In our respective interactions with various networks accessible to us.....as administrators we keep pinging so many IPs for testing the connectivity at various times like ping 192.121.23.1 etc....and we get a response...but ping it self has so many switches that most of us hardly use......i came across a chart today that in a summarized form tells the switches of ping command with examples and a brief explanation.....sharing here with you...thanks http://www.activexperts.com
ping -c count | ping -c 10 | Specify the number of echo requests to send. |
Ping -d | ping -d | Set the SO_DEBUG option. |
Ping -f | ping -f | Flood ping. Sends another echo request immediately after receiving a reply to the last one. Only the super-user can use this option. |
Ping host | ping 121.4.3.2 | Specify the host name (or IP address) of computer to ping |
ping -i wait | ping -i 2 | Wait time. The number of seconds to wait between each ping |
ping -l preload | ping -l 4 | Sends "preload" packets one after another. |
Ping -n | ping -n | Numeric output, without host to symbolic name lookup. |
Ping -p pattern | ping -p ff00 | Ping Pattern. The example sends two bytes, one filled with ones, and one with zeros. |
Ping -q | ping -q | Quiet output. Only summary lines at startup and completion |
ping -r | ping -r | Direct Ping. Send to a host directly, without using routing tables. Returns an error if the host is not on a directly attached network. |
Ping -R | Ping -R | Record Route. Turns on route recording for the Echo Request packets, and display the route buffer on returned packets (ignored by many routers). |
ping -s PacketSize | ping -s 10 | Sets the packet size in number of bytes, which will result in a total packet size of PacketSize plus 8 extra bytes for the ICMP header |
ping -v | ping -v | Verbose Output. Lists individual ICMP packets, as well as Echo Responses |