Provided by: oping_1.10.0-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       oping - send ICMP ECHO_REQUEST to network hosts

SYNOPSIS

       oping [-4 | -6] [-c count] [-i interval] host [host [host ...]]

       oping [-4 | -6] [-c count] [-i interval] -f filename

       noping [-4 | -6] [-c count] [-i interval] host [host [host ...]]

       noping [-4 | -6] [-c count] [-i interval] -f filename

DESCRIPTION

       oping uses ICMPv4 or ICMPv6 ECHO_REQUEST packets to measure a hosts reachability and the
       network latency. In contrast to the original ping(8) utility oping can send ICMP packets
       to multiple hosts in parallel and wait for all ECHO_RESPONSE packets to arrive. In
       contrast to the fping utility (URL is listed in "SEE ALSO") oping can use both, IPv4 and
       IPv6 transparently and side by side.

       noping is an ncurses-based front-end to liboping which displays ping statistics online and
       highlights aberrant round-trip times if the terminal supports colors.

OPTIONS

       -4  Force the use of IPv4.

       -6  Force the use of IPv6.

       -c count
           Send (and receive) count ICMP packets, then stop and exit.

       -i interval
           Send one ICMP packet (per host) each interval seconds. This can be a floating-point
           number to specify sub-second precision.

       -w timeout
           Specifies the time to wait for an "ECHO REPLY" packet before giving up, in seconds.
           This can be a floating point number for sub-second precision. Defaults to 1.0 seconds.

       -t ttl
           Set the IP Time to Live to ttl. This must be a number between (and including)
           1 and 255. If omitted, the value 64 is used.

       -I address
           Set the source address to use. You may either specify an IP number or a hostname. You
           cannot pass the interface name, as you can with GNU's ping(8) - use the -D option for
           that purpose.

       -D interface name
           Set the outgoing network device to use.

       -f filename
           Instead of specifying hostnames on the command line, read them from filename. If
           filename is -, read from "STDIN".

           If oping is installed with the SetUID-bit, it will set the effective UID to the real
           UID before opening the file. In the special (but common) case that oping is owned by
           the super-user (UID 0), this means that privileges are temporarily dropped before
           opening the file, in order to prevent users from reading arbitrary files on the
           system.

           If your system doesn't provide saved set-user IDs (this was an optional feature before
           POSIX 2001), the behavior is different because it is not possible to temporarily drop
           privileges. The alternative behavior is: If the real user ID (as returned by
           getuid(2)) and the effective user ID (as returned by geteuid(2)) differ, the only
           argument allowed for this option is "-" (i.e. standard input).

       -O filename
           Write measurements in Comma Separated Values (CSV) format to filename.  This option
           writes three columns per row: wall clock time in (fractional) seconds since epoch,
           hostname and the round trip time in milliseconds.

       -Q qos
           Specify the Quality of Service (QoS) for outgoing packets. This is a somewhat tricky
           option, since the meaning of the bits in the IPv4 header has been revised several
           times.

           The currently recommended method is Differentiated Services which is used in IPv6
           headers as well. There are shortcuts for various predefined per-hop behaviors (PHBs):

           be  Selects the Best Effort behavior. This is the default behavior.

           ef  Selects the Expedited Forwarding (EF) per-hop behavior, as defined in RFC 3246.
               This PHB is characterised by low delay, low loss and low jitter, i.e. high
               priority traffic.

           va  Selects the Voice Admitted (VA) per-hop behavior, as defined in RFC 5865. This
               traffic class is meant for Voice over IP (VoIP) traffic which uses Call Admission
               Control (CAC) for reserving network capacity.

           afcp
               Selects one of 12 differentiated services code points (DSCPs), which are organized
               in four classes with three priorities each. Therefore, c must be a number
               between 1 through 4 and p must be a number between 1 through 3, for example
               "af13", "af22" and "af41". In each class, the lower priority number takes
               precedence over the higher priority number.

           csn Selects one of the eight Class Selector PHBs. n is a number between 0 through 7.
               The class selectors have been defined to be compatible to the Precedence field in
               the IPv4 header as defined in RFC 791. Please note that "cs0" is synonymous to
               "be".

           The old definition of the same bits in the IPv4 header was as Type of Service (ToS)
           field, specified in RFC 1349. It defined four possible values which have appropriate
           aliases. Please note that this use of the bits is deprecated and the meaning is
           limited to IPv4!

           lowdelay
               Minimize delay

           throughput
               Maximize throughput

           reliability
               Maximize reliability

           mincost
               Minimize monetary cost

           Alternatively, you can also specify the byte manually. You can use either a decimal
           number (0-255), a hexadecimal number (0x00-0xff) or an octal number (00-0377) using
           the usual "0x" and "0" prefixes for hexadecimal and octal respectively.

