Well, I wrote a similar test program for my linux machine to test the status of our network printers. It's a simple snippet of code.
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
my $ip = '10.195.16';
open( 'FH' , ">printer_ping");
for ( 30 .. 200 )
{
my $test = join('.',$ip,$_);
print "Now pinging $test\n";
my $output = `ping -c 2 $test`;
print $output;
print FH $output;
}
The nice thing about this code is that it prints both to standard output, and to file, and can be easily modified to print anywhere else.
Theodore Charles III
Network Administrator
Los Angeles Senior High
email->secon_kun@hotmail.com
perl -e "map{print++$_}split//,Mdbnr;"
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