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SC_ATTACH(1) General Commands Manual SC_ATTACH(1)

NAME

sc_attachsimple scamper driver.

SYNOPSIS

sc_attach [-?dDv] [-c command] [-i infile] [-o outfile] [-O options] [-p [ip:]port] [-P priority] [-R unix-domain] [-U unix-domain]

DESCRIPTION

The sc_attach utility provides the ability to connect to a running scamper(1) instance, have a set of commands defined in a file be executed, and the output be written into a single file, in warts format. The options are as follows:

-?
prints a list of command line options and a synopsis of each.
prints each command sent to scamper(1) on stderr.
causes sc_attach to operate as a daemon.
prints the current revision of sc_attach and exits.
command
specifies the scamper(1) command to prepend to each address in the input file.
infile
specifies the name of the input file which consists of a sequence of scamper(1) commands or addresses (with the -c option), one per line. If '-' is specified, commands are read from stdin.
outfile
specifies the name of the output file to be written. The output file will use the warts format. If '-' is specified, output will be sent to stdout.
options
allows the behavior of sc_attach to be further tailored. The current choices for this option are:
  • shuffle the input commands randomly.
  • send commands to scamper without waiting for scamper to ask for them.
[ip:]port
specifies the IP address and port where a scamper(1) is accepting control socket connections. If an IP address is not specified, sc_attach connects to the specified port on the local host.
priority
specifies the mixing priority scamper(1) should assign to the source.
unix-domain
specifies the unix domain socket on the local host where a remote scamper(1) instance is accepting commands.
unix-domain
specifies the unix domain socket on the local host where a local scamper(1) isntance is accepting commands.

EXAMPLES

Given a set of commands in a file named infile.txt:

tbit -M 1280 -u 'http://www.example.com/' 2620:0:2d0:200::10
trace -P udp-paris -M 192.0.2.1
ping -P icmp-echo 192.0.32.10

and a scamper(1) daemon listening on port 31337, then these commands can be executed using:

sc_attach -i infile.txt -o outfile.warts -p 31337

Given a set of addresses in a file named infile2.txt:

2620:0:2d0:200::10
192.0.2.1
192.0.32.10

these addresses can be pinged with sc_attach operating as a daemon with:

sc_attach -D -c 'ping' -i infile2.txt -o outfile2.warts -p 31337

SEE ALSO

scamper(1), sc_wartsdump(1), sc_warts2json(1)

AUTHORS

sc_attach was written by Matthew Luckie <mjl@luckie.org.nz>.

February 2, 2016 Debian