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TRACEROUTE(8)							 TRACEROUTE(8)

NAME
       traceroute - print the route packets take to network host

SYNOPSIS
       traceroute [ -aDFPIdlMnrvx ] [ -f first_ttl ]
	       [ -g gateway ] [ -i iface ] [ -m max_ttl ]
	       [ -p port ] [ -q nqueries ] [ -s src_addr ]
	       [ -t tos ] [ -w waittime ] [ -z pausemsecs
	] ] [ -A as_server ]
	       host [ packetlen ]

DESCRIPTION
       The  Internet  is  a large and complex aggregation of network hardware,
       connected together by gateways.	Tracking the route one's packets  fol‐
       low  (or	 finding the miscreant gateway that's discarding your packets)
       can be difficult.  Traceroute uses the IP protocol `time to live' field
       and attempts to elicit an ICMP TIME_EXCEEDED response from each gateway
       along the path to some host.

       The only mandatory parameter is the destination host name or IP number.
       The  default  probe  datagram  length  is  40  bytes,  but  this may be
       increased by specifying a packet length (in bytes) after	 the  destina‐
       tion host name.

       Other options are:

       -a     Turn on AS# lookups for each hop encountered.

       -A     Turn  on	AS#  lookups  and  use the given server instead of the
	      default.

       -d     Turn on socket-level debugging.

       -D     Dump the packet data to standard error before transmitting it.

       -f     Set the initial time-to-live used in the	first  outgoing	 probe
	      packet.

       -F     Set the "don't fragment" bit.

       -g     Specify a loose source route gateway (8 maximum).

       -i     Specify  a network interface to obtain the source IP address for
	      outgoing probe packets. This is normally only useful on a multi-
	      homed host. (See the -s flag for another way to do this.)

       -I     Use ICMP ECHO instead of UDP datagrams.

       -l     Display  the  ttl	 value of the returned packet.	This is useful
	      for checking for asymmetric routing.

       -m     Set the max time-to-live (max number of hops) used  in  outgoing
	      probe   packets.	  The	default	  value	  is  taken  from  the
	      net.inet.ip.ttl sysctl(3) variable.

       -M     If found, show the MPLS Label and the Experimental (EXP) bit for
	      the hop.

       -n     Print  hop  addresses  numerically  rather than symbolically and
	      numerically (saves a nameserver address-to-name lookup for  each
	      gateway found on the path).

       -p     Set  the base UDP port number used in probes (default is 33434).
	      Traceroute hopes that nothing is listening on UDP ports base  to
	      base   +	nhops  -  1  at	 the  destination  host	 (so  an  ICMP
	      PORT_UNREACHABLE message will be returned to terminate the route
	      tracing).	  If  something	 is listening on a port in the default
	      range, this option can be used to pick an unused port range.

       -P     Set the "don't fragment" bit, and use the next hop mtu each time
	      we  get  the  "need  fragmentation" error, thus probing the path
	      MTU.

       -q     Set the number of probe packets sent for each hop.  By  default,
	      traceroute sends three probe packets.

       -r     Bypass  the normal routing tables and send directly to a host on
	      an attached network.  If the host is not on a  directly-attached
	      network,	an error is returned.  This option can be used to ping
	      a local host through an interface that has no route  through  it
	      (e.g., after the interface was dropped by routed(8)).

       -s     Use  the	following  IP address (which usually is given as an IP
	      number, not a hostname) as the source address in outgoing	 probe
	      packets.	 On  multi-homed  hosts	 (those	 with more than one IP
	      address), this option can be used to force the source address to
	      be  something  other  than  the  IP address of the interface the
	      probe packet is sent on.	If the IP address is not one  of  this
	      machine's	 interface addresses, an error is returned and nothing
	      is sent. (See the -i flag for another way to do this.)

       -t     Set the type-of-service in probe packets to the following	 value
	      (default	zero).	 The  value  must  be a decimal integer in the
	      range 0 to 255.  This option can be used	to  see	 if  different
	      types-of-service	result	in  different  paths.  (If you are not
	      running 4.4BSD, this may be academic since  the  normal  network
	      services	like  telnet  and  ftp don't let you control the TOS).
	      Not all values of TOS are legal or meaningful - see the IP  spec
	      for definitions.	Useful values are probably `-t 16' (low delay)
	      and `-t 8' (high throughput).

       -v     Verbose output.  Received ICMP packets other than	 TIME_EXCEEDED
	      and UNREACHABLEs are listed.

       -w     Set  the	time  (in  seconds)  to wait for a response to a probe
	      (default 5 sec.).

