Questions about this topic? Sign up to ask in the talk tab.
Difference between revisions of "ARP"
From NetSec
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<b>A</b>ddress <b>R</b>esolution <b>P</b>rotocol | <b>A</b>ddress <b>R</b>esolution <b>P</b>rotocol | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{cleanup}} | ||
ARP is used to map [[MAC addresses]] to [[IP address|IP addresses]] on a [[LAN]]. For information on protecting this protocol, see [[static ARP configuration]] for your appropriate [[Operating System|OS]]. For information regarding the auditing or attacking of this protocol, please see [[arp poisoning|ARP poisoning]]. | ARP is used to map [[MAC addresses]] to [[IP address|IP addresses]] on a [[LAN]]. For information on protecting this protocol, see [[static ARP configuration]] for your appropriate [[Operating System|OS]]. For information regarding the auditing or attacking of this protocol, please see [[arp poisoning|ARP poisoning]]. |
Revision as of 21:22, 4 September 2011
Address Resolution Protocol
ARP is used to map MAC addresses to IP addresses on a LAN. For information on protecting this protocol, see static ARP configuration for your appropriate OS. For information regarding the auditing or attacking of this protocol, please see ARP poisoning.
In linux your ARP table is available by typing :
arp -a
In the console. Example output:
root@orbital:~# arp -a ? (192.168.1.1) at c0:c1:c0:f7:34:a6 [ether] on wlan0
You can delete an entry with arp -d or add an entry with arp -s IP_ADDRESS MAC.
More information available in the protocols section.