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B-31
Chapter 1 Network Administration
Remote Annex 6300 Supplement to the Remote Annex Administrator’s Guide for UNIX
Book B
Table B-12. Arguments for the ping Command (continued)
ping Sample Display
The ping command display looks like this:
annex01# ping caddy
PING caddy: 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 132.245.6.25: icmp_seq=0. time=37. ms
64 bytes from 132.245.6.25: icmp_seq=1. time=12. ms
64 bytes from 132.245.6.25: icmp_seq=2. time=12. ms
64 bytes from 132.245.6.25: icmp_seq=3. time=12. ms
----caddy PING Statistics----
4 packets transmitted, 4 packets received, 0% packet loss
round-trip (ms) min/avg/max = 12/20/37
Argument
Description
–t
Traces the path of a packet from the local host to the destination
host and back, displaying information about each router in the
path. This option allows you to see whether a packet arrived at
and/or returned from its remote destination and, if not, where it
stopped. The option is based on the Traceroute facility
described in RFC 1393.
You can use –t with the –r and/or –v argument(s), but not with
–a.
–v
Displays the IP and ICMP packet headers for the reply from the
host.
host
The host, router, or RA 6300 to which the ping is sent.
databytes
The number of bytes of data in the ICMP Echo Request
message. The default is 56.
Summary of Contents for 6300
Page 4: ...Remote Annex 6300 Supplement to the Remote Annex Administrator s Guide for UNIX iv ...
Page 20: ...Remote Annex 6300 Supplement to the Remote Annex Administrator s Guide for UNIX Figures xx ...
Page 24: ...Remote Annex 6300 Supplement to the Remote Annex Administrator s Guide for UNIX Tables xxiv ...