Grrr commas in data and in printing the order collection screw the interpretation
an OrderedCollection(fe80::21c:42ff:fe00:8%en4(Otter-2),0(0)-inet6- stream-tcp fe80::21c:42ff:fe00:9%en4(fe80::21c:42ff:fe00:9%en4),0(0)- inet6-stream-tcp fe80::21b:63ff:fe02:d2db%en4(fe80::21b:63ff:fe02:d2db %en4),0(0)-inet6-stream-tcp 10.211.55.2(10.211.55.2),0(0)-inet4-stream- tcp 10.37.129.2(10.37.129.2),0(0)-inet4-stream-tcp 192.168.1.139(192.168.1.139),0(0)-inet4-stream-tcp)
is really
fe80::21c:42ff:fe00:8%en4(Otter-2),0(0)-inet6-stream-tcp 10.211.55.2(10.211.55.2),0(0)-inet4-stream-tcp fe80::21b:63ff:fe02:d2db%en4(fe80::21b:63ff:fe02:d2db%en4),0(0)-inet6- stream-tcp 10.211.55.2(10.211.55.2),0(0)-inet4-stream-tcp 10.37.129.2(10.37.129.2),0(0)-inet4-stream-tcp 192.168.1.139(192.168.1.139),0(0)-inet4-stream-tcp
Still fe80::21b:63ff:fe02:d2db%en4(fe80::21b:63ff:fe02:d2db%en4),0(0)-inet6- stream-tcp
is hung off en1 not en4 and shows in ifconfig as fe80::21b: 63ff:fe02:d2db%en1
On 26-Aug-09, at 11:50 AM, Andreas Raab wrote:
Quick Unix question: How do I find out what the IP address for eth0/ eth1 is? I thought NetNameResolver>>localHostAddress was supposed to return this but it returns consistently 127.0.0.1 which is fine from a purity point of view but utterly useless from any practical perspective ;-)
Is there any way of finding out the IP address for eth0 that doesn't involve OS process, sed, and grep?
Thanks,
- Andreas
-- = = = ======================================================================== John M. McIntosh johnmci@smalltalkconsulting.com Twitter: squeaker68882 Corporate Smalltalk Consulting Ltd. http://www.smalltalkconsulting.com = = = ========================================================================