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I have several windows machines identified by ip address. I would like to write an application that query the computers remotely and gets their name. I cannot rely on DNS because it does not provide exact results.

I heard that there is a NetBIOS API that can be used, but I am not familiar with this API.

4 Answers 4

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PING -A xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx

This will try WINS and then DNS.

The NSLOOKUP command does similar, but only via DNS.

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  • @Jay, Is WINS more reliable than the DNS lookup? I have bad experience with DNS
    – gyurisc
    Mar 10, 2010 at 7:10
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    This worked for me on Windows 10 if I used the lowercase ping -a x.x.x.x syntax. -A was not recognized on my machine.
    – Phlucious
    Dec 27, 2017 at 23:21
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check getnameinfo

The getnameinfo function provides protocol-independent name resolution from an address to an ANSI host name and from a port number to the ANSI service name.

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  • I will try this suggestion. Thanks
    – gyurisc
    Mar 10, 2010 at 7:37
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This is the exact purpose of RARP or DHCP.

On Windows there is a dll (DHCPobj.dll) available in one of the Microsoft resource kits that supposedly allows you to make queries like this to your local DHCP server. I've never played with it, so I can't say for sure how well it works.

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you can use below command to get youre remote host name using ip address

nslookup [ip address]

or you can use

tracert [ip address]

to track route that that specific ip address

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