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    • P Offline
      pgarmyn
      last edited by

      👍 👍 👍 @driven

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      • D Offline
        driven
        last edited by

        @pgarmyn said:

        :thumb: :thumb: :thumb: @driven

        Well, maybe not three thumbs... it's unclear to me if that's a standard or an xtool instal, so a safer bet would be

        getMACADDRESS = %x(/usr/sbin/networksetup -getMACADDRESS en0 | /usr/bin/awk '{print $3}' | /usr/bin/sed s/;//g)
        

        which returns

        001ec*******

        the mac MAC address using standard instal items...

        john

        learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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        • Dan RathbunD Offline
          Dan Rathbun
          last edited by

          There IS a gem that can be used for reference (perhaps it can be made SketchUp friendly.)

          Link Preview Image
          macaddr/lib/macaddr.rb at master · ahoward/macaddr

          cross platform mac address determination for ruby. Contribute to ahoward/macaddr development by creating an account on GitHub.

          favicon

          GitHub (github.com)

          I'm not here much anymore.

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          • G Offline
            Garry K
            last edited by

            I'm back at this MAC address - specifically for first Ethernet device.

            This code seems to work fine for Windows 7 - but will it work for OSX ??

            Has anyone tried this in a French computer or some other language?

            ` def get_mac_address()
            return @mac_address if defined?( @mac_address )

            @win = ( RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /darwin/i ) == nil

            tmp = ""
            str = ""
            first = true

            if ( @win )
            # for windows put results in array - splitting on newline
            ipa = %x[ipconfig /all].split("\n")

            # check begining of string for 'Ethernet' and set flag once found
            # then check for 'Physical Address' and look at everything after the ':'
            # set mac_address and return
            ipa.each {|line|
              tmp = line.strip
              str = tmp[0..7]
            
              if ( first )
                first = false if ( "Ethernet" == str )
              elsif ( "Physical" == str )
                pos = tmp.rindex( ":" )
                @mac_address = tmp[pos+2, tmp.length ]
                return @mac_address
              end
            }
            

            else
            tmp = %x[ifconfig eth0].strip
            pos = tmp.rindex( " " )
            @mac_address = tmp[pos+1, tmp.length ]
            return @mac_address
            end

            return ""
            end`

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            • P Offline
              pgarmyn
              last edited by

              @Garry
              As i said before, this only works for US or EN OS.
              The output of ipconfig depends on the OS language.
              In French you will have to scan for "adresse physique" and for the other languages....

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              • G Offline
                Garry K
                last edited by

                This works in Windows 7

                def get_mac_address()
                	return @@mac_address if defined?( @@mac_address )
                
                	if ( ( RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /darwin/i ) == nil )
                		cmd = 'ipconfig /all'
                	else
                		cmd = 'ifconfig'
                	end
                
                	macs = []
                	lines = %x[#{cmd}].split("\n").grep( /^.*\s([0-9a-f|A-F]{2}[:-]){5}([0-9a-f|A-F]{2})$/ )
                	lines.each{|line| macs << line.strip[-17,17] }
                
                	@@mac_address = macs.first.gsub( '-', ':' )
                	return @@mac_address
                end
                
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                • G Offline
                  Garry K
                  last edited by

                  Thanks pgarmyn - I was just confirming the language thing
                  I did try running the code that you posted earlier - but it gave me an error so I decided this was a good opportunity to learn more.

                  I have cleaned this up so if it is benefit to others

                  ` def get_mac_address()
                  return @@mac_address if defined?( @@mac_address )

                  mac_addr = []
                  cmd = @@windows ? 'ipconfig /all' : 'ifconfig'
                  
                  # choose lines that have only six pairs of 2 char hex values separated by either a : or -
                  # pattern must start with a space and be at the end of the line
                  # there can be white space at the end of the line
                  lines = %x[#{cmd}].split("\n").grep( /\s([0-9A-F]{2}[-:]){5}([0-9A-F]{2})\s*$/ )
                  lines.each{|line| mac_addr << (line.strip[-17,17]).gsub( /-/, ':' ) }
                  
                  # if windows and we have more than 1 mac address use the second one otherwise use the first
                  # if not windows then use the first address
                  index = @@windows && mac_addr.length > 1 ? 1 : 0
                  @@mac_address = mac_addr[index]
                  
                  return @@mac_address
                  

                  end`

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                  • D Offline
                    driven
                    last edited by

                    @gary
                    couple of changes needed to run on my mac,
                    got rid of class variables
                    added windows =
                    added simplified regex = with .. for grep

                    def get_mac_address()
                    windows  = ( ( RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /darwin/i ) == nil )
                    return mac_address if defined?( mac_address )
                    
                    mac_addr = []
                    cmd = windows ? 'ipconfig /all' ; 'ifconfig'
                    
                    # choose lines that have only six pairs of 2 char hex values separated by either a ; or -
                    # pattern must start with a space and be at the end of the line
                    # there can be white space at the end of the line
                    regex = Regexp.compile("(..[;-]){5}..")
                    lines = %x[#{cmd}].split("\n").grep( regex )
                    lines.each{|line| mac_addr << (line.strip[-17,17]).gsub( /-/, ';' ) }
                    
                    # if windows and we have more than 1 mac address use the second one otherwise use the first
                    # if not windows then use the first address
                    index = windows && mac_addr.length > 1 ? 1 ; 0
                    mac_address = mac_addr[index]
                    
                    return mac_address
                    end
                    

                    > get_mac_address 00:1e:c4:16:08:46

                    learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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                    • G Offline
                      Garry K
                      last edited by

                      Thank-you very much, I appreciate this, since I don't have access to a mac.
                      I will test on Windows with your simplified regex.

