![]() The tools can also provide a wealth of additional raw data as well. Sudo ln -s /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/amework/Versions/Current/Resources/airport /usr/local/bin/airportīetween running airport -s (which shows the BSSID of every Wi-Fi network one’s Mac can pick up) and airport -I (which shows the BSSID of my currently connected network), I found what I need. Since I’m on Catalina, I first ran this command to easily use the “airport” command in the Terminal: It is named “airport” since Apple’s Wi-Fi settings used to be referred to as “Airport” in previous versions of Mac OS X (it was changed prior to the macOS rename) to match Apple’s Airport Wi-Fi hardware. Since I’m on a Mac, I needed to find a way to run a similar command using Terminal on the Mac.Įnter “airport”, Apple’s command-line wireless utility. Netsh wlan show networks mode=Bssid | findstr “BSSID” Click AirPort Utility to setup the wireless. ![]() On Windows, it can be done running PowerShell as Admin and running this command: Click Finish to complete and you should now find the AirPort Utility software in the Windows. ![]() I had to locate the BSSID of Wi-Fi networks for a Microsoft Teams deployment.
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