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README
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ssmping/asmping/ssmpingd/mcfirst README
Introduction
ssmping is a tool for checking whether a host can receive SSM from
another. If a host runst ssmpingd, users on other hosts can check
that they receive from this host by running the ssmping tool.
asmping is similar to ssmping, but checks for ASM rather than SSM.
This package also contains a tool called mcfirst.
How it works
ssmpingd listens for ssmping requests at UDP port 4321, both IPv4
and IPv6. ssmping is run as "ssmping host". ssmping will look up
addresses for hostname if necessary (both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses)
and then join (S,G) where S is the IP address, and G is either
232.43.211.234 for IPv4 or ff3e::4321:1234 for IPv6. Next it will
until interrupted, send a unicast UDP ping request to the host once
per second. If the host is running ssmpingd, it will respond by
sending the request packet back (only changing type from request
to reply). The reply is sent back both by unicast and to the
multicast group G that the client joined.
asmping works pretty much like ssmping, but the group to use must
be specified. Note that the group will be forced to end with 234
for IPv4, and ::4321:1234 for IPv6.
Example ssmping output:
ssmping joined (S,G) = (2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186,ff3e::4321:1234)
pinging S from 2001:630:d0:111:250:fcff:fe6a:42b3
unicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=0 dist=20 time=56.5ms
unicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=1 dist=20 time=58.6ms
unicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=2 dist=20 time=57.1ms
unicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=3 dist=20 time=58.5ms
unicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=4 dist=20 time=74.0ms
unicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=5 dist=20 time=60.7ms
unicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=6 dist=20 time=56.5ms
multicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=6 dist=12 time=60.9ms
unicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=7 dist=20 time=61.1ms
multicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=7 dist=12 time=64.1ms
unicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=8 dist=20 time=70.9ms
multicast from 2001:700:1:7:290:27ff:fe22:7186, seq=8 dist=12 time=73.2ms
This shows that it took about 6s for the multicast tree to be
established. The first 6 multicast packets got lost. It also
shows the round-trip time for the unicast and multicat (note that
the multicast is really unicast in one direction). This shows here
that there is roughly 3-4ms additional delay for the multicat
packets. It also shows that the unicast packets have travelled 20
hops, while multicast only 12 hops. This shows that there probably
is some tunneling for multicast. This is measured by having
ssmpingd send all packets with a TTL/hop-limit of 64.
Building
On most systems you can just type "make". On Solaris or Windows
try one of the alternate Makefiles. If your system does not
support SSM, you can still use asmping and ssmpingd. If
ssmping build fails, try "make asmping" and "make ssmpingd".
Usage
ssmpingd is run without arguments. ssmping takes hostname or IP
address as argument. asmping takes group and hostname/address as
arguments. See man pages for details.
mcfirst
mcfirst is a tool to check whether you can receive a given
multicast transmission. It supports both ASM and SSM, and IPv4
and IPv6. You run it specifying multicast group (and source if
SSM) and port number. It will then run until it receives a single
multicast packet, and tell you how long it took. Optionally you
may specify how many packets and/or for how many seconds it shall
run. If you specify how long to run, it will also tell you how
many bits and packets per second were received. This tool will
be built together with the ssmping tools.
Credits
The ssmping idea was proposed by Pavan Namburi, Kamil Sarac and
Kevin C. Almeroth in the paper
http://www.utdallas.edu/~ksarac/research/publications/CIIT04-1.pdf
I was also inspired to work on this from discussions with Mickael
Hoerdt who has contributed with several ideas.
License
See top of the individual source files.
Bugs/feedback
I would be happy for any feedback.
2006-06-05 Stig Venaas <[email protected]>