ICMP Ping library for Go, inspired by go-fastping
Here is a very simple example that sends & receives 3 packets:
pinger, err := ping.NewPinger("www.google.com")
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
defer pinger.Stop()
pinger.Count = 3
pinger.Run() // blocks until finished
stats := pinger.Statistics() // get send/receive/rtt stats
Here is an example that emulates the unix ping command:
pinger, err := ping.NewPinger("www.google.com")
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
// listen for ctrl-C signal
c := make(chan os.Signal, 1)
signal.Notify(c, os.Interrupt)
go func() {
for _ = range c {
pinger.Stop()
}
}()
pinger.OnRecv = func(pkt *ping.Packet) {
fmt.Printf("%d bytes from %s: icmp_seq=%d time=%v\n",
pkt.Nbytes, pkt.IPAddr, pkt.Seq, pkt.Rtt)
}
pinger.OnFinish = func(stats *ping.Statistics) {
fmt.Printf("\n--- %s ping statistics ---\n", stats.Addr)
fmt.Printf("%d packets transmitted, %d packets received, %v%% packet loss\n",
stats.PacketsSent, stats.PacketsRecv, stats.PacketLoss)
fmt.Printf("round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = %v/%v/%v/%v\n",
stats.MinRtt, stats.AvgRtt, stats.MaxRtt, stats.StdDevRtt)
}
fmt.Printf("PING %s (%s):\n", pinger.Addr(), pinger.IPAddr())
pinger.Run()
It sends ICMP packet(s) and waits for a response. If it receives a response, it calls the "receive" callback. When it's finished, it calls the "finish" callback.
For a full ping example, see cmd/ping/ping.go
go get github.com/go-ping/ping
To install the native Go ping executable:
go get github.com/go-ping/ping/...
$GOPATH/bin/ping
This repo was originally in the personal account of @sparrc, but is now maintained by the go-ping organization.
For support and help, you usually find us in the #go-ping channel of Gophers slack. See https://invite.slack.golangbridge.org/ for an invite to the Gophers slack org.
This library attempts to send an "unprivileged" ping via UDP. On linux, this must be enabled by setting
sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.ping_group_range="0 2147483647"
If you do not wish to do this, you can set pinger.SetPrivileged(true)
and
use setcap to allow your binary using go-ping to bind to raw sockets
(or just run as super-user):
setcap cap_net_raw=+ep /bin/go-ping
See this blog and the Go icmp library for more details.
You must use pinger.SetPrivileged(true)
, otherwise you will receive an error:
Error listening for ICMP packets: socket: The requested protocol has not been configured into the system, or no implementation for it exists.
This should without admin privileges. Tested on Windows 10.