Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: issue a ping on a remote box
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting issue a ping on a remote box Post 302259844 by hcclnoodles on Wednesday 19th of November 2008 04:58:04 AM
Old 11-19-2008
issue a ping on a remote box

Hi there

I am running a script on a central box (boxA) that will send a remote request to boxB to perform a ping test to an ip

note: I am not pinging boxB from boxA but sending a request over ssh to get boxB to perform a ping test !

The thing is, I want the script back at boxA to know whether the remote ping was successful or not ...is this possible, i tried using this 'if' test condition hoping that a true/false would come back, am i doing something wrong?

Code:
[root@boxA] # vi test  

#!/bin/ksh -x

if [ `ssh boxB 'ping 172.1.1.1'` ]; then
echo "can ping from boxA"
else
echo "cant ping at all"
fi

NOTE: this ip is in fact definitely pingable from boxB but I get the following return from my script

Code:
[root@boxA] # ./test
+ FCEDIT=vi
+ export FCEDIT
+ set -o vi
+ + uname -n
PS1=boxA$ 
+ EDITOR=vi
+ export EDITOR
+ ssh boxB ping 172.1.1.1
+ [ 172.1.1.1 is alive ]
./test[5]: is: unknown test operator
+ echo cant ping at all
cant ping at all

As you can see from the bit highlighted in red above, the remote ping seems to be working, but how do I get my local script on boxA to be made aware of this

Any help on this would be greatly appreciated
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Cybersecurity

securing a remote box

someone has access to my server... I've got a solaris 7 box with remote access only. many of the services don't have passwords and someone recently messed with the shadow file -the root: line was changed: . password field was changed to NP . the number after that was changed too The... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: sphiengollie
8 Replies

2. SCO

Openserver 5.0.4 can't be ping or telnet into from a remote site

Hi, Can anybody help me out why l can't not ping my server with Openserver 5.0.4 with my windows machine from a remote site. The machine could see the local LAN with the Router however, i can't ping or telnet unto the server from another site on the WAN. The default gateway was configure on the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kayode
0 Replies

3. Programming

cathcing `mozilla -remote ping()` within c++

Here is my problem. An extension and alternative to my initial post https://www.unix.com/showthread.php?t=18043 This is what I have done so far to counter it. In my application, I have used /usr/bin/mozilla -remote "openURL(URL)" The -remote makes sure that I go and open the URL in an... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vino
1 Replies

4. Linux

Can't SSH / ping Linux box !!!

I have a linux box build11 which can be pinged from build18 (Windows) box. And we can only login to the box (using SSH) from build18 box. Plz help to characterize the problem, network, DNS, DHCP, etc (or whatever which I am unsure) Any idea what may be the reason ? :confused: Thanks in... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: csaha
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with Ping command for windows Box

Hi, I would like to write a script for checking the windows remote server has responding or not from Unix box. 123.34.56.222-- the windows remote server I wrote like: ping 123.34.56.222 PING 123.34.56.222: 64 byte packets 64 bytes from 123.34.56.222: icmp_seq=0. time=8. ms 64... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: koti_rama
1 Replies

6. Linux

How to find remote Linux box login account without login in to that box?

Hi, How to find remote Linux box login account without login in to that box? I don't have login account at my remote Linux box. But I need who are all having login account. How do I findout? Thanks, --Muthu. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Muthuselvan
3 Replies

7. Red Hat

Can't ping my unix box by name

Hi All, I have recently setup a Windows 2003 server as AD / Domain Controller. In it, I have a VMWare for RHEL 4. I have 3 other computers connected to the network all using Windows 7. These computers can ping each other by name. But none of these can ping the Unix OS in the VMWare of the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: adshocker
5 Replies

8. AIX

Ping to remote host failed

Actually. I was getting a ping to remote host failed for one of my etherchannel. When I checked it was in backup adapter and again I use to faileover and brought to primary channel. But it was again going to backup channel and giving me the alert ping to remotehost failed. When I checked the load... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mohamed Thamim
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Notify when the script run(hourly)on my jump-box only when there is a failure on my remote-box

Team, Presently I have a script, which i have set up cron on one of my Jump-boxes,and gives me the output on every hourly basis,fetching the data from the remote machine.Basically it gives me the list of all active users logged and its count once we execute the script.Here the count is... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: whizkidash
6 Replies

10. BSD

Ping remote sever, nc, telnet, whatever

I put this thread to shell and bsd, because I want to resolve this matter on bsd. May somebody can explain to me how to ping a remote server, in unix. BTW the following code examples were tried on a linux system as well, with the same output, nothing. But on my bsd are not installed nmap neither... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: 1in10
4 Replies
External(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     External(3pm)

