING[|||||||||-]
GRAPHICS [||||------]
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Going slowly... Very slow.

Offline Hooman

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my ip
« Reply #2 on: October 05, 2004, 01:19:57 PM »
I think mIRC will give the external IP when you do that. To find the local IP try running "winipcfg" or "ipconfig". I don't seem to have winipcfg on my winXP computer but the other one is there. You have to run it from the command prompt though. (Run "cmd" or "command", preferrably the first one). Anyways, it should tell you the local IP of the computer along with other stuff like the subnet mask and the default gateway.
 

xfir

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my ip
« Reply #3 on: October 05, 2004, 02:49:44 PM »
Double click your connect icon in the system tray. Click Support (2nd tab) (WinXP SP2 has it as Support)...

That is if they don't let you run cmd.

 

Offline BlackBox

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my ip
« Reply #4 on: October 05, 2004, 03:11:33 PM »
Any call that a program makes to winsock to retrieve the ip will give you your local IP.

To get it: in Win9x/Me use "winipcfg" in the run command to get it. Make sure you select your ethernet adapter that is connected to the LAN, if you have multiple adapters. Look under IP Address, and it's there.

In NT/2k/XP: start a command prompt and enter ipconfig <enter>.
Look in the section for the ethernet adapter that is connected to your LAN, and read the IP Address. this is your local IP.

BTW: if cmd (Command Prompt) is disabled on NT/2k/XP, run command.com (it will work) and enter it in there.
« Last Edit: October 05, 2004, 03:12:12 PM by op2hacker »

Offline zeritou

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my ip
« Reply #5 on: October 08, 2004, 02:54:26 PM »
thanks "ipconfig" tells it to me

i might be able to play on a decent connection now
but it will only be for 43 ish minutes from 2:41ish to 3:25 central time (i think its gmt -5:00)

edit: im asking a mod to lock this topic so that it can still be helpful to newbs but free of spam
« Last Edit: October 08, 2004, 03:01:18 PM by zeritou »
how to insult a klingon:

qatlh Quch Hab ghaj no'ra'
vaj HabHa''a' je 'uSDu'lIj joj

wich translates roughly to:

how come you guys never had those for head bumps in the first staktrek series and do you guys have bumps like that on your genitals too?

Offline Oprime

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my ip
« Reply #6 on: October 10, 2004, 08:35:35 AM »
Are you trying to play within the Lan or are you trying to play out to the internet? Proxy servers can not forward packets like that, all they do is exchange the source IP address with the out-going static IP of the computer running the server. That is unless OP2 is modifed to use TCP/UDP tunnels that would forward the packets to their destinations. But, there would be massive lag too if the server is slow, there's a cache setup, or if the connection is just plain slow :P. I hate it when dumb schools restrict the internet by using proxys especially when they just to save an extra buck on connection speed (Most public schools don't pay for internet it's given to them by local goverments or telecoms).
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Offline BlackBox

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my ip
« Reply #7 on: October 10, 2004, 11:32:48 AM »
Quote
Are you trying to play within the Lan or are you trying to play out to the internet? Proxy servers can not forward packets like that, all they do is exchange the source IP address with the out-going static IP of the computer running the server. That is unless OP2 is modifed to use TCP/UDP tunnels that would forward the packets to their destinations. But, there would be massive lag too if the server is slow, there's a cache setup, or if the connection is just plain slow :P. I hate it when dumb schools restrict the internet by using proxys especially when they just to save an extra buck on connection speed (Most public schools don't pay for internet it's given to them by local goverments or telecoms).
You're wrong. SOCKS4/5 Proxies do forward packets (most modern proxy servers are socks-compliant proxies) Read the SOCKS 5 RFC (search it on google).

It works like so:

Client -> Proxy -> Server

The client sends a socks4/5 request to the proxy, telling it what type of connection to make, and the connection parameters (address, port). The proxy then establishes the connection to the server, and then the open channel is used by the client to send and receive data. (it appears now to the client that it has a direct connection to the server. But in fact, the proxy is taking all data from either end and sending it to the other end (eg. when data arrives to the proxy from the client this data is forwarded to the server, and vice versa.)

So in effect the proxy actually makes a connection, making it more complex then something that simply switches the fields in the IP packet. (This would be what internet routers do, is swap IP's with the correct system's IP)

Btw.... I see no need to close the topic. If there is a spam problem the spam will be deleted

Offline Oprime

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« Reply #8 on: October 11, 2004, 08:53:56 PM »
Hacker I forgot to mention that schools like to use http proxys. Mainly the reason why is that SOCKS proxys (if not configured right) can sometimes make security holes. For example students using the SOCKS proxy to download music or use programs like Windows messager (with the help of a http proxy). So some kind of tunnel would have to be made so that "normal" :P OP2 TCP/UDP packets can flow using the HTTP proxy (lag, don't forget about the lag). I know how SOCKS proxys work it's just that schools only use HTTP proxys to keep your hands from typing Kazza...PORN....VIRUS! Don't you hate how they sometimes use filters.

P.S. When using HTTP proxys to put it simply all they do is change the ip then they forward it kind of like a nat router. That's why the ip zeritou sees is the external ip. Which is most likely connected to the school districts Framerelay network on differents DLCIs to the main router that has the physical line to the internet! wow that's a long sentience. I love Framerelay and how anyone with the money can run their own network across town :D.

*edit* Almost forgot  it's just the same way AOL uses their stupid filter crap doodle which is why It2000us lags so much lol
« Last Edit: October 11, 2004, 08:59:37 PM by Oprime »
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Motherboard: MSI K9A2 Platinum
Case: Thermaltake Armor Plus+
Power Supply: Themermatake ToughPower 1200Watt PSU
Hard Drive: Fujitsu 15k SAS SCSI 74GB/148GB Raid 0 @ 189MBps
Moniter: LG Flatron 20.1in Widescreen LCD 8ms 1400:1 Contrast ratio w/ F engine
GFX Card: 4 ATI Radeon 4870 1GB GDDR5 CrossFireX
DVD Burners: 2x SONY DVD-RW
Speakers[/b] Logitech Z-5500 505Watt 5.1 Surround
CPU Heatsink[/b]ZeroTerm NV120
OS[/b]Windows Vista Home Premium x64
:P I'm a Hardware freak ><

Offline Flanx

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my ip
« Reply #9 on: October 12, 2004, 12:29:05 PM »
Just so I'm clear on it does this mean if I set up a game from within my router can other people join it or do I have to disable the router to be the host?
To the Sky

xfir

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my ip
« Reply #10 on: October 12, 2004, 09:54:25 PM »
Most likely you have to disable the router (I.E. Your global IP is your system's IP)

As note: CST is GMT -6.

Offline BlackBox

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my ip
« Reply #11 on: October 13, 2004, 02:50:42 PM »
At the next update, we will include a fix that will allow you to host from behind a router.

Ah yea, I wasn't thinking of http proxies, only socks proxies.

Another reason they use http proxies is for their filters (which I'm sure you already knew).

an HTTP proxy cannot reliably forward non http/mime data so most schools bypass the proxy for any other type of connection. (It is up to the software used to implement the proxy connection, the software can bypass it if it wants - that's why programs like AIM etc will still work. The tcp/ip stack doesn't marshall requests to the proxy.)

Also, HTTP proxies are incapable of forwarding non TCP data. To forward UDP data they must be using a socks 5 proxy.

And most http proxy software is more complex than just switching the IP's on the packets. (Again, it uses the HTTP protocol for data input from client -> proxy)