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Table
C-5
  
ping(1M)
command
options
Option Description Application
hostname When
you
send
a
probe
packet
to
hostname,
a
message
is
returned.
Allows
you
to
confirm
that
a
host
is
active
on
the
network.
-g
hostname Forces
the
probe
packet
to
go
through
the
specified
gateway.
Allows
you
to
test
the
quality
of
individual
routes
by
sending
the
packet
to
the
target
host
via
various
routes
specified.
-i
interface Specifies
the
interface
to
be
used
for
sending
and
receiving
a
probe
packet.
Allows
you
to
easily
check
the
secondary
network
interface.
-n Converts
a
host
name
into
an
IP
address
and
then
displays
it.
Allows
you
to
check
the
IP
address
instead
of
the
host
name.
-s ping
is
repeated
at
intervals
of
1
second.
Pressing
the
[Ctrl]
+
[C]
keys
stops
ping,
and
then
displays
the
statistics.
Allows
you
to
check
intermittent
or
long-term
network
events.
You
can
view
nighttime
network
events
at
one
time
by
piping
the
ping
output
to
a
file.
-svR Displays
the
routes
that
probe
packets
have
passed
through
at
intervals
of
1
second.
Displays
the
routes
and
hop
counts
of
probe
packets,
allowing
you
to
compare
multiple
routes
to
identify
any
bottleneck.
#
ping
-s
10.24.187.50
PING
10.24.187.50:
56
data
bytes
64
bytes
from
10.24.187.50:
icmp_seq=0.
time=0.555
ms
64
bytes
from
10.24.187.50:
icmp_seq=1.
time=0.400
ms
64
bytes
from
10.24.187.50:
icmp_seq=2.
time=0.447
ms
^C
----10.24.187.50
PING
Statistics----
3
packets
transmitted,
3
packets
received,
0%
packet
loss
round-trip
(ms)

min/avg/max/stddev
=
0.400/0.467/0.555/0.079
#
In
certain
configurations
of
the
ping(1M)
command,
the
command
output
allows
you
to
identify
a
network
link
or
a
node
that
has
experienced
a
problem.
The
destination
host
is
specified
by
the
variable:
hostname.
Table
C-5
lists
the
options
of
the
ping(1M)
command
and
how
those
options
are
useful
for
troubleshooting.
The
following
example
shows
the
ping(1M)
command
output.
Appendix
C
 
Oracle
Solaris
Troubleshooting
Commands 319

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