On Windows, OSX, Linux, etc then Chris Bunch's answer can be much improved by using
netstat -rn
in place of a traceroute
command.
Your gateway's IP address will appear in the second field of the line that starts either default
or 0.0.0.0
.
This gets around a number of problems with trying to use traceroute
:
- on Windows
traceroute
is actually tracert.exe
, so there's no need for O/S dependencies in the code
- it's a quick command to run - it gets information from the O/S, not from the network
traceroute
is sometimes blocked by the network
The only downside is that it will be necessary to keep reading lines from the netstat
output until the right line is found, since there'll be more than one line of output.
EDIT: The Default Gateway's IP Address is in the second field of the line that starts with 'default' if you are on a MAC (tested on Lion), or in the third field of the line that starts with '0.0.0.0' (tested on Windows 7)
Windows:
Network Destination Netmask Gateway Interface Metric
0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.254 192.168.2.46 10
Mac:
Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire
default 192.168.2.254 UGSc 104 4 en1