OPBNOS R2.5
Release
  • Open Packet Broker
  • What's New?
  • Getting Started
    • Licensing
    • Limitations
    • Image Management
      • Installing OPBNOS from ONIE
      • Installing OPBNOS from USB Drive
      • Image Upgrade from OPBNOS
      • Selecting OPBNOS on next boot
      • Removing available images
      • Rebooting the Switch
    • Supported HwSku
    • Scalability
    • Downloads
  • CLI Configuration Guide
    • Configuring License
    • Configuring Hostname
    • Configuring Username
    • On-Box FlowVision
    • Configuring AAA
      • Configuring AAA
      • Configuring TACACS
      • Configuring RADIUS
    • Interface Management
      • Configuring Management Interface
      • Configuring Physical Interface
    • Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP)
      • Enabling LLDP
      • Displaying LLDP Neighbors
    • Configuring Interface Description
    • Configuring Auto Negotiation
    • Configuring FEC
    • Configuring Maximum Transition Unit
    • Configuring Port Speed
    • Configuring Interface Type
    • Configuring VLAN Modes
    • Configuring Loopback Mode
    • Configuring Packet Slicing
    • Configuring Ingress VLAN
    • Configuring Egress Tagging
    • Configuring Tx-only
    • Configuring An-clause
    • Configuring PortChannel
    • Configuring LAG Hash
    • Configuring Flows and Rules
      • Configuring Network Ports
      • Configuring Tool Ports
      • Configuring Flows
      • Configuring Flow Description
      • Configuring Flow Rules (NVIDIA)
      • Configuring Flow Rules (Broadcom)
      • Configuring Flow Match Expression Rules
      • Configuring Flow UDF Rules
      • Configuring Push/Pop VLAN
      • Configuring Flow Override Action(s)
      • Display Flow Information
      • Clear Flow Counters
    • Configuring GTP Flow
    • Configuring VxLAN Flow
    • Configuring SNMP
      • Configure SNMP community
      • Configuring SNMP Trap
      • Configuring SNMP Threshold
      • Configuring SNMP User
      • Configuring SNMP Location
      • Configuring SNMP Contact
    • Configuring SYSLOG
    • Ping
    • Traceroute
    • Configuring NTP
    • Configuring Timezone
    • Configuring sFlow
    • Display Interface Information
      • Front Panel Port Mapping
    • Display System Information
      • Interface Transceiver Information
      • System Uptime
      • Reboot Cause
      • Show Environment
      • Show System Memory
      • Show Docker Memory
      • Show Services
      • Show Platform Fan
      • Show platform pcieinfo
      • Show Platform PSU
      • Show Platform SSD
      • Show Platform Summary
      • Show Platform Syseeprom
      • Show Platform Temperature
    • Configuration Management
      • Copying Files To Device
      • Copying Files From Device
      • Copying Running and Startup Configuration
      • Saving Configuration
      • Display Configuration
      • Clearing Startup configuration
    • Zero Touch Provisioning
      • DHCP Discovery
      • ZTP Boot File
      • Enable ZTP
    • Troubleshooting
  • Aviz FlowVision Graphical User Interface Guide
    • FlowVision Controller Installation
      • FV ESXi Host Installation
      • FV VirtualBox Installation
    • System
      • Viewing the Dashboard
      • Accessing System and Device Information
      • Managing Topologies
      • Managing Devices
      • Viewing System Log
      • Managing Users
      • Performing Backup and Restore
      • Viewing Audit Logs
    • Configuration
      • Configuring Ports
      • Configuring Port Groups
      • Configuring Rule Templates
      • Configuring Flows
    • Statistics
      • Viewing Port Statistics
      • Viewing Flow Statistics
    • Help
  • REST API Guide
    • FLOW
    • Interface Management
    • Port Channel
    • LLDP
    • SNMP
    • System and Platform
    • Statistics
  • Use Cases
    • For Engineers
      • VxLAN Deployment (NVIDIA)
      • GTP Deployment
      • Truncation and Load Balancing
      • Ingress VLAN and Egress Tagging
      • Loopback-mode Port
      • VLAN Mode/Tag Actions
    • Command Reference
      • Converting Network-to-Tool port
      • Configuring 1G Electrical SFP
      • Enabling FlowVision On-box Support
  • Solution Integration
    • Network Visibility and Analysis with OPB, Arkime, Elasticsearch & Kibana
      • Installation Pre-Requisites
      • Solution Components
      • Configuring OPBNOS
      • Installing Arkime
      • Installing Kibana
      • Troubleshooting
  • Support
    • How to contact Aviz Networks Support?
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  1. CLI Configuration Guide

Ping

Ping is an administration utility used to test the connectivity between two network IP devices.

Ping functions by sending an Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) echo request to the specified remote host and waiting for an ICMP reply from that host. Using this method, ping also determines the time interval between when the echo request is sent and when the echo reply is received. This interval is called round-trip time.

At the end of the test, ping displays the minimum, maximum, and average round-trip times, and the standard deviation of the mean. Besides the round-trip time, ping can also measure the rate of packet loss. This is determined by the number of received echo replies over the number of sent echo requests. It is displayed as a percentage.

Reference

Command

ping <ip address> [source <source address> | interface <interface name> [count {<number>}] [interval <seconds> ] [size <bytes> ] [timeout <seconds> ]

Description

Polls or “pings” to see if the specified host is reachable

Parameters

ip address The IP address (ipv4/ipv6) of the host to ping.

source ip address Source IP address to use

interface interface name Interface to use count packets Count of ping request

size bytes Specifies the number of data bytes to be sent

timeout seconds Time to wait for a response, in seconds

Mode

EXEC

Example

pbnoscli# ping 192.168.0.98
ping 192.168.0.98
PING 192.168.0.98 (192.168.0.98) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 192.168.0.98: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=1.05 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.0.98: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.333 ms
^C
--- 192.168.0.98 ping statistics ---
2 packets transmitted, 2 received, 0% packet loss, time 1001ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 0.333/0.691/1.050/0.359 ms
pbnoscli# ping 192.168.0.98 count 2
ping 192.168.0.98 -c 2
PING 192.168.0.98 (192.168.0.98) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 192.168.0.98: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.548 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.0.98: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.497 ms
--- 192.168.0.98 ping statistics ---
2 packets transmitted, 2 received, 0% packet loss, time 1004ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 0.497/0.522/0.548/0.034 ms
pbnoscli# ping 192.168.0.98 size 100
ping 192.168.0.98 -s 100
PING 192.168.0.98 (192.168.0.98) 100(128) bytes of data.
108 bytes from 192.168.0.98: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.548 ms
108 bytes from 192.168.0.98: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.510 ms
108 bytes from 192.168.0.98: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.496 ms
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Last updated 1 year ago

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