Response Time Reporter; Configuration Tasks - Juniper JUNOSE SOFTWARE FOR E SERIES 11.3.X - IP-IPV6-IGP CONFIGURATION GUIDE 2010-10-31 Configuration Manual

Software for e series broadband services routers ip, ipv6, and igp configuration guide
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JunosE 11.3.x IP, IPv6, and IGP Configuration Guide
traceroute

Response Time Reporter

Configuration Tasks

62
host1(config-if)#exit
host1#ping 172.16.1.1 extended interface serial 5/2:1/1
There is no no version.
See ping
Use to discover the routes that router packets follow when traveling to their destination.
You can specify:
A VRF context
Destination IP or IPv6 address
Source interface for each of the transmitted packets
Source address for each of the transmitted packets
Maximum number of hops of the trace and a timeout value
Size of the IP packets (not the ICMP payload) in the range 0–64000 bytes sent with
the traceroute command. Including a size might help locate any MTU problems that
exist between your router and a particular device.
Extended IP header attributes, including the ToS byte (IP only), whether to set the
DF bit for the transmitted packets (IP only), the traffic class (IPv6 only), and flow
label (IPv6 only).
You can also force transmission of the packets on a specified interface regardless of
what the IP address lookup indicates.
Example
host1#traceroute 172.20.13.1 20 timeout 10
There is no no version.
See traceroute
The Response Time Reporter (RTR) feature enables you to monitor network performance
and resources by measuring response times and the availability of your network devices.
RTR configuration is associated with a specific virtual router, distinct from any other
virtual router.
To configure RTR:
Configure the probe type—an echo probe or a path echo probe.
1.
(Optional) Configure probe characteristics:
2.
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.

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