       -x     Toggle ip checksums. Normally,  this  prevents  traceroute  from
	      calculating  ip  checksums.  In some cases, the operating system
	      can overwrite parts of the outgoing packet but  not  recalculate
	      the  checksum  (so in some cases the default is to not calculate
	      checksums and using -x causes them to be calculated). Note  that
	      checksums	 are usually required for the last hop when using ICMP
	      ECHO probes (-I).	 So they  are  always  calculated  when	 using
	      ICMP.

       -z     Set  the time (in milliseconds) to pause between probes (default
	      0).  Some systems such as Solaris and  routers  such  as	Ciscos
	      rate  limit icmp messages. A good value to use with this this is
	      500 (e.g. 1/2 second).

       This program attempts to trace the route an IP packet would  follow  to
       some  internet  host  by	 launching  UDP probe packets with a small ttl
       (time to live) then listening for an ICMP "time exceeded" reply from  a
       gateway.	  We  start  our  probes with a ttl of one and increase by one
       until we get an ICMP "port unreachable" (which means we got to  "host")
       or  hit	a  max	(which defaults to 30 hops  can be changed with the -m
       flag).  Three probes (change with -q flag) are sent at each ttl setting
       and a line is printed showing the ttl, address of the gateway and round
       trip time of each probe.	 If the	 probe	answers	 come  from  different
       gateways,  the  address	of each responding system will be printed.  If
       there is no response within a 5 sec. timeout interval (changed with the
       -w flag), a "*" is printed for that probe.

       We  don't want the destination host to process the UDP probe packets so
       the destination port is set to an unlikely value (if some clod  on  the
       destination is using that value, it can be changed with the -p flag).

       A sample use and output might be:

	      [yak 71]% traceroute nis.nsf.net.
	      traceroute to nis.nsf.net (35.1.1.48), 30 hops max, 38 byte packet
	       1  helios.ee.lbl.gov (128.3.112.1)  19 ms  19 ms	 0 ms
	       2  lilac-dmc.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.216.1)	 39 ms	39 ms  19 ms
	       3  lilac-dmc.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.216.1)	 39 ms	39 ms  19 ms
	       4  ccngw-ner-cc.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.136.23)  39 ms  40 ms  39 ms
	       5  ccn-nerif22.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.168.22)  39 ms  39 ms  39 ms
	       6  128.32.197.4 (128.32.197.4)  40 ms  59 ms  59 ms
	       7  131.119.2.5 (131.119.2.5)  59 ms  59 ms  59 ms
	       8  129.140.70.13 (129.140.70.13)	 99 ms	99 ms  80 ms
	       9  129.140.71.6 (129.140.71.6)  139 ms  239 ms  319 ms
	      10  129.140.81.7 (129.140.81.7)  220 ms  199 ms  199 ms
	      11  nic.merit.edu (35.1.1.48)  239 ms  239 ms  239 ms

       Note  that  lines  2  3 are the same.  This is due to a buggy kernel on
       the 2nd hop system - lilac-dmc.Berkeley.EDU  -  that  forwards  packets
       with  a	zero  ttl  (a bug in the distributed version of 4.3BSD).  Note
       that you have to guess what path the packets are	 taking	 cross-country
       since  the NSFNET (129.140) doesn't supply address-to-name translations
       for its NSSes.

       A more interesting example is:

	      [yak 72]% traceroute allspice.lcs.mit.edu.
	      traceroute to allspice.lcs.mit.edu (18.26.0.115), 30 hops max
	       1  helios.ee.lbl.gov (128.3.112.1)  0 ms	 0 ms  0 ms
	       2  lilac-dmc.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.216.1)	 19 ms	19 ms  19 ms
	       3  lilac-dmc.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.216.1)	 39 ms	19 ms  19 ms
	       4  ccngw-ner-cc.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.136.23)  19 ms  39 ms  39 ms
	       5  ccn-nerif22.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.168.22)  20 ms  39 ms  39 ms
	       6  128.32.197.4 (128.32.197.4)  59 ms  119 ms  39 ms
	       7  131.119.2.5 (131.119.2.5)  59 ms  59 ms  39 ms
	       8  129.140.70.13 (129.140.70.13)	 80 ms	79 ms  99 ms
	       9  129.140.71.6 (129.140.71.6)  139 ms  139 ms  159 ms
	      10  129.140.81.7 (129.140.81.7)  199 ms  180 ms  300 ms
	      11  129.140.72.17 (129.140.72.17)	 300 ms	 239 ms	 239 ms
	      12  * * *
	      13  128.121.54.72 (128.121.54.72)	 259 ms	 499 ms	 279 ms
	      14  * * *
	      15  * * *
	      16  * * *
	      17  * * *
	      18  ALLSPICE.LCS.MIT.EDU (18.26.0.115)  339 ms  279 ms  279 ms

       Note that the gateways 12, 14, 15, 16  17 hops away either  don't  send
       ICMP  "time  exceeded"  messages	 or  send them with a ttl too small to
       reach us.  14 - 17 are running the MIT C Gateway code that doesn't send
       "time exceeded"s.  God only knows what's going on with 12.

