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Check if a desired port is reachable via TCP
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mkirchner/tcping
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TCPING(1) User Manuals TCPING(1) NAME tcping - non-blocking TCP connection test SYNOPSIS tcping [-q] [-f <4|6> ] [-t timeout-sec | -u timeout-usec ] host port DESCRIPTION tcping attempts to complete a TCP connection to a host:port combination within the time interval timeout-[u]sec. The result of the operation is encoded as a return value. OPTIONS -q Quiet flag. Suppress all informational output. -f <4|6> IP protocol family to use: 4 for IPv4, 6 for IPv6. If left unspecifed, the implementation will use the protocol family of the first record returned from getaddrinfo(3), based on the for- mat of the host parameter. Specifying host as dotted-decimal IPv4 or hex IPv6 address string will use the respective protocol stack. Specification as a hostname character string will cause a dependency on the order of IPv4 and IPv6 records returned from getaddrinfo(3). -t timeout-sec Connection timeout in seconds. -u timeout-usec Connection timeout in microseconds. host Destination host. Either a host name node name or a numeric host address string (i.e., a dotted-decimal IPv4 address or an IPv6 hex address), per RFC 2553. port Destination port. Either a service name or a decimal port num- ber, per RFC 2553. RETURN VALUES tcping encodes the result of the connection attempt in its return value: 0 The connection attempt was successful. 1 The connection attempt was unsuccessful. 2 The connection attempt timed out. 255 An error occured. DIAGNOSTICS Unless the quiet (-q) flag is set, the following diagnostics are issued on stderr. The messages align with the program return value (see above). <host> port <port> open. The connection attempt to host:port was successful. <host> port <port> closed. The connection attempt to host:port was unsuccessful and the server side signaled a closed port. <host> port <port> user timeout. The connection attempt to host:port did not complete within the user-defined timeout interval. AUTHOR Marc Kirchner <mail at marc-kirchner dot de> HISTORY tcping came to be in 2002 as a utility to allow basic TCP connection checking and to enable failure shortcircutry before issuing network commands with long timeouts (on Solarix 2.x, Solaris 7/8, AIX and Linux). IPv6 functionality was added for 2.0.0 in 2023, which also dropped support for the AIX and Solaris OS. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Many thanks to Kai Hambrecht, John Smith and Vincent Loriot. SEE ALSO nc(1) Linux MARCH 2023 TCPING(1)
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