Disclaimer: I'm not the original author of this sheet, but can't recall where I found it. If you know the author, please let me know so I give the attribution.
The original author seems to be Charles Edge, here's the original content, as pointed out by @percisely.
Note: Since this seems to be helpful to some people, I formatted it to improve readability of the original. Also, note that this is from 2016, many things may have changed, and I don't use macOS anymore, so I probably can't help in case of questions, but maybe someone else can.
After writing up the presentation for MacSysAdmin in Sweden, I decided to go ahead and throw these into a quick cheat sheet for anyone who’d like to have them all in one place. Good luck out there, and stay salty.
Get an ip address for en0:
ipconfig getifaddr en0
Same thing, but setting and echoing a variable:
ip=`ipconfig getifaddr en0` ; echo $ip
View the subnet mask of en0:
ipconfig getoption en0 subnet_mask
View the dns server for en0:
ipconfig getoption en0 domain_name_server
Get information about how en0 got its DHCP on:
ipconfig getpacket en1
View some network info:
ifconfig en0
Set en0 to have an IP address of 10.10.10.10 and a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0:
ifconfig en0 inet 10.10.10.10 netmask 255.255.255.0
Show a list of locations on the computer:
networksetup -listlocations
Obtain the active location the system is using:
networksetup -getcurrentlocation
Create a network location called Work and populate it with information from the active network connection:
networksetup -createlocation Work populate
Delete a network location called Work:
networksetup -deletelocation Work
Switch the active location to a location called Work:
networksetup -switchlocation Work
Switch the active location to a location called Work, but also show the GUID of that location so we can make scripties with it laters:
scselect Work
List all of the network interfaces on the system:
networksetup -listallnetworkservices
Rename the network service called Ethernet to the word Wired:
networksetup -renamenetworkservice Ethernet Wired
Disable a network interface:
networksetup -setnetworkserviceenabled off
Change the order of your network services:
networksetup -ordernetworkservices “Wi-Fi” “USB Ethernet”
Set the interface called Wi-Fi to obtain it if it isn’t already:
networksetup -setdhcp Wi-Fi
Renew DHCP leases:
ipconfig set en1 BOOTP && ipconfig set en1 DHCP
ifconfig en1 down && ifconfig en1 up
Renew a dhcp lease in a script:
echo "add State:/Network/Interface/en0/RefreshConfiguration temporary" | sudo scutil
Configure a manual static IP address:
networksetup -setmanual Wi-Fi 10.0.0.2 255.255.255.0 10.0.0.1
Configure the dns servers for a given network interface:
networksetup -setdnsservers Wi-Fi 10.0.0.2 10.0.0.3
Obtain the dns servers used on the Wi-Fi interface:
networksetup -getdnsservers Wi-Fi
Stop the application layer firewall:
launchctl unload /System/Library/LaunchAgents/com.apple.alf.useragent.plistlaunchctl unload /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.alf.agent.plist
Start the application layer firewall:
launchctl load /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.alf.agent.plistlaunchctl load /System/Library/LaunchAgents/com.apple.alf.useragent.plist
Allow an app to communicate outside the system through the application layer firewall:
socketfilterfw -t“/Applications/FileMaker Pro/FileMaker Pro.app/Contents/MacOS/FileMaker Pro”
See the routing table of a Mac:
netstat -nr
Add a route so that traffic for 10.0.0.0/32 communicates over the 10.0.9.2 network interface:
route -n add 10.0.0.0/32 10.0.9.2
Log bonjour traffic at the packet level:
sudo killall -USR2 mDNSResponder
Stop Bonjour:
launchctl unload -w /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.mDNSResponder.plist
Start Bonjour:
launchctl load -w /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.mDNSResponder.plist
Put a delay in your pings:
ping -i 5 192.168.210.1
Ping the hostname 5 times and then stop the ping:
ping -c 5 google.com
Flood ping the host:
ping -f localhost
Set the packet size during your ping:
ping -s 100 google.com
Customize the source IP during your ping:
ping -S 10.10.10.11 google.com
View disk performance:
iostat -d disk0
Get information about the airport connection on your system:
/System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/Apple80211.framework/Versions/A/Resources/airport -I
Scan the available Wireless networks:
/System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/Apple80211.framework/Versions/A/Resources/airport -s
Trace the path packets go through:
traceroute google.com
Trace the routes without looking up names:
traceroute -n google.com
Trace a route in debug mode:
traceroute -d google.com
View information on all sockets:
netstat -at
View network information for IPv6:
netstat -lt
View per protocol network statistics:
netstat -s
View the statistics for a specific network protocol:
netstat -p igmp
Show statistics for network interfaces:
netstat -i
View network information as it happens (requires ntop to be installed):
ntop
Scan port 80 of www.google.com
/System/Library/CoreServices/Applications/Network\ Utility.app/Contents/Resources/stroke www.google.com 80 80
Port scan krypted.com stealthily:
nmap -sS -O krypted.com/24
Establish a network connection with www.apple.com:
nc -v www.apple.com 80
Establish a network connection with gateway.push.apple.com over port 2195:
/usr/bin/nc -v -w 15 gateway.push.apple.com 2195
Establish a network connection with feedback.push.apple.com only allowing IPv4:
/usr/bin/nc -v -4 feedback.push.apple.com 2196
Setup a network listener on port 2196 for testing:
/usr/bin/nc -l 2196
Capture some packets:
tcpdump -nS
Capture all the packets:
tcpdump -nnvvXS
Capture the packets for a given port:
tcpdump -nnvvXs 548
Capture all the packets for a given port going to a given destination of 10.0.0.48:
tcpdump -nnvvXs 548 dst 10.0.0.48
Capture the packets as above but dump to a pcap file:
tcpdump -nnvvXs 548 dst 10.0.0.48 -w /tmp/myfile.pcap
Read tcpdump (cap) files and try to make them human readable:
tcpdump -qns 0 -A -r /var/tmp/capture.pcap
What binaries have what ports and in what states are those ports:
lsof -n -i4TCP
Make an alias for looking at what has a listener open, called ports:
alias ports='lsof -n -i4TCP | grep LISTEN'
Report back the name of the system:
hostname
Flush the dns cache:
dscacheutil -flushcache
Clear your arp cache:
arp -ad
View how the Server app interprets your network settings:
serveradmin settings network
Whitelist the IP address 10.10.10.2:
/Applications/Server.app/Contents/ServerRoot/usr/libexec/afctl -w 10.10.10.2