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Name

ping - send ICMP ECHO_REQUEST packets to network hosts

Synopsis

/usr/sbin/ping host [ timeout ]

/usr/sbin/ping [ -s ] [ -dlLnrRv ] [ -i interface ] [ -I interval ] [ -t ttl ] host [ packetsize ] [ count ]

Availability

SUNWcsu

Description

ping utilizes the ICMP protocol’s ECHO_REQUEST datagram to elicit an ICMP ECHO_RESPONSE from the specified host or network gateway. If host responds, ping will print host is alive on the standard output and exit. Otherwise after timeout seconds, it will write no answer from host. The default value of timeout is 20 seconds.

When the -s flag is specified, ping sends one datagram per second (adjustable with -I), and prints one line of output for every ECHO_RESPONSE that it receives. No output is produced if there is no response. In this second form, ping computes round trip times and packet loss statistics; it displays a summary of this information upon termination or timeout. The default datagram packet size is 64 bytes, or you can specify a size with the packetsize command-line argument. If an optional count is given, ping sends only that number of requests.

When using ping for fault isolation, first ping the local host to verify that the local network interface is running.

If ping is successful and the host responds, the exist status is 0. If a host does not respond, or an error was returned, the exit status is 1.

Options

-d
Set the SO_DEBUG socket option.
-l
Loose source route. Use this option in the IP header to send the packet to the given host and back again. Usually specified with the -R option.
-L
Turn off loopback of multicast packets. Normally, if there are members in the host group on the outgoing interface, a copy of the multicast packets will be delivered to the local machine.
-n
Show network addresses as numbers. ping normally displays addresses as host names.
-r
Bypass the normal routing tables and send directly to a host on an attached network. If the host is not on a directly-attached network, an error is returned. This option can be used to ping a local host through an interface that has been dropped by the router daemon (see in.routed(1M) ).
-R
Record route. Sets the IP record route option, which will store the route of the packet inside the IP header. The contents of the record route will only be printed if the -v option is given, and only be set on return packets if the target host preserves the record route option across echos, or the -l option is given.
-v
Verbose output. List any ICMP
packets, other than ECHO_RESPONSE, that are received.
-i interface
Specify the outgoing interface to use for multicast packets. The default interface for multicast packets is determined from the (unicast) routing tables.
-I interval
Specify the interval between successive transmissions. The default is one second.
-t ttl
Specify the IP time to live for unicast and multicast packets. The default time to live for unicast packets is set with ndd (using the icmp_def_ttl variable). The default time to live for multicast is one hop.

Exit Status

The following exit values are returned:
  1. Success -- the machine is alive.
    non-zero
    An error has occurred -- either a malformed argument has been specified, or the machine was not alive.

    See Also

    ifconfig(1M) , in.routed(1M) , netstat(1M) , ndd(1M) , rpcinfo(1M) , icmp(7P)


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