           The printed lines will contain information about the QoS field of received packets if
           either a non-standard QoS setting was used on outgoing packets or if the QoS byte of
           incoming packets is not zero. In other words, the QoS information is omitted if both,
           the outgoing and the incoming QoS bytes are zero. The received byte is always
           interpreted as Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) and Explicit Congestion
           Notification (ECN), even if the deprecated Type of Service (ToS) aliases were used to
           specify the bits of outgoing packets.

       -m mark
           Linux only Sets the mark (an integer number) on outgoing packets. This can be used by
           iptables(8) and other networking infrastructure for filtering and routing.

       -u|-U
           noping only -u forces UTF-8 output, -U disables UTF-8 output. If neither is given, the
           codeset is automatically determined from the locale.

       -g none|prettyping|boxplot|histogram
           noping only Selects the graph to display.

           none
               Do not show a graph.

           prettyping
               Show a graph with time on the x-axis, the y-axis shows the round-trip time.  This
               is the default graph.

               If your terminal supports unicode and colors, they are used to improve the
               precision of the data shown: a green box is drawn for round-trip times up to one
               third of the configured timeout, the height representing the RTT. Longer RTTs will
               start to fill the box yellow (with a green background) and then red (with a yellow
               background). Lost packages are drawn as a bold red explamation mark.

           boxplot
               Show a box plot where the x-axis, i.e. the width of the window, is the round-trip
               time. The entire width of the window it the ping interval, set with the -i option.

               The box is sized so it contains 50% of the replies. The vertical line shows the
               median. The whiskers are sized to contain 95% of the replies -- 2.5% below the
               whiskers and 2.5% above.

                 |----------[#####|##########]--------------------------------------------|
                 ^          ^     ^          ^                                            ^
                2.5%       25%   50%        75%                                         97.5%

           histogram
               Show a histrogram of the round-trip times. The width of the window is taken as
               round-trip time from 0ms on the left to the interval (the -i option, default
               1000ms) on the right.

               The height of the graph is scaled so that the most-used buckets vertically fills
               the line. The buckets are colored green up to and including the 80th percentile,
               yellow up to and including the 95th percentile and red for the remainder.

       -b  Audible bell. Print a ASCII BEL character (\a or 0x07) when a packet is received
           before the timeout occurs. This can be useful in order to monitory hosts' connectivity
           without looking physically at the console, for example to trace network cables (start
           audible beep, disconnect cable N: if beep stops, the cable was in use) or to tell when
           a host returns from a reboot.

           This relies on the terminal bell to be functional. To enable the terminal bell, use
           the following instructions.

           •   the visual bell is disabled in your terminal emulator, with the +vb commandline
               flag or the following in your .Xresources:

                XTerm*visualBell: false

           •   the PC speaker module is loaded in your kernel:

                modprobe pcspkr

           •   X11 has the terminal bell enabled:

                xset b on; xset b 100

           •   and finally, if you are using PulseAudio, that the module-x11-bell module is
               loaded with a pre-loaded sample defined in your pulseaudio configuration:

                load-sample-lazy x11-bell /usr/share/sounds/freedesktop/stereo/complete.oga
                load-module module-x11-bell sample=x11-bell

       -P percent
           Configures the latency percentile to report. percent must be a number between zero and
           100, exclusively in both cases. In general, defaults to 95.  If -c is given and a
           number less than 20, this would be the same as the maximum. In this case the default
           is chosen so that it excludes the maximum, e.g. if -c 5 is given, the default is 80.
           The calculated percentile is based on the last 900 packets (15 minutes with the
           default interval).

       -Z percent
           If any hosts have a drop rate higher than percent, where percent is a number between
           zero and 100 inclusively, exit with a non-zero exit status.  Since it is not possible
           to have a higher drop rate than 100%, passing this limit will effectively disable the
           feature (the default). Setting the option to zero means that the exit status will only
           be zero if all replies for all hosts have been received.

           The exit status will indicate the number of hosts with more than percent packets lost,
           up to a number of 255 failing hosts.

COLORS

       If supported by the terminal, noping will highlight the round-trip times (RTT) using the
       colors green, yellow and red. Green signals RTTs that are in the "expected" range, yellow
       marks moderately unusual times and times that differ a lot from the expected value are
       printed in red.

       The information used to categorize round-trip times is the percentile. RTTs in the 80th
       percentile are considered to be "normal" and are printed in green.  RTTs within the 95th
       percentile are considered "moderately unusual" and are printed in yellow. RTTs above that
       are considered to be "unusual" and are printed in red.

INTERACTIVE KEYBOARD CONTROLS

       When running noping, the type of graph being displayed can be changed by using the g key.
       A new host can be added at any time with the a key.

SEE ALSO

       ping(8), <http://fping.org/>, liboping(3)

LICENSE

       oping and noping are licensed under the GPL 2.  No other version of the license is
       applicable.

AUTHOR

       liboping is written by Florian "octo" Forster <ff at octo.it>.  Its homepage can be found
       at <http://noping.cc/>.

       Copyright (c) 2006-2017 by Florian "octo" Forster.