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SC_SPEEDTRAP(1) General Commands Manual SC_SPEEDTRAP(1) NAME sc_speedtrap -- scamper driver to resolve aliases for a set of IPv6 in- terfaces. SYNOPSIS sc_speedtrap [-?Iv] [-a addressfile] [-A aliasfile] [-l logfile] [-o outfile] [-p port] [-R unix-remote] [-s stop] [-S skipfile] [-U unix-local] sc_speedtrap [-d dump] [file ...] DESCRIPTION The sc_speedtrap utility provides the ability to connect to a running scamper(1) instance and use it to collect data for alias resolution of a set of IPv6 addresses using the "speedtrap" technique. sc_speedtrap induces each address to send fragmented ICMP echo replies, with the goal of obtaining an incrementing Identifier (ID) field in the fragmen- tation header. If two addresses are aliases, they will return ICMP echo replies with a monotonically increasing value in the ID field be- cause the ID field is implemented as a counter shared amongst all in- terfaces. sc_speedtrap implements a scalable algorithm to quickly de- termine which addresses are aliases. Further information about the al- gorithm is found in the "see also" section. The supported options to sc_speedtrap are as follows: -? prints a list of command line options and a synopsis of each. -v prints the version of sc_speedtrap and exits. -a addressfile specifies the name of the input file which consists of a se- quence of IPv6 addresses to resolve for aliases, one address per line. -A aliasfile specifies the name of an output file which will receive pairs of aliases, one address-pair per line. -d dump specifies the number identifying an analysis task to conduct. Valid dump numbers are 1-3. See the examples section. -I specifies that the addressfile contains only interfaces known to send fragmentation headers containing incrementing values. -l logfile specifies the name of a file to log output from sc_speedtrap generated at run time. -o outfile specifies the name of the output file to be written. The out- put file will use the warts 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. -s stop specifies the step at which sc_speedtrap should halt. The available steps are "classify", "descend", "overlap", "de- scend2", "candidates", and "ally". -S skipfile specifies the name of an input file which contains known aliases that do not need to be resolved, one address-pair per line. -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 IPv6 addresses contained in a file named addressfile.txt and a scamper process listening on port 31337 configured to probe at 30 packets per second started as follows: scamper -P 31337 -p 30 the following command will resolve the addresses for aliases, store the raw measurements in outfile1.warts, and record the interface-pairs that are aliases in aliases.txt: sc_speedtrap -p 31337 -a addressfile.txt -o outfile1.warts -A aliases.txt 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_speedtrap -R /path/to/socket/foo -a addressfile.txt -o outfile2.warts The next example is useful when inferring aliases from multiple vantage points. Given the output of aliases.txt from a previous measurement, the following will resolve the addressfile for aliases, skipping those in aliases.txt, and appending the new aliases to aliases.txt: sc_speedtrap -p 31337 -a addressfile.txt -o outfile3.warts -A aliases.txt -S aliases.txt To obtain a transitive closure of routers from an input warts file: sc_speedtrap -d 1 outfile1.warts To obtain a list of the interfaces probed and their IPID behaviour: sc_speedtrap -d 2 outfile1.warts To obtain statistics of how many probes are sent in each stage, and how long the stage takes: sc_speedtrap -d 3 outfile1.warts SEE ALSO M. Luckie, R. Beverly, W. Brinkmeyer, and k. claffy, Speedtrap: Internet-scale IPv6 Alias Resolution, Proc. ACM/SIGCOMM Internet Measurement Conference 2013. scamper(1), sc_ally(1), sc_ipiddump(1), sc_remoted(1), sc_wartsdump(1), sc_warts2text(1), sc_warts2json(1) AUTHORS sc_speedtrap was written by Matthew Luckie <mjl@luckie.org.nz>. FreeBSD Ports 14.quarterly February 25, 2025 SC_SPEEDTRAP(1)
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | AUTHORS
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