X-Git-Url: https://git.octo.it/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=src%2Fmans%2Foping.pod;h=5582286ffc7b2f334b216e42851c5c6c79e12c10;hb=12e4f9fd1ff58b047b531ec2fc744d4417cfae78;hp=e6ef195e74777d056636ccdd33e24d3ec7bc3f71;hpb=6995e2cfd517af456904db26b7781b4953feeacc;p=liboping.git diff --git a/src/mans/oping.pod b/src/mans/oping.pod index e6ef195..5582286 100644 --- a/src/mans/oping.pod +++ b/src/mans/oping.pod @@ -6,14 +6,24 @@ oping - send ICMP ECHO_REQUEST to network hosts B [B<-4> | B<-6>] [B<-c> I] [B<-i> I] I [I [I ...]] +B [B<-4> | B<-6>] [B<-c> I] [B<-i> I] B<-f> I + +B [B<-4> | B<-6>] [B<-c> I] [B<-i> I] I [I [I ...]] + +B [B<-4> | B<-6>] [B<-c> I] [B<-i> I] B<-f> I + =head1 DESCRIPTION -oping uses ICMPv4 or ICMPv6 ECHO_REQUEST packets to measure a hosts +B uses ICMPv4 or ICMPv6 ECHO_REQUEST packets to measure a hosts reachability and the network latency. In contrast to the original L utility B can send ICMP packets to multiple hosts in parallel and wait -for all ECHO_RESPONSE packets to arrive. In contrast to the -B utility (URL is listed in L<"SEE ALSO">) B can use both, IPv4 -and IPv6 transparently and side by side. +for all ECHO_RESPONSE packets to arrive. In contrast to the B utility +(URL is listed in L<"SEE ALSO">) B can use both, IPv4 and IPv6 +transparently and side by side. + +B is an ncurses-based front-end to I which displays ping +statistics online and highlights aberrant round-trip times if the terminal +supports colors. =head1 OPTIONS @@ -25,7 +35,7 @@ Force the use of IPv4. =item B<-6> -Force the use of IPv6 +Force the use of IPv6. =item B<-c> I @@ -36,23 +46,223 @@ Send (and receive) I ICMP packets, then stop and exit. Send one ICMP packet (per host) each I seconds. This can be a floating-point number to specify sub-second precision. +=item B<-t> I + +Set the IP Time to Live to I. This must be a number between (and +including) 1EandE255. If omitted, the value B<64> is used. + +=item B<-I> I
+ +Set the source address to use. You may either specify an IP number or a +hostname. You B pass the interface name, as you can with GNU's +L - use the B<-D> option for that purpose. + +=item B<-D> I + +Set the outgoing network device to use. + +=item B<-f> I + +Instead of specifying hostnames on the command line, read them from +I. If I is B<->, read from C. + +If I is installed with the SetUID-bit, it will set the effective UID to +the real UID before opening the file. In the special (but common) case that +I is owned by the super-user (UIDE0), this means that privileges +are temporarily dropped before opening the file, in order to prevent users from +reading arbitrary files on the system. + +If your system doesn't provide I (this was an optional +feature before POSIXE2001), the behavior is different because it is not +possible to I drop privileges. The alternative behavior is: If the +real user ID (as returned by L) and the effective user ID (as +returned by L) differ, the only argument allowed for this option is +"-" (i.e. standard input). + +=item B<-Q> I + +Specify the I (QoS) for outgoing packets. This is a +somewhat tricky option, since the meaning of the bits in the IPv4 header has +been revised several times. + +The currently recommended method is I which is used in +IPv6 headers as well. There are shortcuts for various predefined +I (PHBs): + +=over 4 + +=item B + +Selects the I behavior. This is the default behavior. + +=item B + +Selects the I (EF) per-hop behavior, as defined in +I3246>. This PHB is characterised by low delay, low loss and low +jitter, i.e. high priority traffic. + +=item B + +Selects the I (VA) per-hop behavior, as defined in +I5865>. This traffic class is meant for I (VoIP) +traffic which uses I (CAC) for reserving network +capacity. + +=item BII

+ +Selects one of 12Edifferentiated services code points (DSCPs), which are +organized in four I with three I each. Therefore, I +must be a number betweenE1 throughE4 and I

