Annotation of embedaddon/mtr/FORMATS, revision 1.1.1.1
1.1 misho 1:
2: The "split" format is for a separating the gui from the main program.
3: The main program can be installed setuid, and you don't want to link a
4: gui-library with a setuid program.
5:
6:
7: The split format is:
8:
9: <pos> <host> <loss%> <rcvd pckts> <sent pckts> <best> <avg> <worst>
10:
11:
12: The "raw" format is:
13:
14: hostline|pingline|dnsline|timestampline
15:
16: hostline:
17: h <pos> <host IP>
18:
19: pingline:
20: p <pos> <pingtime (ms)>
21:
22: dnsline:
23: d <pos> <hostname>
24:
25: timestampline:
26: t <pos> <pingtime> <timestamp>
27:
28:
29: Timestampline is not yet implemented. Need to find out how to do
30: ICMP timestamping first. :-)
31:
32:
33: Someone suggested to put the following text here. As to context: Some
34: people are wondering why mtr sometimes reports hosts beyond the
35: destination host.
36:
37:
38: The FINAL host will occasionally be mentioned at position n, n+1, n+2
39: etc.
40:
41: You know traceroute, right? It sends a packet, waits for the reply to
42: come back and when it comes back, it sends the next packet.
43:
44: If say hosts 5-8 do not send "time exceeded" packets, you'll wait a
45: 4*3 = twelve seconds extra before you get any results on hosts 9 and
46: further. MTR doesn't work like that.
47:
48: In theory we could send out a probe for host 1-40 all at once. But
49: this would pose an unnecessary burden on the network. So what we do,
50: is we send out probes for a max of 5 hosts beyond where we've seen a
51: reply. So in the example above, we'd see a reply from router at
52: position 4, then we'd send out 5-9 (and because the max-host is now at
53: 9, we'll send them out at 1s/9 = 111ms intervals). When the reply from
54: host 9 comes back, we'll start probing for host 10-15 (at about 60ms
55: intervals). But suppose the network delay upto host 9 is already 200ms
56: and suppose our destination host is at position 11. Then by the time
57: the packet from host 11 comes back, we'll already have sent probe
58: packets for position 12, 13, and 14! Those will come back as
59: "destination reached" and be reported by the "raw" mode.
60:
61: Curses mode will stop showing hosts with position numbers beyond the
62: first reply of the destination host. It could gather the information
63: about replies to packets sent as probes FURTHER than it actually is
64: into the line displayed at its true position, but it doesn't (yet).
65:
66: In fact the above example is almost completely true:
67:
68: % mtr -r -n -c 2 152.179.99.218 | tail -5
69: 13.|-- 144.232.18.238 0.0% 2 94.8 95.4 94.8 96.0 0.8
70: 14.|-- 152.63.16.182 0.0% 2 95.1 95.5 95.1 95.8 0.5
71: 15.|-- 152.63.64.106 0.0% 2 163.9 163.9 163.9 164.0 0.1
72: 16.|-- 152.63.50.89 50.0% 2 163.7 163.7 163.7 163.7 0.0
73: 17.|-- 152.179.99.218 50.0% 2 168.2 168.2 168.2 168.2 0.0
74: % mtr -l -c 2 152.179.99.218 | grep -v "^[dp]" |tail -7
75: h 10 144.232.1.41
76: h 11 144.232.4.96
77: h 16 152.179.99.218
78: h 17 152.179.99.218
79: h 18 152.179.99.218
80: h 12 144.232.18.238
81: h 13 152.63.16.182
82:
83: As you can see we get the reply from the destination host at position
84: 16 AFTER we've sent probes for position 17 and 18. When those come
85: back, they are reported. That's what raw mode does. It reports the raw
86: information.
87:
88: If you write a backend for the raw mode, it's up to you to
89: filter/display the results.
90:
91: h 10 144.232.1.41
92: h 11 144.232.4.96
93: h 12 144.232.18.238
94: h 13 152.63.16.182
95: h 14 152.63.64.106
96: h 15 152.63.50.89
97: h 16 152.179.99.218
98: h 17 152.179.99.218
99: h 18 152.179.99.218
100:
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