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SC_PINGER(1) General Commands Manual SC_PINGER(1) NAME sc_pinger -- scamper driver to run ping with different probe methods on a list of addresses. SYNOPSIS sc_pinger [-?Dv] [-a infile] [-b batch-size] [-c probe-count] [-l limit] [-m method] [-M move-dir] [-o outfile] [-p port] [-R unix-remote] [-t logfile] [-U unix-local] DESCRIPTION The sc_pinger utility provides the ability to connect to a running scamper(1) instance and run ping on a set of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. For each address in the file, sc_pinger will try ICMP, UDP, and TCP-ack probe methods to solicit responses from the address. sc_pinger will not try all methods if one method obtains responses. The output of sc_pinger is written to a warts(5) file, which can then be processed to extract details of responses. The options are as follows: -? prints a list of command line options and a synopsis of each. -v prints the version of sc_pinger and exits. -D causes sc_pinger to detach and become a daemon. -a infile specifies the name of the input file which consists of a se- quence of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, one per line. -b batch-count specifies the number of addresses sent to scamper(1) in each batch. This is useful when using a remote scamper instance, as the delay between where sc_pinger is run, and where the remote scamper(1) instance is, can restrict throughput. By default, sc_pinger sends a single address at a time. -c probe-count specifies the number of probes to send for each method. sc_pinger accepts two formats: a single integer that specifies the number of probes (and responses) desired; or, two integers, separated by /, that specify the number of responses desired and maximum number of probes to send. By default, sc_pinger seeks three responses from up to five probes. -l limit specifies the number of objects to write to an output file, be- fore closing it and opening the next file. The output file must contain a %u format specifier, which sc_pinger uses to em- bed a counter value that increments with each new output file. If the user uses the move option, sc_pinger moves the file when it closes the file. -m method specifies a single probe method to try. The available probe methods are the same as scamper's ping implementation, listed in scamper(1) manual page. By default, sc_pinger uses ICMP- echo, UDP-dport, and TCP-ack-sport to destination port 80. -M move-dir specifies the name of the directory to move completed files to. By default, sc_pinger leaves completed files in place. -o outfile specifies the name of the output file to be written. The out- put file will use the warts(5) format. -p port specifies the port on the local host where scamper(1) is ac- cepting control socket connections. -R unix-remote specifies the name of a unix domain socket on the local host where a remote scamper(1) instance is accepting commands. The unix-remote parameter can either be a unix domain socket for a single remote scamper(1) instance, or be a sc_remoted(1) mux socket with the name of the remote VP encoded after a trailing slash. -t logfile specifies the name of a file to log output from sc_pinger gen- erated at run time. -U unix-local specifies the name of a unix domain socket on the local host where a local scamper(1) instance is accepting commands. EXAMPLES Given a set of IPv4 and IPv6 address sets in a file named infile.txt: 192.0.2.1 192.0.32.10 192.0.31.60 2001:db8::1 and a scamper(1) daemon listening on port 31337, then these addresses can be probed using: sc_pinger -a infile.txt -o outfile.warts -p 31337 To send 4 probes, and stop after receiving two responses: sc_pinger -a infile.txt -o outfile.warts -p 31337 -c 2/4 To use ICMP-echo and TCP-syn probes to destination port 443: sc_pinger -a infile.txt -o outfile.warts -p 31337 -m icmp-echo -m 'tcp-syn -d 443' The following command writes a series of gzip-compressed warts(5) files, each of which have up to 1000 objects in them, with names such as outfile_0000.warts.gz, outfile_0001.warts.gz, moving them to the finished directory: sc_pinger -a infile.txt -o outfile_%04u.warts.gz -p 31337 -l 1000 -m finished A user can concatenate these files into a final bzip2-compressed warts(5) file with sc_wartscat(1): sc_wartscat -o outfile_final.warts.bz2 outfile_0000.warts.gz outfile_0001.warts.gz Given a sc_remoted(1) process listening on a unix domain socket named /path/to/socket, and a remote vantage point named 'foo' connected to the controller, probe the addresses with the remote vantage point us- ing: sc_pinger -a infile.txt -o outfile.warts -R /path/to/socket/foo SEE ALSO scamper(1), sc_minrtt(1), sc_remoted(1), sc_wartscat(1), sc_wartsdump(1), sc_warts2json(1), sc_warts2text(1) AUTHORS sc_pinger was written by Matthew Luckie <mjl@luckie.org.nz>. FreeBSD Ports 14.quarterly February 25, 2025 SC_PINGER(1)
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | AUTHORS
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