man dnping (Commandes) - Loopbacks diagnostic packets through a remote node
NAME
dnping - Loopbacks diagnostic packets through a remote node
SYNOPSIS
dnping
nodename [user pass] count
or
dnping
nodename [options] nodename
Options:
[dqsv] [-c number] [-i interval] [-p password] [-s size] [-u username] [-w timeout]
DESCRIPTION
This utility sends to remote DECnet node
nodename
the number of packets specified by
count
to test the link between the two systems. Optionally a
username and password may be specified for the connection as well as
several other options. NOTE that if you dnping another Linux box it must
have
dnetd
running.
NOTE also that dnping is not really like an IP "ping" in that it needs
a registered object at the other end to connect to. So, just because
you cannot ping a machine does not, necessarily, mean that machine
is not available, just that the MIRROR object is not available. There
is not (to my knowledge) a low-level equivalent in DECnet of the ICMP
ping message.
OPTIONS
- -c number
- Number of packets to send (default 10)
- -d
- Debug mode (default off)
- -i interval
- interval between packets in microseconds (default 0)
- -p password
- Access control password. If this is "-" then you will be prompted.
- -q
- Quiet mode (default off)
- -s size
- size of frame to send in bytes (40 data + 68 hdr)
- -t
- timestamps mode (default off)
- -u username
- access control username
- -w timeout
- Specifies a timeout (in seconds). If not response is received after this time then dnping will abort. The default is to wait forever.
- -v
- verbose mode (default off)
EXAMPLES
Pings 10 packets through remote node "mv3100"
# dnping mv3100 10
Make it look a bit like IP ping:
# dnping -vti 1000000 marsha