                      You show the mac_address as lower case - can you confirm that is indeed the output.
                      Also - off topic - but how do you get the source code to go into the embedded window?

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                      • D Offline
                        driven
                        last edited by

                        @garry k said:

                        You show the mac_address as lower case - can you confirm that is indeed the output.

                        yes it's lower-case, I realised that obscuring it in my other posts was counter productive, so I just adjusted only the number values to show the return this time...
                        @unknownuser said:

                        Also - off topic - but how do you get the source code to go into the embedded window?
                        the one with the red circle...

                        learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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                        • G Offline
                          Garry K
                          last edited by

                          Thanks again. I checked the code for windows and it works fine.
                          I've added an upcase on the following line

                          lines.each{|line| mac_addr << (line.strip[-17,17]).upcase().gsub( /-/, ':' ) }

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                          • jaimedaJ Offline
                            jaimeda
                            last edited by

                            Hello

                            This works fine in Sketchup 2013 but not in 2014.

                            Any tips?

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                            • tt_suT Offline
                              tt_su
                              last edited by

                              @jaimeda said:

                              This works fine in Sketchup 2013 but not in 2014.

                              Due to the upgrade of the Ruby core this broke. We haven't been able to figure out why. But the workaround is to pipe the result from the command to a temporary file and read it after executing the command.

                              <span class="syntaxdefault"><br />tempfile&nbsp;</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">=&nbsp;</span><span class="syntaxstring">"C;/Users/Thomas/Desktop/temp.txt"<br /></span><span class="syntaxkeyword">`</span><span class="syntaxstring">ipconfig&nbsp;/all&nbsp;>&nbsp;#{tempfile}</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">`<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">puts&nbsp;File</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">read</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxdefault">tempfile</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br />&nbsp;</span><span class="syntaxdefault"></span>
                              
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                              • jaimedaJ Offline
                                jaimeda
                                last edited by

                                Thanks Thomas.

                                It works perfectly.

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                                • G Offline
                                  Garry K
                                  last edited by

                                  @tt_su said:

                                  @jaimeda said:

                                  This works fine in Sketchup 2013 but not in 2014.

                                  Due to the upgrade of the Ruby core this broke. We haven't been able to figure out why. But the workaround is to pipe the result from the command to a temporary file and read it after executing the command.

                                  <span class="syntaxdefault"><br />tempfile </span><span class="syntaxkeyword">=</span><span class="syntaxdefault"> </span><span class="syntaxstring">"C;/Users/Thomas/Desktop/temp.txt"<br /></span><span class="syntaxkeyword">`</span><span class="syntaxstring">ipconfig /all > #{tempfile}</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">`<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">puts File</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">read</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxdefault">tempfile</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault"> </span>
                                  

                                  In my C++ programming for windows I would create a temp file this way

                                  tempfp = tmpfile();

                                  Is there anything in Sketchup that would do the same for both Windows and Mac?

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                                  • tt_suT Offline
                                    tt_su
                                    last edited by

                                    Well,... since we now have the Ruby Standard Library available: http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.0.0/libdoc/tempfile/rdoc/Tempfile.html

                                    😄

                                    So an updated example would be:

                                    <span class="syntaxdefault"><br /></span><span class="syntaxkeyword">require&nbsp;</span><span class="syntaxstring">'tempfile'<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">file&nbsp;</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">=&nbsp;</span><span class="syntaxdefault">Tempfile</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.new(</span><span class="syntaxstring">'my_prefix'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">file</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">close<br /></span><span class="syntaxkeyword">`</span><span class="syntaxstring">ipconfig&nbsp;/all&nbsp;>&nbsp;#{file.path}</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">`<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">puts&nbsp;File</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">read</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxdefault">file</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">path</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">file</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">unlink<br /></span>
                                    
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                                    • Dan RathbunD Offline
                                      Dan Rathbun
                                      last edited by

                                      Weirdly the backquotes, & %x strings which use the ()` method, work on my machine.

                                      And I verified that I do not have the backquote_patch.rb (that I proposed,) loaded.

                                      I'm not here much anymore.

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                                      • Chris FullmerC Offline
                                        Chris Fullmer
                                        last edited by

                                        We have seen that if a user drags a skp model onto their SU icon, then they work. but if they double click on a skp model file, or double click on the SU icon, then it does not work. Are you seeing it work in both scenarios?

                                        Lately you've been tan, suspicious for the winter.
                                        All my Plugins I've written

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                                        • G Offline
                                          Garry K
                                          last edited by

                                          @tt_su said:

                                          Well,... since we now have the Ruby Standard Library available: http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.0.0/libdoc/tempfile/rdoc/Tempfile.html

                                          😄

                                          So an updated example would be:

                                          <span class="syntaxdefault"><br />require </span><span class="syntaxstring">'tempfile'<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">file </span><span class="syntaxkeyword">=</span><span class="syntaxdefault"> Tempfile</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.new(</span><span class="syntaxstring">'my_prefix'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">file</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">close<br /></span><span class="syntaxkeyword">`</span><span class="syntaxstring">ipconfig /all > #{file.path}</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">`<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">puts File</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">read</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxdefault">file</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">path</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">file</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">unlink<br /></span>
                                          

                                          This is great for 2014 and forward - but what if you want to support earlier versions.

                                          I guess we have to either use a one size fits all strategy or check the version an branch appropriately.

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                                          • Dan RathbunD Offline
                                            Dan Rathbun
                                            last edited by

                                            There are whole topic threads on using the TEMP directory.

                                            No problem on Mac OSX...

                                            The issue on PC is unicode characters in usernames, which cause Ruby 1.8.x to choke.

                                            So some coders create a TEMP subdir of THEIR specific plugin's folder.
                                            (I think this is better than creating any temp folders in the root dir of the system drive.)

                                            I'm not here much anymore.

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