NAME
Net::Ping::External - Cross-platform interface to ICMP "ping" utilities SYNOPSIS
In general: use Net::Ping::External qw(ping); ping(%options); Some examples: use Net::Ping::External qw(ping); # Ping a single host my $alive = ping(host => "127.0.0.1"); print "127.0.0.1 is online" if $alive; # Or a list of hosts my @hosts = qw(127.0.0.1 127.0.0.2 127.0.0.3 127.0.0.4); my $num_alive = 0; foreach (@hosts) { $alive = ping(hostname => $_, timeout => 5); print "$_ is alive! " if $alive; $num_alive++; } print "$num_alive hosts are alive. "; # Using all the fancy options: ping(hostname => "127.0.0.1", count => 5, size => 1024, timeout => 3); DESCRIPTION
Net::Ping::External is a module which interfaces with the "ping" command on many systems. It presently provides a single function, "ping()", that takes in a hostname and (optionally) a timeout and returns true if the host is alive, and false otherwise. Unless you have the ability (and willingness) to run your scripts as the superuser on your system, this module will probably provide more accurate results than Net::Ping will. Why? o ICMP ping is the most reliable way to tell whether a remote host is alive. o However, Net::Ping cannot use an ICMP ping unless you are running your script with privileged (AKA "root") access. o The system's "ping" command uses ICMP and does not usually require privileged access. o While it is relatively trivial to write a Perl script that parses the output of the "ping" command on a given system, the aim of this module is to encapsulate this functionality and provide a single interface for it that works on many systems. ping() OPTIONS This module is still "alpha"; it is expected that more options to the "ping()" function will be added soon. o "host, hostname" The hostname (or dotted-quad IP address) of the remote host you are trying to ping. You must specify either the "hostname" option or the "ip" option. "host" and "hostname" are synonymous. o "ip" A packed bit-string representing the 4-byte packed IP address (as returned by "Socket.pm"'s "inet_aton()" function) of the host that you would like to ping. o "timeout" The maximum amount of time, in seconds, that "ping()" will wait for a response. If the remote system does not respond before the timeout has elapsed, "ping()" will return false. Default value: 5. o "count" The number of ICMP ping packets to send to the remote host. Eventually, Net::Ping::External will return the number of packets that were acknowledged by the remote host; for now, however, "ping()" still returns just true or false. Default value: 1. o "size" Specifies the number of data bytes to be sent. The default is 56, which translates into 64 ICMP data bytes when combined with the 8 bytes of ICMP header data. Default value: 56. SUPPORTED PLATFORMS Support currently exists for interfacing with the standard ping utilities on the following systems. Please note that the path to the `ping' should be somewhere in your PATH environment variable (or your system's closest equivalent thereof.) Otherwise, Net::Ping::External will be unable to locate your system's `ping' command. o Win32 Tested OK on Win98, Win XP. It should work on other Windows systems as well. o Cygwin Tested OK on Cygwin 1.5.21. Problem is that we may be running windows ping. They have different options. o Linux Tested OK on Debian 2.2 and Redhat 6.2. It appears that different versions of Linux use different versions of ping, which support different options. Not sure how I'm going to resolve this yet; for now, all the options but "count" are disabled. o BSD Tested OK on OpenBSD 2.7 and 3.0, Netbsd 1.5.3, Freebsd 4.6.2, 5.4. Needs testing for BSDi. o Solaris Tested OK on Solaris 2.6 and 2.7. o IRIX Tested OK on IRIX 6.5. o AIX, DEC OSF, UNICOSMK, NeXTStep, HP-UX, BSD/OS (BSDi), BeOS Support for these systems is integrated into this module but none have been tested yet. If you have successful or unsuccessful test results for any of these systems, please send them to me. On some of these systems, some of the arguments may not be supported. If you'd like to see better support on your system, please e-mail me. More systems will be added as soon as any users request them. If your system is not currently supported, e-mail me; adding support to your system is probably trivial. BUGS
This module should be considered beta. Bugs may exist. Although no specific bugs are known at this time, the module could use testing on a greater variety of systems. See the warning below. WARNING
This module calls whatever "ping" program it first finds in your PATH environment variable. If your PATH contains a trojan "ping" program, this module will call that program. This involves a small amount of risk, but no more than simply typing "ping" at a system prompt. Beware Greeks bearing gifts. AUTHOR
Alexandr Ciornii (alexchorny AT gmail.com), Colin McMillen (colinm AT cpan.org) This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. CREDITS
Dan Moore contributed command-line options and code for NeXT, BeOS, HP-UX, and BSD/OS. Jarkko Hietaniemi contributed a huge list of command-line options and results for the `ping' command on 9 different systems. Randy Moore contributed several patches for Win32 support. Marc-Andre Dumas contributed a patch for FreeBSD support. Jonathan Stowe fixed a bug in 0.09 that prevented the module from running on some systems. Numerous people sent in a patch to fix a bug in 0.10 that broke ping on Windows systems. Peter N. Lewis contributed a patch that works correctly on Mac OS X 10.2 (and hopefully other versions as well). SEE ALSO
Net::Ping perl v5.10.1 2008-12-18 External(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:19 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy