Network utility

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Template:About Network utilities are software utilities designed to analyze and configure various aspects of computer networks. The majority of them originated on Unix systems, but several later ports to other operating systems exist.

The most common tools (found on most operating systems) include:

  • Template:Mono, ping a host to check connectivity (reports packet loss and latency, uses ICMP).
  • Template:Mono shows the series of successive systems a packet goes through en route to its destination on a network. It works by sending packets with sequential TTLs which generate ICMP TTL-exceeded messages from the hosts the packet passes through.
  • Template:Mono, used to query a DNS server for DNS data (deprecated on Unix systems in favour of Template:Mono and Template:Mono; Template:As of the preferred tool on Microsoft Windows systems).
  • vnStat, useful command to monitor network traffic from the console. vnstat allows to keep the traffic information in a log system to be analyzed by third party tools.


Other network utilities include:

Some usages of network configuration tools also serve to display and diagnose networks, for example:

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

Template:Compu-network-stub