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Now you can use the airport utility as a stand-in for the usual Linux networking utilities.
Now you can use the airport utility as a stand-in for the usual Linux networking utilities.
https://www.itdojo.com/osx-airport-cli-tool-not-just-for-airport-aps/
<pre>
$ airport -I
</pre>
(that's a capital i flag, as in Information) will print out information about your current wireless card, your mac address, your data rates, your encryption, your signal strength, etc.


=Sniff a channel=
=Sniff a channel=

Revision as of 05:34, 27 January 2016

This page contains handy instructions for doing things with wireless cards on the Mac.

Airport utility

Start by creating a symlink to the airport utility, a hidden utility that comes with the Mac, somewhere on your path:

sudo ln -fs /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/Apple80211.framework/Versions/Current/Resources/airport /usr/local/bin/airport

Now you can use the airport utility as a stand-in for the usual Linux networking utilities.

https://www.itdojo.com/osx-airport-cli-tool-not-just-for-airport-aps/

$ airport -I

(that's a capital i flag, as in Information) will print out information about your current wireless card, your mac address, your data rates, your encryption, your signal strength, etc.

Sniff a channel

The syntax for sniffing a channel on a wireless interface is as follows.

Start by finding you wireless interface name with ifconfig. The built-in wireless is probably en1. The syntax is:

sudo airport [interface] -c [channel]