10-29-2009
How to Know is a Remote hosts have open port
Hi gurus of unix!!!!, I have a little question. I nedd your helps
The scenarios is the following
I have tree equipment that are installed in different places. I use a carrier to interconnect the equipment.
Some Port's (TCP) need to be open for an application that must be function correctly.
For example:
Place 1: have the following IP 10.20.30.1
Place 2: have the following IP 20.30.40.1
Place 3: have the following IP 30.40.50.1
The application need the following port(TCP), for example 1020, 21, 53, 8080
I talk to the Network Administratos of the Carrier and he tell me that these port (TCP) are open in your firewall/router.
The question is How I verify that this port are open?,
Suppose that the application is properly installed
Help me please.
Regard
Andres
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
test::tcp
Test::TCP(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::TCP(3pm)
NAME
Test::TCP - testing TCP program
SYNOPSIS
use Test::TCP;
my $server = Test::TCP->new(
code => sub {
my $port = shift;
...
},
);
my $client = MyClient->new(host => '127.0.0.1', port => $server->port);
undef $server; # kill child process on DESTROY
Using memcached:
use Test::TCP;
my $memcached = Test::TCP->new(
code => sub {
my $port = shift;
exec $bin, '-p' => $port;
die "cannot execute $bin: $!";
},
);
my $memd = Cache::Memcached->new({servers => ['127.0.0.1:' . $memcached->port]});
...
And functional interface is available:
use Test::TCP;
test_tcp(
client => sub {
my ($port, $server_pid) = @_;
# send request to the server
},
server => sub {
my $port = shift;
# run server
},
);
DESCRIPTION
Test::TCP is test utilities for TCP/IP programs.
METHODS
empty_port
my $port = empty_port();
Get the available port number, you can use.
test_tcp
Functional interface.
test_tcp(
client => sub {
my $port = shift;
# send request to the server
},
server => sub {
my $port = shift;
# run server
},
# optional
port => 8080
);
wait_port
wait_port(8080);
Waits for a particular port is available for connect.
OO-ish interface
my $server = Test::TCP->new(%args);
Create new instance of Test::TCP.
Arguments are following:
$args{auto_start}: Boolean
Call "$server->start()" after create instance.
Default: true
$args{code}: CodeRef
The callback function. Argument for callback function is: "$code->($pid)".
This parameter is required.
$server->start()
Start the server process. Normally, you don't need to call this method.
$server->stop()
Stop the server process.
my $pid = $server->pid();
Get the pid of child process.
my $port = $server->port();
Get the port number of child process.
FAQ
How to invoke two servers?
You can call test_tcp() twice!
test_tcp(
client => sub {
my $port1 = shift;
test_tcp(
client => sub {
my $port2 = shift;
# some client code here
},
server => sub {
my $port2 = shift;
# some server2 code here
},
);
},
server => sub {
my $port1 = shift;
# some server1 code here
},
);
Or use OO-ish interface instead.
my $server1 = Test::TCP->new(code => sub {
my $port1 = shift;
...
});
my $server2 = Test::TCP->new(code => sub {
my $port2 = shift;
...
});
# your client code here.
...
How do you test server program written in other languages like memcached?
You can use "exec()" in child process.
use strict;
use warnings;
use utf8;
use Test::More;
use Test::TCP 1.08;
use File::Which;
my $bin = scalar which 'memcached';
plan skip_all => 'memcached binary is not found' unless defined $bin;
my $memcached = Test::TCP->new(
code => sub {
my $port = shift;
exec $bin, '-p' => $port;
die "cannot execute $bin: $!";
},
);
use Cache::Memcached;
my $memd = Cache::Memcached->new({servers => ['127.0.0.1:' . $memcached->port]});
$memd->set(foo => 'bar');
is $memd->get('foo'), 'bar';
done_testing;
AUTHOR
Tokuhiro Matsuno <tokuhirom@gmail.com>
THANKS TO
kazuhooku
dragon3
charsbar
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa
lestrrat
SEE ALSO
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-02-01 Test::TCP(3pm)