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Network Debugging. Organizational Communications and Technologies Prithvi Rao H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management Carnegie Mellon University. Objectives. Present some examples of debugging tools. Readings.
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Network Debugging Organizational Communications and Technologies Prithvi Rao H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management Carnegie Mellon University
Objectives • Present some examples of debugging tools
Readings Suggested reading: Class notes Practical Internetworking with TCP/IP and UNIX (not required)
Tools for Debugging • Most tools are available for Unix based systems (most servers are likely to be UNIX) • Some tools are freely available (traceroute and dig) • Some proprietary tools exist (etherfind)
Ping • Simple yet valuable network debugging tool • Sends an ICMP echo request message to remote host • Remote host sends back an ICMP echo and reply message • Sending an echo is called “pinging” • Good baseline test of connectivity • Successful ping implies that IP packets can be exchanged • Network routing is also tested with pingExample % ping unix5.andrew.cmu.edu unix5.andrew.cmu.edu is alive
Ping • Variant of first form of pingExample% ping -s akasha.tic.com 5 no response from akasha.tic.com64 bytes from akasha.tic.com (192.12.23.130) icmp_seq = 0, time = 6 ms 64 bytes from akasha.tic.com (192.12.23.130) icmp_seq = 1, time = 5 ms64 bytes from akasha.tic.com (192.12.23.130) icmp_seq =2, time = 5 ms In this case command times out after 5 seconds
Ping • Echo request and echo reply are part of ICMP • Ping does not rely on application server running on remote host • Relies on network interface card to be configured properly • Unix host in single-user-mode will respond to ping commands
Remote Script • Script that permits running of arbitrary command on remote machine • Uses the remote shell (rsh) protocolExample % remote uptime –h unix5.andrew.cmu.edu Host: unix5.andrew.cmu.edu 8:30 am up 5 days <time> <#users> <load average>
Netstat • Netstat is jack-of-all-trades network tool • Can display connections, interfaces, routing tables and traffic statistics • Active connection display • Statistics display • Interfaces • Routing
Routing: netstat -r • Displays kernel routing tableExample% netstat –r Destination Gateway Flags Refcnt Use Interface 127.0.0.1 127.0.01 UH 12 244870 le0 default 192.12.23.132 UG 0 51 le0 192.12.23.128 192.12.23.129 U 16 8248341 le0
Routing: netstat -r • Gateway is the IP address of the next hop to which to send address • Flags is the status of each route • Refcnt is the current number of active TCP connections • Use is the total number of IP packets sent using route • Interface is the logical name of the local interface
Routing: netstat -i • Can display status of all interfaces Example% netstat –i –n Name MTU Net/Dest Address Ipkts Ierrs Opkts Oerrs Collle0 1500 192.12.23.128192.12.23.1298141411 0 7902647 0 61
Routing: netstat -i • Name is logical name of network • MTU is size in bytes of MTU interface • Net/Dest IP address of network to which interface is connected or that of end-point of link • Address is local IP address of interface • Ipkts is count of datalink frames received on link since last bootstrap • Ierrs is number of datalink frames received with errors and dropped by interface • Opkts is datalink frames sent on interface since last boot • Oerrs count of frames not sent due to output errors • Coll is count of collisions detected by this interface
Routing: netstat -f • Permits looking at TCP and UDP packets onlyExample% netstat –f inetActive internet connectionsProto Rec-Q Req-Q Local Address Foreign Address (state)tcp 0 4096 kiwilabs.com kia.smtp ESTABLISHED
Routing: netstat -f • Proto is the protocol (TCP or UDP) • Recv-Q number of bytes in socket input queue • Send-Q number of bytes in socket output queue • Local address set of period separated names • Foreign address is remote socket address given in format of local address • (state) is current state of TCP connection. Field is always empty for UDP connections
Traceroute • Traces route an IP packet takes to destination host • Takes single hostname argument and lists all intermediate router • Sends three UDP messages encapsulated in an IP packet and records the round-trip time in milliseconds for each message sent to intermediate router • Lost message or router that does not respond is denoted with a “*”Example% traceroute unix5.andrew.cmu.edu
ARP: Address Resolution Protocol • Arp command permits the examining and modifying of local ARP cacheExample% arp -a
Etherfind • Specific to Sun for tracing Ethernet frames • Performs functions of a network analyzer • Output can be piped to other unix tools (grep, awk, sed) • Can display selective frames • Mainly useful for TCP/IIPExample% etherfind –i le0 –v –t greater 0
nslookup • Simple tool for querying DNS servers • Without arguments user is prompted for queries Example% nslookup <unix5> > unix5> ls kiwilabs.com> set type = pttr> set type = any
Summary • Presented examples of network debugging tools • Discussed the use of these tools for various purposes