First, always look on the case and back of your device. If the device has a MAC address and has no human interface, it may be printed on the device somewhere.
MAC addresses consists of six 2-digit pairs of characters. A character may be a number 0-9 or a letter A-F. MAC addresses may be formatted using a space between the pairs, a colon, or a hyphen depending on the device. The colon is the most common. On a device it may be called MAC, ID, DSN, SN or something else, but it will always have the same format.
Here are 3 examples:
If you find any errors in the list, please let us know!. These can change without notice.
Your CSB provides a page that lists all devices it has seen on your network. It also displays the Hardware address (MAC address) for each device. This can be of great help when creating clients.
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See also: MAC Addresses, Network Overview