XYMONPING(1) | General Commands Manual | XYMONPING(1) |
xymonping - Xymon ping tool
xymonping [--retries=N] [--timeout=N] [IP-addresses]
xymonping(1) is used for ping testing of the hosts monitored by the xymon(7) monitoring system. It reads a list of IP addresses from stdin, and performs a "ping" check to see if these hosts are alive. It is normally invoked by the xymonnet(1) utility, which performs all of the Xymon network tests.
Optionally, if a list of IP-addresses is passed as command-line arguments, it will ping those IP's instead of reading them from stdin.
xymonping only handles IP-addresses, not hostnames.
xymonping was inspired by the fping(1) tool, but has been written from scratch to implement a fast ping tester without much of the overhead found in other such utilities. The output from xymonping is similar to that of "fping -Ae".
xymonping probes multiple systems in parallel, and the runtime is therefore mostly dependent on the timeout-setting and the number of retries. With the default options, xymonping takes approximately 18 seconds to ping all hosts (tested with an input set of 1500 IP addresses).
xymonping needs to be installed with suid-root privileges, since it requires a "raw socket" to send and receive ICMP Echo (ping) packets.
xymonping is implemented such that it immediately drops the root privileges, and only regains them to perform two operations: Obtaining the raw socket, and optionally binding it to a specific source address. These operations are performed as root, the rest of the time xymonping runs with normal user privileges. Specifically, no user-supplied data or network data is used while running with root privileges. Therefore it should be safe to provide xymonping with the necessary suid-root privileges.
Version 4.3.28: 17 Jan 2017 | Xymon |