2013-05-10, 22:00
That's fabulous, so the pr got merged and we can fix the issue in the stabilization phase?
I think w and W are two different options in linux:
I think the corresponding option in mac os is t
Best regards
(2013-05-10, 21:58)t4_ravenbird Wrote:(2013-05-10, 21:41)regnets Wrote: ...
Could it be possible that the ping command is not in the right shape?
Code:macbook:~ andy$ ping -c 1 -w 1 10.0.0.253
ping: illegal option -- w
usage: ping [-AaDdfnoQqRrv] [-b boundif] [-c count] [-G sweepmaxsize] [-g sweepminsize]
[-h sweepincrsize] [-i wait] [-l preload] [-M mask | time] [-m ttl]
[-p pattern] [-S src_addr] [-s packetsize] [-t timeout]
[-W waittime] [-z tos] host
ping [-AaDdfLnoQqRrv] [-c count] [-I iface] [-i wait] [-l preload]
[-M mask | time] [-m ttl] [-p pattern] [-S src_addr]
[-s packetsize] [-T ttl] [-t timeout] [-W waittime]
[-z tos] mcast-group
The w needs to be capitalized, or am i wrong?
...
I think you nailed it, looking at http://linux.die.net/man/8/ping it appears uppercase is correct also for linux, but linux has not complained .. , my bad
I think w and W are two different options in linux:
Code:
-w deadline
Specify a timeout, in seconds, before ping exits regardless of how many packets have been sent or received. In this case ping does not stop after count packet are sent, it waits either for deadline expire or until count probes are answered or for some error notification from network.
-W timeout
Time to wait for a response, in seconds. The option affects only timeout in absense of any responses, otherwise ping waits for two RTTs.
I think the corresponding option in mac os is t
Code:
-t timeout
Specify a timeout, in seconds, before ping exits regardless of how many packets have been received.
-W waittime
Time in milliseconds to wait for a reply for each packet sent. If a reply arrives later, the packet is not printed as replied, but considered as replied when calculating statistics.
Best regards