Date: Wed, 31 Aug 2005 13:49:43 -0400 From: Charles Swiger <cswiger@mac.com> To: John Oxley <john@yoafrica.com> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Command to trace a route? Message-ID: <549B0F2E-F72D-41E5-B1A5-7EAD527FC99C@mac.com> In-Reply-To: <20050831174357.GE78248@yoafrica.com> References: <WorldClient-F200508261650.AA50430021@dhl.co.cu> <20050831012825.GC10597@the-grills.com> <20050831174357.GE78248@yoafrica.com>
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On Aug 31, 2005, at 1:43 PM, John Oxley wrote: >> As others have pointed out it's traceroute. >> apropos may help the next time you're looking for a command: > > Slightly OT, but tcptraceroute is also very useful: > Info: A traceroute implementation using TCP packets "traceroute -P tcp"...? :-) The modern BSD traceroute supports all of: -P Send packets of specified IP protocol. The currently supported protocols are: UDP, TCP, GRE and ICMP. Other protocols may also be specified (either by name or by number), though traceroute does not implement any special knowledge of their packet for- mats. This option is useful for determining which router along a path may be blocking packets based on IP protocol number. But see BUGS below. -- -Chuck
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