must be a number +betweenE1 throughE3, for example "af13", "af22" and "af41". In each +class, the lower priority number takes precedence over the higher priority +number. + +=item BI + +Selects one of the eight I PHBs. I is a number +betweenE0 throughE7. The class selectors have been defined to be +compatible to the I field in the IPv4 header as defined in +I791>. Please note that "cs0" is synonymous to "be". + +=back + +The old definition of the same bits in the IPv4 header was as I (ToS) field, specified in I1349>. It defined four possible +values which have appropriate aliases. Please note that this use of the bits is +B and the meaning is limited to IPv4! + +=over 4 + +=item B + +Minimize delay + +=item B + +Maximize throughput + +=item B + +Maximize reliability + +=item B + +Minimize monetary cost + =back -=head1 BUGS +Alternatively, you can also specify the byte manually. You can use either a +decimal number (0-255), a hexadecimal number (0x00-0xff) or an octal number +(00-0377) using the usual "0x" and "0" prefixes for hexadecimal and octal +respectively. + +The printed lines will contain information about the QoS field of received +packets if either a non-standard QoS setting was used on outgoing packets or if +the QoS byte of incoming packets is not zero. In other words, the QoS +information is omitted if both, the outgoing and the incoming QoS bytes are +zero. The received byte is always interpreted as +I (DSCP) and +I (ECN), even if the deprecated +I (ToS) aliases were used to specify the bits of outgoing +packets. + +=item B<-u>|B<-U> + +I B<-u> forces UTF-8 output, B<-U> disables UTF-8 output. If +neither is given, the codeset is automatically determined from the locale. + +=item B<-g> B|B|B|B + +I Selects the graph to display. =over 4 -=item The TTL cannot be set +=item B + +Do not show a graph. + +=item B + +Show a graph with time on the x-axis, the y-axis shows the round-trip time. +This is the default graph. + +If your terminal supports unicode and colors, they are used to improve +the precision of the data shown: a green box is drawn for round-trip times up +to one third of the configured timeout, the height representing the RTT. Longer +RTTs will start to fill the box yellow (with a green background) and then red +(with a yellow background). Lost packages are drawn as a bold red explamation +mark. + +=item B + +Show a I where the x-axis, i.e. the width of the window, is the +round-trip time. The entire width of the window it the ping interval, set with +the B<-i> option. + +The box is sized so it contains 50% of the replies. The vertical line shows the +median. The whiskers are sized to contain 95% of the replies -- 2.5% below the +whiskers and 2.5% above. + + |----------[#####|##########]--------------------------------------------| + ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ + 2.75% 25% 50% 75% 97.5% + +=item B + +Show a I of the round-trip times. The width of the window is taken +as round-trip time from 0ms on the left to the I (the B<-i> option, +default 1000ms) on the right. + +The height of the graph is scaled so that the most-used buckets vertically fills +the line. The buckets are colored green up to and including the 80th +percentile, yellow up to and including the 95th percentile and red for the +remainder. =back +=item B<-P> I + +Configures the latency percentile to report. I must be a number +between zero and 100, exclusively in both cases. In general, defaults to B<95>. +If B<-c> is given and a number less than 20, this would be the same as the +maximum. In this case the default is chosen so that it excludes the maximum, +e.g. if B<-cE5> is given, the default is I<80>. The calculated percentile +is based on the last 900 packets (15 minutes with the default interval). + +=item B<-Z> I + +If any hosts have a drop rate higher than I, where I is a +number between zero and 100 inclusively, exit with a non-zero exit status. +Since it is not possible to have a higher drop rate than 100%, passing this +limit will effectively disable the feature (the default). Setting the option to +zero means that the exit status will only be zero if I replies for I +hosts have been received. + +The exit status will indicate the number of hosts with more than I +packets lost, up to a number of 255 failing hosts. + +=back + +=head1 COLORS + +If supported by the terminal, I will highlight the round-trip times +(RTT) using the colors green, yellow and red. Green signals RTTs that are in +the "expected" range, yellow marks moderately unusual times and times that +differ a lot from the expected value are printed in red. + +The information used to categorize round-trip times is the I. RTTs +in the 80th percentile are considered to be "normal" and are printed in green. +RTTs within the 95th percentile are considered "moderately unusual" and are +printed in yellow. RTTs above that are considered to be "unusual" and are +printed in red. + =head1 SEE ALSO -L, L, L +L, L, L =head1 AUTHOR -liboping is written by Florian octo Forster Eocto at verplant.orgE. -It's homepage can be found at L. +liboping is written by Florian "octo" Forster Eff at octo.itE. +Its homepage can be found at L. -(c) 2005, 2006 by Florian octo Forster. +Copyright (c) 2005-2011 by Florian "octo" Forster.