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MRTG-PING-PROBE(1)    User Contributed Perl Documentation   MRTG-PING-PROBE(1)

NAME
       mrtg-ping-probe - a round trip time and packet loss probe for MRTG

SYNOPSIS
       mrtg-ping-probe [ -hsvV ] [ -d deadtime ] [ -k count ] [ -l length ] [
       -o ping_options ] [ -p [factor*]item/[factor*]item ] [ -r
       [rsh:][user@]host[:osname] ] [ -t timeout ] host

DESCRIPTION
       mrtg-ping-probe pings the given host host and prints on stdout two
       lines extracted from the ping output.  The default is to print the
       maximum, and the minimum round trip time.

       It is meant to be called by the Multi Router Traffic Grapher (MRTG).

OPTIONS
       -h      print help on stdout and exit.

       -v      Be more verbose.

       -V      Print version number on stderr and exit.

       -d deadtime
	       Specifies the value we return for round trip times in case we
	       assume that the target is down.	The default is zero.  We
	       assume that the target is unreachable, if we cannot find the
	       ping summary or if the ping program was aborted because of a
	       set timeout.

	       For WAN connections that usually have round trip times of 10ms
	       and higher, ranges of zero round trip time are highly visible.
	       In a LAN environment, you might set it to a high value, e.g.
	       999, which however might change the scale of the graphs in such
	       a way that you hardly see the regular round trip times.	You
	       might use mrtg-misc-probe's pong option to generate a graph
	       that shows reachability of targets, instead.

       -k count
	       Specifies the number of of ping packets to be sent.  The
	       default is to send 10 ping packets.

       -l length
	       Use length as the length of the data portion of the ICMP ECHO
	       request packet.	The default length is 56 data bytes.

       -o ping_options
	       Pass ping_options to the ping program.  You can use this
	       generic option to e.g. pass an option to ping to suppress
	       displaying addresses as host names.  This helps to prevent the
	       ping to fail because it cannot map hostnames to IP addresses
	       and vice versa.	To pass several arguments, enclose the options
	       in quotes.  Check the documentation of your ping program for
	       possible options.

       -p [factor*]item/[factor*]item
	       Pick the values you want mrtg-ping-probe to return.  Allowed
	       values for item are: min, max, avg, loss, or an integer.	 Each
	       item can be preceded by a integer factor used to multiply the
	       value returned by the ping program.  The default pick-list is
	       min/max.

	       To display ping times in microseconds instead of milliseconds,
	       use: -p 1000*max/1000*min.

       -r [rsh:][user@]host[:osname]
	       Not Yet Implemented

	       run ping on remote host host, as user user (or as local user,
	       if no user is given).  Uses rsh -n to start program on remote
	       host, unless you provide a different program name.  If the
	       remote host has a different system type than the local host (if
	       the osname is different) you have to say so.

	       This option can be used if you run mrtg on a host that cannot
	       ping to the final target, and you cannot install mrtg and/or
	       perl on the intermediate host used to ping the final target.

       -s      Silent mode.  Do not generate error messages if there is no
	       response from the ping program or if it ran into the timeout.
	       Usually cron will mail you these error messages, which might be
	       helpful to debug problems.

       -t timeout
	       Abort the external ping program after timeout seconds.  A
	       timeout value of zero (the default) means, we do not abort the
	       external ping program.

	       If mrtg-ping-probe seems to hang forever, check your ping
	       program, it might be a version that wants to receive the given
	       number of ECHO_RESPONSE packets instead of just sending them.
	       If your target is unreachable, these pings ping forever.

	       You want to choose timeout as short as possible to leave mrtg
	       enough time for all your other targets, but long enough so you
	       do not abort pings (too often).	You might use (count * worst
	       case round trip time) as a starting point.  (Or install a ping
	       program that is not broken ;-)

	       If your perl installation does not implement the built-in
	       alarm() function, the timeout option will be ignored.  You will
	       get a warning about this only in verbose mode (option -v).  I
	       have not found a perl installation on Windows that implements
	       the alarm() built-in function on Win32.	So basically on
	       Windows the timeout option is not working.

RETURN VALUE
       The program exits with an exit value 0, if it believes it was
       successful.

EXAMPLES
       mrtg-ping-probe ricochet
	   Retrieves the maximum and minimum round trip time to the host
	   ricochet, using the default length and count.

       mrtg-ping-probe -p max/avg ricochet
	   Retrieves the maximum and average round trip time to the host
	   ricochet, using the default length and count.

       mrtg-ping-probe -p '1000*max/1000*avg' ricochet
	   Retrieves the maximum and average round trip time to the host
	   ricochet multiplied by a factor of 1000, using the default length
	   and count.

       mrtg-ping-probe -k 17 -l 1000 192.168.192.42
	   Retrieves the maximum and minimum round trip time to the host
	   192.168.192.42, using 17 1000 data bytes pings.

       mrtg-ping-probe -o -n ricochet.pwo.de
	   Suppress displaying addresses as host names on Solaris 2 (to
	   protect from DNS problems causing the ping to fail) by passing
	   option -n to the ping program.

