IPStatus Enum
Definition
Important
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Reports the status of sending an Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) echo message to a computer.
public enum class IPStatus
public enum IPStatus
type IPStatus =
Public Enum IPStatus
- Inheritance
Fields
Name | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
Unknown | -1 | The ICMP echo request failed for an unknown reason. |
Success | 0 | The ICMP echo request succeeded; an ICMP echo reply was received. When you get this status code, the other PingReply properties contain valid data. |
DestinationNetworkUnreachable | 11002 | The ICMP echo request failed because the network that contains the destination computer is not reachable. |
DestinationHostUnreachable | 11003 | The ICMP echo request failed because the destination computer is not reachable. |
DestinationProhibited | 11004 | The ICMPv6 echo request failed because contact with the destination computer is administratively prohibited. This value applies only to IPv6. |
DestinationProtocolUnreachable | 11004 | The ICMP echo request failed because the destination computer that is specified in an ICMP echo message is not reachable, because it does not support the packet's protocol. This value applies only to IPv4. This value is described in IETF RFC 1812 as Communication Administratively Prohibited. |
DestinationPortUnreachable | 11005 | The ICMP echo request failed because the port on the destination computer is not available. |
NoResources | 11006 | The ICMP echo request failed because of insufficient network resources. |
BadOption | 11007 | The ICMP echo request failed because it contains an invalid option. |
HardwareError | 11008 | The ICMP echo request failed because of a hardware error. |
PacketTooBig | 11009 | The ICMP echo request failed because the packet containing the request is larger than the maximum transmission unit (MTU) of a node (router or gateway) located between the source and destination. The MTU defines the maximum size of a transmittable packet. |
TimedOut | 11010 | The ICMP echo Reply was not received within the allotted time. The default time allowed for replies is 5 seconds. You can change this value using the Send or SendAsync methods that take a |
BadRoute | 11012 | The ICMP echo request failed because there is no valid route between the source and destination computers. |
TtlExpired | 11013 | The ICMP echo request failed because its Time to Live (TTL) value reached zero, causing the forwarding node (router or gateway) to discard the packet. |
TtlReassemblyTimeExceeded | 11014 | The ICMP echo request failed because the packet was divided into fragments for transmission and all of the fragments were not received within the time allotted for reassembly. RFC 2460 specifies 60 seconds as the time limit within which all packet fragments must be received. |
ParameterProblem | 11015 | The ICMP echo request failed because a node (router or gateway) encountered problems while processing the packet header. This is the status if, for example, the header contains invalid field data or an unrecognized option. |
SourceQuench | 11016 | The ICMP echo request failed because the packet was discarded. This occurs when the source computer's output queue has insufficient storage space, or when packets arrive at the destination too quickly to be processed. |
BadDestination | 11018 | The ICMP echo request failed because the destination IP address cannot receive ICMP echo requests or should never appear in the destination address field of any IP datagram. For example, calling Send and specifying IP address "000.0.0.0" returns this status. |
DestinationUnreachable | 11040 | The ICMP echo request failed because the destination computer that is specified in an ICMP echo message is not reachable; the exact cause of problem is unknown. |
TimeExceeded | 11041 | The ICMP echo request failed because its Time to Live (TTL) value reached zero, causing the forwarding node (router or gateway) to discard the packet. |
BadHeader | 11042 | The ICMP echo request failed because the header is invalid. |
UnrecognizedNextHeader | 11043 | The ICMP echo request failed because the Next Header field does not contain a recognized value. The Next Header field indicates the extension header type (if present) or the protocol above the IP layer, for example, TCP or UDP. |
IcmpError | 11044 | The ICMP echo request failed because of an ICMP protocol error. |
DestinationScopeMismatch | 11045 | The ICMP echo request failed because the source address and destination address that are specified in an ICMP echo message are not in the same scope. This is typically caused by a router forwarding a packet using an interface that is outside the scope of the source address. Address scopes (link-local, site-local, and global scope) determine where on the network an address is valid. |
Examples
The following code example sends an ICMP echo message and checks the status.
#using <System.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Net;
using namespace System::Net::NetworkInformation;
using namespace System::Text;
// args[1] can be an IPaddress or host name.
int main()
{
array<String^>^args = Environment::GetCommandLineArgs();
Ping ^ pingSender = gcnew Ping;
PingOptions ^ options = gcnew PingOptions;
// Use the default Ttl value which is 128,
// but change the fragmentation behavior.
options->DontFragment = true;
// Create a buffer of 32 bytes of data to be transmitted.
String^ data = "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa";
array<Byte>^buffer = Encoding::ASCII->GetBytes( data );
int timeout = 120;
PingReply ^ reply = pingSender->Send( args[ 1 ], timeout, buffer, options );
if ( reply->Status == IPStatus::Success )
{
Console::WriteLine( "Address: {0}", reply->Address->ToString() );
Console::WriteLine( "RoundTrip time: {0}", reply->RoundtripTime );
Console::WriteLine( "Time to live: {0}", reply->Options->Ttl );
Console::WriteLine( "Don't fragment: {0}", reply->Options->DontFragment );
Console::WriteLine( "Buffer size: {0}", reply->Buffer->Length );
}
}
using System;
using System.Net;
using System.Net.NetworkInformation;
using System.Text;
namespace Examples.System.Net.NetworkInformation.PingTest
{
public class PingExample
{
// args[0] can be an IPaddress or host name.
public static void Main (string[] args)
{
Ping pingSender = new Ping ();
PingOptions options = new PingOptions ();
// Use the default Ttl value which is 128,
// but change the fragmentation behavior.
options.DontFragment = true;
// Create a buffer of 32 bytes of data to be transmitted.
string data = "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa";
byte[] buffer = Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes (data);
int timeout = 120;
PingReply reply = pingSender.Send (args[0], timeout, buffer, options);
if (reply.Status == IPStatus.Success)
{
Console.WriteLine ("Address: {0}", reply.Address.ToString ());
Console.WriteLine ("RoundTrip time: {0}", reply.RoundtripTime);
Console.WriteLine ("Time to live: {0}", reply.Options.Ttl);
Console.WriteLine ("Don't fragment: {0}", reply.Options.DontFragment);
Console.WriteLine ("Buffer size: {0}", reply.Buffer.Length);
}
}
}
}
open System.Net.NetworkInformation
open System.Text
// args[0] can be an IPaddress or host name.
[<EntryPoint>]
let main args =
let pingSender = new Ping()
// Use the default Ttl value which is 128,
// but change the fragmentation behavior.
let options = PingOptions()
options.DontFragment <- true
// Create a buffer of 32 bytes of data to be transmitted.
let data = "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"
let buffer = Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes data
let timeout = 120
let reply: PingReply = pingSender.Send(args.[0], timeout, buffer, options)
match reply.Status with
| IPStatus.Success ->
printfn "Address: %O" reply.Address
printfn "RoundTrip time: %d" reply.RoundtripTime
printfn "Time to live: %d" reply.Options.Ttl
printfn "Don't fragment: %b" reply.Options.DontFragment
printfn "Buffer size: %d" reply.Buffer.Length
0
| _ ->
eprintfn "Error sending ping: %O" reply
eprintfn "Error was: %O" reply.Status
1
Remarks
The Ping class uses the values in this enumeration to set the PingReply.Status property. The Ping class returns PingReply objects when you call the Ping.Send or Ping.SendAsync methods to check whether you can reach a computer across the network.
Warning
The DestinationProhibited and DestinationProtocolUnreachable enumeration values have the same numeric value. This is possible because DestinationProhibited applies only to IPv6 and DestinationProtocolUnreachable applies only to IPv4.