       The  silent  gateway  12 in the above may be the result of a bug in the
       4.[23]BSD network code (and its derivatives):  4.x (x  ≤	 3)  sends  an
       unreachable  message  using  whatever ttl remains in the original data‐
       gram.  Since, for gateways, the remaining ttl is zero, the  ICMP	 "time
       exceeded"  is  guaranteed  to  not make it back to us.  The behavior of
       this bug is slightly more interesting when it appears on	 the  destina‐
       tion system:

	       1  helios.ee.lbl.gov (128.3.112.1)  0 ms	 0 ms  0 ms
	       2  lilac-dmc.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.216.1)	 39 ms	19 ms  39 ms
	       3  lilac-dmc.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.216.1)	 19 ms	39 ms  19 ms
	       4  ccngw-ner-cc.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.136.23)  39 ms  40 ms  19 ms
	       5  ccn-nerif35.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.168.35)  39 ms  39 ms  39 ms
	       6  csgw.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.133.254)  39 ms  59 ms  39 ms
	       7  * * *
	       8  * * *
	       9  * * *
	      10  * * *
	      11  * * *
	      12  * * *
	      13  rip.Berkeley.EDU (128.32.131.22)  59 ms !  39 ms !  39 ms !

       Notice  that  there are 12 "gateways" (13 is the final destination) and
       exactly the last half of them are "missing".  What's  really  happening
       is  that	 rip  (a  Sun-3	 running  Sun OS3.5) is using the ttl from our
       arriving datagram as the ttl in its ICMP reply.	 So,  the  reply  will
       time out on the return path (with no notice sent to anyone since ICMP's
       aren't sent for ICMP's) until we probe with a ttl that's at least twice
       the  path  length.  I.e., rip is really only 7 hops away.  A reply that
       returns with a ttl of 1 is a  clue  this	 problem  exists.   Traceroute
       prints  a  "!"  after the time if the ttl is ≤ 1.  Since vendors ship a
       lot of obsolete (DEC's ULTRIX, Sun 3.x) or non-standard	(HP-UX)	 soft‐
       ware,  expect  to  see this problem frequently and/or take care picking
       the target host of your probes.

       Other possible annotations after the time are !H, !N, or !P (host, net‐
       work  or	 protocol  unreachable),  !S  (source route failed), !F-<pmtu>
       (fragmentation needed - the RFC1191 Path MTU Discovery  value  is  dis‐
       played),	 !X  (communication  administratively  prohibited),  !V	 (host
       precedence violation), !C (precedence cutoff in effect),	 or  !N	 (ICMP
       unreachable  code num).	These are defined by RFC1812 (which supersedes
       RFC1716).  If almost all the probes result in some kind of unreachable,
       traceroute will give up and exit.

	      traceroute -g 10.3.0.5 128.182.0.0

       will show the path from the Cambridge Mailbridge to PSC, while

	      traceroute -g 192.5.146.4 -g 10.3.0.5 35.0.0.0

       will show the path from the Cambridge Mailbridge to Merit, using PSC to
       reach the Mailbridge.

       This program is intended for use in network  testing,  measurement  and
       management.   It	 should	 be used primarily for manual fault isolation.
       Because of the load it could impose on the network, it is unwise to use
       traceroute during normal operations or from automated scripts.

SEE ALSO
       netstat(1), ping(8)

AUTHOR
       Implemented  by	Van  Jacobson  from  a	suggestion  by	Steve Deering.
       Debugged by a cast of thousands with particularly cogent suggestions or
       fixes from C. Philip Wood, Tim Seaver and Ken Adelman.

       The current version is available via anonymous ftp:

	      ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/traceroute.tar.gz

BUGS
       Please send bug reports to traceroute@ee.lbl.gov.

       The  AS	number	capability  reports  information that may sometimes be
       inaccurate due to discrepancies between the  contents  of  the  routing
       database server and the current state of the Internet.

4.3 Berkeley Distribution      21 September 2000		 TRACEROUTE(8)
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