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A pure python ICMP ping implementation using raw sockets.

Project description

A pure python ping implementation using raw sockets.

Note that ICMP messages can only be sent from processes running as root (in Windows, you must run this script as ‘Administrator’).

Original Version from Matthew Dixon Cowles

  • copyleft 1989-2011 by the python-ping team, see AUTHORS for more details.

  • license: GNU GPL v2, see LICENSE for more details.

usage

~/python-ping$ sudo ./ping.py google.com

PYTHON-PING google.com (209.85.148.99): 55 data bytes
64 bytes from google.com (209.85.148.99): icmp_seq=0 ttl=54 time=56.2 ms
64 bytes from google.com (209.85.148.99): icmp_seq=1 ttl=54 time=55.7 ms
64 bytes from google.com (209.85.148.99): icmp_seq=2 ttl=54 time=55.5 ms

----google.com PYTHON PING Statistics----
3 packets transmitted, 3 packets received, 0.0% packet loss
round-trip (ms)  min/avg/max = 55.468/55.795/56.232

TODOs

  • refactor ping.py

  • create a CLI interface

  • add a “suprocess ping”, with output parser

contribute

Fork this repo on GitHub and send pull requests. Thank you.

Revision history

Oct. 12, 2011

Merge sources and create a seperate github repository:

Add a simple CLI interface.

September 12, 2011

Bugfixes + cleanup by Jens Diemer Tested with Ubuntu + Windows 7

September 6, 2011

Cleanup by Martin Falatic. Restored lost comments and docs. Improved functionality: constant time between pings, internal times consistently use milliseconds. Clarified annotations (e.g., in the checksum routine). Using unsigned data in IP & ICMP header pack/unpack unless otherwise necessary. Signal handling. Ping-style output formatting and stats.

August 3, 2011

Ported to py3k by Zach Ware. Mostly done by 2to3; also minor changes to deal with bytes vs. string changes (no more ord() in checksum() because >source_string< is actually bytes, added .encode() to data in send_one_ping()). That’s about it.

March 11, 2010

changes by Samuel Stauffer: replaced time.clock with default_timer which is set to time.clock on windows and time.time on other systems.

November 8, 2009

Fixes by George Notaras, reported by Chris Hallman:

Improved compatibility with GNU/Linux systems.

Changes in this release:

Re-use time.time() instead of time.clock(). The 2007 implementation worked only under Microsoft Windows. Failed on GNU/Linux. time.clock() behaves differently under the two OSes.

May 30, 2007

little rewrite by Jens Diemer:

  • change socket asterisk import to a normal import

  • replace time.time() with time.clock()

  • delete “return None” (or change to “return” only)

  • in checksum() rename “str” to “source_string”

December 4, 2000

Changed the struct.pack() calls to pack the checksum and ID as unsigned. My thanks to Jerome Poincheval for the fix.

November 22, 1997

Initial hack. Doesn’t do much, but rather than try to guess what features I (or others) will want in the future, I’ve only put in what I need now.

December 16, 1997

For some reason, the checksum bytes are in the wrong order when this is run under Solaris 2.X for SPARC but it works right under Linux x86. Since I don’t know just what’s wrong, I’ll swap the bytes always and then do an htons().

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