I have a multipath system with 2 physicals, a virtual and a failsafe. All network connectivity is working fine to and from all of the interfaces and the virtual. The one thing that is not working is 'ping -s'. From this machine, I cannot send and receive packets using ping -s. ping without the... (1 Reply)
Helo !
I set up a new server using FreeBSD 6.0-RELEASE. Everything is ok, until I try to connect it to the internet. After I set up the connection I try to ping yahoo.com and I don't get any reply. When I try to ping the gateway I get a lot of replyes for the same packet. It looks similar to this:... (2 Replies)
Hi
Can someone give me a shell script that can ping a range of IPs and return IPs which are not pingable.
Range for example say 192.168.0.1 to 192.168.0.50 and whichever are not pingable then return the IP.
Thanks for your help (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have this script in ksh, what it does is loop every ip in the nodes_nso and produced another variable up_nodes_nso of only ip's that are up.
nodes_nso=$(cat /var/tmp/nodes.txt)
echo "ICMP Tests:"
up_nodes_nso=""
for ip in ${nodes_nso} ; do
ping ${ip} 3 > /dev/null
if ; then
... (1 Reply)
I have 2 physical interfaces (bnx0 and bnx1) aggregated into aggr1. I need to assign second IP, and normally I know how to do it to physical interface (i.e. bnx0:1) however same trick (aggr1:1) is not working. Is there any way to do it? (0 Replies)
anyone ever seen this problem:
I can ping the server by IP address but I can't by hostname.
nslookup is working and dns query is ok.
# nslookup mwxnsb24
Server: 10.11.49.206
Address: 10.11.49.206#53
Name: mwxnsb24
Address: 10.10.58.175
# ping... (8 Replies)
hi guys
This is suse 11 sp1
I have a Server that has 4 NICs, I've created 2 bonds
bond0(eth0-eth1) - 10.10.10.2
bond1(eth2-eth3) - 10.10.10.3
Each bound goes to a Storage Device which is directly connected
so bond0 goes to Storage_Controller_1 and 2 like this
Server_bond0 <-------->... (2 Replies)
Hi Team
we have created a DNS server at RHEL6.2 environment in 10.20.203.x/24 network.
Everything is going well on linux client as nslookup, ping by host etc in entire subnet. We are getting problem in windows client as nslookup working as well but not ping. all the firewall is disabled and... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have ip addresses from 192.168.0.1 to 192.168.0.10.
I have to ping those series of IP address in single command? Which command i can use? (2 Replies)
I am rather new to shell scripting and currently taking a linux course.
Im having some troubles writing a loop to curl multiple ips in mutiple access logs to the site ipinfo.io and push the output to a text file for easy viewing and removing duplicates.
So far i have these simple lines
cat... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kjcraig77
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mrtg-ping-probe
MRTG-PING-PROBE(1) General Commands Manual MRTG-PING-PROBE(1)NAME
mrtg-ping-probe - ping probe module for Multi Router Traffic Grapher
DESCRIPTION
mrtg-ping-probe is a ping probe module for MRTG 2.x. It is used to monitor the round trip time and packet loss to networked devices. MRTG
uses the output of mrtg-ping-probe to generate graphs visualizing minimum and maximum round trip times or packet loss.
mrtg-ping-probe is not run directly, but is called by MRTG as a helper when it needs to determine ping time to a host.
Act responsibly: do not use mrtg-ping-probe to ping devices without the owner's permission. Just imagine if 10,000 people decided to ping
your hosts! mrtg-ping-probe is meant to be used within your network to get round trip time performance figures for your network.
OPTIONS
To use mrtg-ping-probe you need to configure MRTG to call it from within the definition of a target host. This is done in the MRTG config
file, which is usually /etc/mrtg.conf.
Here's an example snippet: change the target name and IP address to suit your needs.
Target[your.target.ping]: `/usr/bin/mrtg-ping-probe 123.456.789.123`
SetEnv[your.target.ping]: MRTG_INT_IP="123.456.789.123" MRTG_INT_DESCR="ping"
MaxBytes[your.target.ping]: 100
AbsMax[your.target.ping]: 200
Options[your.target.ping]: gauge, growright
YLegend[your.target.ping]: ping time (ms)
ShortLegend[your.target.ping]: ms
Legend1[your.target.ping]: Maximum Round Trip Time in ms
Legend2[your.target.ping]: Minimum Round Trip Time in ms
Legend3[your.target.ping]: Maximal 5 Minute Maximum Round Trip Time in ms
Legend4[your.target.ping]: Maximal 5 Minute Minimum Round Trip Time in ms
LegendI[your.target.ping]: Max:
LegendO[your.target.ping]: Min:
Pay close attention to the backticks in the first line which tell MRTG to execute the nominated external program. Note also that you need
to use the "gauge" option, since the results of subsequent ping probes are independant values and not an incrementing counter.
SEE ALSO mrtg(1).
The latest release of mrtg-ping-probe can be found on the web at http://pwo.de/projects/mrtg/
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Jonathan Oxer <jon@debian.org>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
April 14, 2003 MRTG-PING-PROBE(1)