WHAT IS MTR?
mtr combines the functionality of the 'traceroute' and 'ping' programs
in a single network diagnostic tool.
As mtr starts, it investigates the network connection between the host
mtr runs on and a user-specified destination host. After it
determines the address of each network hop between the machines,
it sends a sequence of ICMP ECHO requests to each one to determine the
quality of the link to each machine. As it does this, it prints
running statistics about each machine.
mtr is distributed under the GNU General Public License version 2.
See the COPYING file for details.
INSTALLING
If you're building this from a tarball, compiling mtr should be as
simple as:
make
It should first call the "configure" script and then run "make" again
with the makefile that "configure" just generated.
If you're building from the git repository, you'll need to run:
./bootstrap.sh && ./configure && make
After compiling, install:
make install
Note that mtr-packet must be suid-root because it requires access to
raw IP sockets. See SECURITY for security information.
Older versions used to require a non-existent path to GTK for a
correct build of a non-gtk version while GTK was installed. This is
no longer necessary. ./configure --without-gtk should now work.
If it doesn't, try "make WITHOUT_X11=YES" as the make step.
On Solaris, you'll need to use GNU make to build.
(Use 'gmake' rather than 'make'.)
On Solaris (and possibly other systems) the "gtk" library may be
installed in a directory where the dynamic linker refuses to look when
a binary is setuid. Roman Shterenzon reports that adding
-Wl,-rpath=/usr/lib
to the commandline will work if you are using gnu LD. He tells me that
you're out of luck when you use the sun LD. That's not quite true, as
you can move the gtk libraries to /usr/lib instead of leaving them in
/usr/local/lib. (when the ld tells you that /usr/local/lib is untrusted
and /usr/lib is trusted, and you trust the gtk libs enough to want them
in a setuid program, then there is something to say for moving them
to the "trusted" directory.)
Building on MacOS should not require any special steps.
BUILDING FOR WINDOWS
Building for Windows requires Cygwin. To obtain Cygwin, see
https://cygwin.com/install.html. When installing Cygwin, select
the 'lynx' package for installation. lynx is required by apt-cyg.
Next, install apt-cyg for easy installation of the remaining
components. See https://github.com/transcode-open/apt-cyg.
Install the packages required for building:
apt-cyg install automake pkg-config make gcc-core libncurses-devel
Build as under Unix:
./bootstrap.sh && ./configure && make
Finally, install the built binaries:
make install
WHERE CAN I GET THE LATEST VERSION OR MORE INFORMATION?
mtr is now hosted on github.
https://github.com/traviscross/mtr
See the mtr web page at
http://www.BitWizard.nl/mtr/
Bug reports and feature requests should be submitted to the Github
bug tracking system.
Patches can be submitted by cloning the Github repository and issuing
a pull request, or by email to me. Please use unified diffs. Usually
the diff is sort of messy, so please check that the diff is clean and
doesn't contain too much of your local stuff (for example, I don't
want/need the "configure" script that /your/ automake made for you).
(There used to be a mailinglist, but all it got was spam. So
when the server was upgraded, the mailing list died.)
-- REW
FreeBSD-CVSweb <freebsd-cvsweb@FreeBSD.org>