Tracing A Route - Motorola BSR 2000 Configuration And Management Manual

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BSR 2000 Configuration and Management Guide
3. You can send ICMP echo request packets to a specified address. You can set an

Tracing a Route

A route path includes all IP level devices, such as routers and servers, that packets
travel through over the network on a hop-by-hop bases to get to their intended
destination.
Use the traceroute command in Privileged EXEC mode to identify the route path
from the route source to the route destination:
MOT# traceroute [<A.B.C.D> | <Hostname>]
where:
5-18
optional packet count for a destination. Use the ping command from Privileged
EXEC mode to do this:
MOT #ping [<hostname> | <A.B.C.D>] [size <40-65515>] [<1-65535>] [timeout
<1-1024>] [source <A.B.C.D>] [tos <0-255>] [ttl <0-255>] [df]
where:
hostname is the DNS host name.
A.B.C.D is an IP address.
40-65515 is the packet size value expressed in bytes.
1-65535 is the packet number or request messages sent.
timeout is the duration.
1-1024 is the timeout value, expressed in seconds.
source A.B.C.D is the IP address of the source.
tos 0-255 specifies the type of service.
ttl 0-255 is the time to live value.
df sets the don't fragment flag in the IP header.
In the following example, a request packet is sent to address 192.35.42.1, with a
size of 55, a packet count of 10, and a timeout value of 10 seconds.
MOT #ping 192.35.42.1 size 55 10 timeout 10
A.B.C.D is the source IP address.
Hostname is the Domain Name Server (DNS) hostname.
MGBI
Release 1.0
526360-001-00 Rev. B

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