how to use ping in a script
Use the -w
switch (or -t
on FreeBSD and OS X) on the ping
command, then inspect the command's return value.
ping -w 1 $c
RETVAL=$?
if [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ]; then
ssh $c 'check something'
fi
You may want to adjust the parameter you pass with -w
if the hosts you're connecting to are far away and the latency is higher.
From man ping
:
-w deadline
Specify a timeout, in seconds, before ping exits regardless of
how many packets have been sent or received. In this case ping
does not stop after count packet are sent, it waits either for
deadline expire or until count probes are answered or for some
error notification from network.
Use ping
's return value:
for C in computers; do
ping -q -c 1 $C && ssh $C 'check something'
done
ping
will exit with value 0 if that single ping (-c 1
) succceeds. On a ping timeout, or if $C
cannot be resolved, it will exit with a non-zero value.
Not all network environments allow ping to go through (though many do) and not all hosts will answer a ping request. I would recommend not to use ping, but instead set the connect timeout for ssh:
for c in compuers; do ssh -o ConnectTimeout=2 $c 'check something' done