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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Shell script to ping a range of IPs Post 302364356 by Scrutinizer on Thursday 22nd of October 2009 09:49:26 PM
Old 10-22-2009
This script is a bit more elaborate as it will perform the probes in parallel, so it doesn't take much time
Code:
probe () {
  ping -c1 -w5 $1 >&- 2>&- || touch /tmp/pingfail.$1
}
rm /tmp/pingfail.* 2>&-
for i in $(seq 1 50); do
  probe 192.168.0.$i &
done;
wait
for failip in /tmp/pingfail.*; do
  echo ${failip#*.}
done|sort -nt. -k1,1 -k2,2 -k3,3 -k4,4
rm /tmp/pingfail.* 2>&-

You'd have to check if the ping on your system supports these options or use something equivalent, so that the ping stops after a number of seconds:

My man ping:

-c count
Stop after sending count ECHO_REQUEST packets. With deadline option, ping waits for count
ECHO_REPLY packets, until the timeout expires.

-w deadline
Specify a timeout, in seconds, before ping exits regardless of how many packets have been
sent or received. In this case ping does not stop after count packet are sent, it waits
either for deadline expire or until count probes are answered or for some error notification
from network.

Last edited by Scrutinizer; 10-22-2009 at 11:01 PM..
 

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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]: &nbsp;Max: LegendO[your.target.ping]: &nbsp;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)
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