Provided by: scamper_20211212-1.1_amd64 bug

NAME

     sc_erosprober — scamper driver to periodically probe addresses and rotate output files.

SYNOPSIS

     sc_erosprober [-a addrfile] [-c command] [-I interval] [-l logfile] [-o outfile] [-O option]
                   [-p port] [-R rotation] [-U unix-scamper] [-x unix-control]

DESCRIPTION

     The sc_erosprober utility provides the ability to connect to a running scamper(1) instance
     and use it to periodically probe a set of addresses at a defined interval, and periodically
     rotate the output file at a defined interval.  The supported options to sc_erosprober are as
     follows:

     -a addrfile
             specifies the name of the input file which consists of a sequence of IP addresses to
             probe, one address per line.

     -c command
             specifies the command to use with each address.  sc_erosprober supports the trace
             and ping commands, and their options, in scamper.  scamper(1) documents the options
             available in trace and ping.

     -I interval
             specifies the probe interval, in seconds, between probing each address.
             sc_erosprober will spread the probing of the addresses across the interval.  If
             there are 10 addresses to probe at an interval of 20 seconds, then sc_erosprober
             will issue a command every two seconds.

     -l logfile
             specifies the name of a file to log progress output from sc_erosprober generated at
             run time.

     -o outfile
             specifies the prefix of the name of the output file to be written.  The output file
             will use the warts(5) format.  sc_erosprober will create a sequence of files named
             using the prefix and a timestamp.

     -O options
             allows the behavior of sc_erosprober to be further tailored.  The current choices
             for this option are:
               -  noshuffle: do not shuffle the order of addresses before probing starts.
               -  nooutfile: do not write to warts files, just do the probing.

     -p port
             specifies the port on the local host where scamper(1) is accepting control socket
             connections.

     -R rotation
             specifies the rotation interval, in seconds, between rotating output files.

     -U unix-scamper
             specifies the name of a unix domain socket where scamper(1) is accepting control
             socket connections.  This socket is used by sc_erosprober to send probing commands
             to scamper(1)

     -x unix-control
             specifies the name of a unix domain socket where sc_erosprober is accepting control
             socket connections.  This socket can be used by a local process to adjust the
             probing list at run time.

EXAMPLES

     Given a set of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses contained in a file named addrs and a scamper process
     listening at sock configured to probe at 100 packets per second started as follows:

           scamper -U scamper-sock -p 100

     the following command will ping the addresses every two minutes using one packet, and create
     an output file every thirty seconds prefixed with foo:

           sc_erosprober -U scamper-sock -a addrs -o foo -I 120 -R 30 -c 'ping -c 1'

     The following command will traceroute towards the addresses every 15 minutes, creating an
     output file every minute, with an sc_erosprober control socket:

           sc_erosprober -U scamper-sock -x erosprober-sock -a addrs -o foo -I 900 -R 60 -c
           'trace'

     To add an address to the probeset at runtime, using netcat, use:
           nc -U erosprober-sock
           +192.0.2.1

     To remove an address from the probeset at runtime, using netcat, use:
           nc -U erosprober-sock
           -192.0.31.60

SEE ALSO

     scamper(1), sc_wartsdump(1), sc_warts2text(1), sc_warts2json(1), warts(5)

AUTHORS

     sc_erosprober was written by Matthew Luckie.