Dart / Flutter package that allows discovering network devices in local network (LAN) via multi-threaded ICMP pings.
Note: This library is intended to be used on Class C networks.
Add the package to your pubspec.yaml:
lan_scanner: ^4.0.0
Import the library:
import 'package:lan_scanner/lan_scanner.dart';
Create an instance of the class and call
quickIcmpScanAsync()
on it:
final scanner = LanScanner();
final List<Host> hosts = scanner.quickIcmpScanAsync('192.168.0');
There is also stream-based icmpScan()
method available, which provides progress callback, but is much slower and resource hungry than other methods.
If you don't know what subnet to provide, you can use network_info_plus to get your local IP and then ipToCSubnet()
function, which will conviently strip the last octet of the IP address:
// 192.168.0.1
var wifiIP = await NetworkInfo().getWifiIP()
// 192.168.0
var subnet = ipToCSubnet(wifiIP);
Due to the issue with Flutter platform channels (#119207), iOS platform is currently supported only when using the quickIcmpScanSync()
method and requires additional steps:
Add dart_ping_ios
to your pubspec.yaml
:
dart_ping_ios: ^4.0.0
Call register()
method before running your app:
void main() {
DartPingIOS.register();
runApp(const App());
}
Warning:
In order to use this package, you may need to do additional configuration on some platforms.
Android:
Add the android.permission.INTERNET
to your AndroidManifest.xml
file:
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.INTERNET" />
MacOS:
Add following key to DebugProfile.entitlements
and Release.entitlements
files:
<key>com.apple.security.network.client</key>
<true/>
Feel free to contribute to this project.
Please file feature requests and bugs at the issue tracker.
If you fixed a bug or implemented a feature by yourself, feel free to send a pull request.
I am working on my packages in my free time.
If this package is helping you, please consider buying me a coffee, so I can keep updating and maintaining this package.