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TCP/IP Communication Verification Utility (ping/ping6)
(Page 3 of 5)
Basic ping Use
The most basic use of the ping
command is to enter it by itself with the IP address of a host. Virtually
all implementations also allow a host name to be used, which will be
resolved
to an IP address automatically. When the
utility is invoked with no additional options, default values are used
for parameters such as what size message to send, how many messages
to be sent, how long to wait for a reply, and so on. The utility will
transmit a series of Echo messages to the host and report back
whether or not a reply was received for each; if a reply is seen, it
will also indicate how long it took for the response to be received.
When the program is done, it will provide a statistical summary showing
what percentage of the Echo messages received a reply, and the
average amount of time for them to be received.
Table 284
shows an example using the ping command on a Windows XP computer
(mine!), which by default sends four 32-byte Echo messages and
allows four seconds before considering an Echo message lost.
I use a satellite Internet connection that has fairly high latency and
also occasionally drops packets. This isnt great for me, but it
is useful for illustrating how ping works.
Table 284: Verifying Communication Using the ping Utility
D:\aa>ping
www.pcguide.com
Pinging pcguide.com [209.68.14.80] with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 209.68.14.80: bytes=32 time=582ms TTL=56
Reply from 209.68.14.80: bytes=32 time=601ms TTL=56
Request timed out.
Reply from 209.68.14.80: bytes=32 time=583ms TTL=56
Ping statistics for 209.68.14.80:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 3, Lost = 1 (25% loss),
Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
Minimum = 582ms, Maximum = 601ms, Average = 588ms
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Version 3.0 - Version Date: September 20, 2005
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