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Full Discussion: Determining typing latency
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Determining typing latency Post 302539361 by matrixmadhan on Sunday 17th of July 2011 01:55:40 AM
Old 07-17-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by mirni
I'd think a simple ping time would be a representative measure of how much delay you get, since the delay is caused by the information that needs to get transmitted through network.
Thanks. I thought of this gropher first but am not really sure whether this is the right one to use for relative metric.

For a region say A, I ping to a local box in region 'A' and ping to remote box in region 'B' which involves a WAN latency. Can I use the average ping metrics to these boxes and say that my typing latency is 'x' times more in remote box when compared to the latency in local box?

Is it a right metric to use?
 

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liboping(3)							     liboping							       liboping(3)

NAME
liboping - Library to send ICMPv4/ICMPv6 echo packets to multiple hosts DESCRIPTION
This is an overview of liboping, a C library to send ICMP ECHO_REQUEST packets to remote hosts and measure the time it takes for replies to be received. This method, often simply called "ping", is a common way to measure network latency and/or host reachability. The goals of this library are to provide the above functionality in a platform and protocol independent manner. The interface is simple, object oriented and (hopefully) ANSI-C compliant. GENERAL USAGE
There are two main types that are used by applications. Both are "opaque types", meaning they are structures that are not completely defined in the header file, so you cannot access the structures' members. You don't need to, don't do it. These structures are subject to change without notice. "pingobj_t" A ping-object. You can set specific options for this object, add and remove hosts to/from it and send ICMP packets to all associated hosts. This is often called a "handle". "pingobj_iter_t" An iterator over the hosts associated with a "pingobj_t" object. This iterator can be used to query more information about a host, for example the hostname, the measured latency or the current ICMP sequence. Upon startup you usually create one or more "pingobj_t" objects and add hosts to it using the "ping_host_add" method (see below). You periodically send "echo requests" using the "ping_send" method, iterate over all hosts using "ping_iterator_get" and "ping_iterator_next". For each host you call "ping_iterator_get_info" to read the current latency and do something with it. If an error occurs you can use "ping_get_error" so get information on what failed. LINKING WITH LIBOPING
Depending on you platform you don't need any extra libraries (e.g. GNU/Linux) or "libsocket" (using "-lsocket") if the "socket" function is not in the C-library. The latter is the case for the Solaris operating system. SYMBOL NAMES
All "official" function or method names are prefixed with "ping_". Don't use any other functions or methods. Although no such functions should exist. THREAD SAFETY
liboping has been designed to be as thread safe a possible. However, this has not been tested and may need some additional work. Use at your own risk and please report back any problems or success messages. Thank you :) SEE ALSO
ping_construct(3), ping_setopt(3), ping_host_add(3), ping_send(3), ping_get_error(3), ping_iterator_get(3), ping_iterator_get_info(3), ping_iterator_get_context(3) LICENSE
liboping is licensed under the GPLv2. No other version of the license is applicable. AUTHOR
liboping is written by Florian "octo" Forster <octo at verplant.org>. Its homepage can be found at <http://verplant.org/liboping/>. Copyright (c) 2005-2011 by Florian "octo" Forster. 1.6.2 2012-01-31 liboping(3)
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