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SC_TRACEDIFF(1) DragonFly General Commands Manual SC_TRACEDIFF(1)
NAME
sc_tracediff - display traceroute paths where the path has changed.
SYNOPSIS
sc_tracediff [-a] [-m method] [-n] file1.warts file2.warts
DESCRIPTION
The sc_tracediff utility displays pairs of traceroutes to a destination
where the path has changed. It takes two warts files as input and
displays paths where a hop differs by its address. The options are as
follows:
-a dump all traceroute pairs regardless of whether they have
changed.
-m method
specifies the method used to match pairs of traceroutes together.
If dst is specified, traceroutes are matched if the destination
IP address of both traces are the same. If userid is specified,
traceroutes are matched if the userid field of both traces are
the same. If dstuserid is specified, traceroutes are matched if
the destination IP address and userid fields are the same. By
default, the destination IP address is used.
-n names should be reported instead of IP addresses, where possible.
sc_tracediff can be useful in network monitoring to identify when a
forward IP path has changed. In this scenario, it is recommended that
Paris traceroute is used with the same UDP source and destination ports
for each execution of scamper so that only paths that have changed are
identified, not merely alternate paths visible due to per-flow load-
balancing. By default scamper uses a source port based on the process
ID, which will change with each execution of scamper.
EXAMPLES
The command:
scamper -O warts -o file1.warts -c 'trace -P udp-paris -s 31337' -f
list.txt
collects the forward IP paths towards a set of IP addresses found in
list.txt using 31337 as the UDP source port value. If the above command
is adjusted to subsequently collect file2.warts, then we can identify
paths that have subsequently changed with the command:
sc_tracediff file1.warts file2.warts
If Paris traceroute with ICMP probes is preferred, then the following
invocation of scamper is appropriate:
scamper -O warts -o file1.warts -c 'trace -P icmp-paris -d 31337' -f
list.txt
In this case, scamper uses 31337 as the ICMP checksum value in each
probe.
SEE ALSO
scamper(1),
B. Augustin, X. Cuvellier, B. Orgogozo, F. Viger, T. Friedman, M. Latapy,
C. Magnien, and R. Teixeira, Avoiding traceroute anomalies with Paris
traceroute, Proc. ACM/SIGCOMM Internet Measurement Conference 2006.
AUTHOR
sc_tracediff is written by Matthew Luckie <mjl@luckie.org.nz>.
DragonFly 6.5-DEVELOPMENT April 21, 2011 DragonFly 6.5-DEVELOPMENT