SC_ALLY(1) | General Commands Manual | SC_ALLY(1) |
NAME¶
sc_ally
— scamper
driver to run Ally on a list of candidate aliases.
SYNOPSIS¶
sc_ally |
[-?D ]
[-a infile]
[-o outfile]
[-p port]
[-U unix-socket]
[-f fudge]
[-i probe-wait]
[-O options]
[-q attempts]
[-t logfile]
[-w waittime] |
sc_ally |
[-d dump-id]
[-O options]
[file ...] |
DESCRIPTION¶
The sc_ally
utility provides the ability
to connect to a running scamper(1) instance and have a set
of IPv4 address sets tested for aliases using the Ally technique. For each
address pair on a single line in the file, sc_ally
establishes which probe methods (UDP, TCP-ack, ICMP-echo) solicit an
incrementing IP-ID value, and then uses the Ally technique on pairs where a
probe method is able to obtain an incrementing IP-ID for both addresses.
sc_ally
can also infer which IP addresses are
aliases using the Mercator common source address technique as a byproduct of
the UDP probing that sc_ally
does. The output of
sc_ally
is written to a warts(5)
file, which can then be processed to extract aliases. The options are as
follows:
-
?- prints a list of command line options and a synopsis of each.
-D
- causes
sc_ally
to detach and become a daemon. -a
infile- specifies the name of the input file which consists of a sequence of IPv4 addresses, one candidate set per line.
-o
outfile- specifies the name of the output file to be written. The output file will use the warts format.
-p
port- specifies the port on the local host where scamper(1) is accepting control socket connections.
-U
unix-socket- specifies the name of a unix domain socket where scamper(1) is accepting control socket connections.
-d
dump-id- specifies the number identifying an analysis to conduct. The current choices for are 1-3, and are:
-f
fudge- specifies the fudge factor to use when (1) inferring if IPIDs are assigned from a counter, and (2) inferring if two addresses share the same counter. A value of zero will cause ally to infer aliases if the IPIDs are in a monotonic sequence.
-i
probe-wait- specifies the inter-probe gap for both ping and Ally measurements, in milliseconds. The default is 1000ms (1 second); the minimum is 200ms, and the maximum is 2000ms.
-O
options- allows the behavior of
sc_ally
to be further tailored. The current choices for this option are: -q
attempts- specifies the number of probes to use with Ally.
-t
logfile- specifies the name of a file to log output from
sc_ally
generated at run time. -w
waittime- specifies the minimum length of time, in seconds, to wait between completing a measurement to a particular IP address and issuing the next.
EXAMPLES¶
Given a set of IPv4-address sets in a file named infile.txt:
192.0.2.1 192.0.32.10 192.0.31.60 192.0.2.2 192.0.31.8 192.0.2.3 192.0.30.64
and a scamper(1) daemon listening on port 31337, then these addresses can be tested for aliases using
sc_ally -a infile.txt -o outfile.warts -p 31337
To obtain a list of inferred alias pairs using the Ally technique from a warts(5) file:
sc_ally -d 1 outfile.warts
To obtain a list of inferred routers using a transitive closure of alias pairs inferred using the Ally and Mercator techniques:
sc_ally -d 3 -O tc outfile.warts
SEE ALSO¶
scamper(1), sc_radargun(1), sc_wartsdump(1), sc_warts2text(1),
N. Spring, R. Mahajan, and D. Wetherall, Measuring ISP topologies with Rocketfuel, Proc. ACM SIGCOMM 2002.
R. Govindan and H. Tangmunarunkit, Heuristics for Internet Map Discovery, Proc. IEEE INFOCOM 2000.
A. Bender, R. Sherwood, and N. Spring, Fixing Ally's growing pains with velocity modeling, Proc. ACM/SIGCOMM Internet Measurement Conference 2008.
AUTHORS¶
sc_ally
was written by Matthew Luckie
<mjl@luckie.org.nz>.
May 4, 2019 | Debian |