	   Note that in this example `-n' is not an option for mrtg-ping-
	   probe, but gets passed to the ping program.

       mrtg-ping-probe -o '-n -I 3' ricochet.pwo.de
	   Pass several options -n -I 3 to the ping program.

       mrtg-ping-probe -p loss/loss ricochet.pwo.de
	   Monitors the packet loss for the link to host ricochet.pwo.de.

FILES
       mrtg-ping-probe uses an external ping program, like /usr/sbin/ping.

SEE ALSO
       mrtg(1), mrtg-ping-cfg, ping(1), mrtg.cfg-ping, mrtg-misc-probe(1)

       http://www.mrtg.org/

       http://pwo.de/projects/mrtg/

DIAGNOSTICS
       FATAL: Not yet configured for osname
	   Currently mrtg-ping-probe depends on an external ping program,
	   which every operating systems hides in another place.  Also
	   different programs require different arguments.  We have a
	   configuration table listing the ping program for each operating
	   systems.  You have to figure out how to call which program on your
	   platform, and add to the information to the table.  Please
	   contribute back any additions, so I can include them in the next
	   version.

       ERROR: ignoring superfluous arguments
	   More than one argument was given.  mrtg-ping-probe will ignore all
	   but the first argument.  The first argument is taken as a hostname
	   or IP address of an host and mrtg-ping-probe will try to ping it.

       FATAL: ping what?
	   No argument was given.  mrtg-ping-probe terminates, as there is
	   nothing to ping.

       FATAL: option option requires numeric argument.
	   The argument for option option was not an integer number.

       FATAL: Can't open ping: some reason
	   mrtg-ping-probe was not able to execute the external ping program.
	   Check the pathname and permissions of the external ping program.
	   some reason might give some useful hints.

       ERROR: external ping hit timeout timeout, assuming target host is
       unreachable
	   We ran into a timeout pinging the target host host.	You might have
	   to increase the timeout value (Option -t) if this happens when the
	   target is up and the round trip time just happens to be longer than
	   usual.

	   The captured output of the ping program is printed and will
	   (hopefully) give further hints why this problem occurred.

	   This message is not printed if mrtg-ping-probe runs in silent mode
	   (Option -s).

       ERROR: Could not find ping summary for host
	   mrtg-ping-probe was not able to find the ping summary.  Most
	   likely, the host is not reachable.  If your operating system
	   changed (e.g. it was upgraded to a new version, or a new version of
	   the ping program was installed), it might also be necessary to
	   change the regular expression that extracts the round trip times.
	   You might want to use the perl script check-ping-fmt (which is part
	   of the source distribution) to test the regular expression.

	   The captured output of the ping program is printed and will
	   (hopefully) give further hints why this problem occurred.

	   This message is not printed if mrtg-ping-probe runs in silent mode
	   (Option -s).

       ERROR: Could not find packet loss summary for host
	   mrtg-ping-probe was not able to find the packet loss summary.  If
	   your operating system changed (e.g. it was upgraded to a new
	   version, or a new version of the ping program was installed), it
	   might also be necessary to change the regular expression that
	   extracts the packet loss.  You might want to use the perl script
	   check-ping-fmt (which is part of the source distribution) to test
	   the regular expression.

	   The captured output of the ping program is printed and will
	   (hopefully) give further hints why this problem occurred.

	   This message is not printed if mrtg-ping-probe runs in silent mode
	   (Option -s).

RESTRICTIONS
       mrtg-ping-probe currently depends on an external ping(1) program.  If
       the external program does not support an option, the option given to
       mrtg-ping-probe will be ignored.

       Under freebsd release 3.x or later, ping option -s packet-length (mrtg-
       ping-probe option -l length) is only allowed to be used when we run as
       root (which we should not), therefore this option is silently removed
       on freebsd before we call the external ping program.

BUGS
       This program has way too many options and tries to support too many
       different systems.

       Using this program to monitor sub-millisecond round trip times or
       packet loss might be questionable.

       Option -r, remote execution of the ping program, is not yet
       implemented.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 1997-2003 Peter W. Osel <pwo@pwo.de>.  All Rights
       Reserved.

       See the file COPYRIGHT in the distribution for the exact terms.

AUTHOR
       Written by Peter W. Osel <pwo@pwo.de>.  http://pwo.de/

perl v5.20.3			  2016-02-18		    MRTG-PING-PROBE(1)
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