Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Python - pure python ping using raw sockets

# I've searched the web far and wide.  I've written my own
#    os.popen() version to ride an operating system's ping.
#    I finally found a pure raw ping implementation in python
#    that seems to work!
#
# I copied the entire page from:
#   http://svn.pylucid.net/pylucid/CodeSnippets/ping.py
#########################################################

#!/usr/bin/env python 
 
"""
    A pure python ping implementation using raw socket.
 
 
    Note that ICMP messages can only be sent from processes running as root.
 
 
    Derived from ping.c distributed in Linux's netkit. That code is
    copyright (c) 1989 by The Regents of the University of California.
    That code is in turn derived from code written by Mike Muuss of the
    US Army Ballistic Research Laboratory in December, 1983 and
    placed in the public domain. They have my thanks.
 
    Bugs are naturally mine. I'd be glad to hear about them. There are
    certainly word - size dependenceies here.
 
    Copyright (c) Matthew Dixon Cowles, <http://www.visi.com/~mdc/>.
    Distributable under the terms of the GNU General Public License
    version 2. Provided with no warranties of any sort.
 
    Original Version from Matthew Dixon Cowles:
      -> ftp://ftp.visi.com/users/mdc/ping.py
 
    Rewrite by Jens Diemer:
      -> http://www.python-forum.de/post-69122.html#69122
 
 
    Revision history
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
    May 30, 2007
    little rewrite by Jens Diemer:
     -  change socket asterisk import to a normal import
     -  replace time.time() with time.clock()
     -  delete "return None" (or change to "return" only)
     -  in checksum() rename "str" to "source_string"
 
    November 22, 1997
    Initial hack. Doesn't do much, but rather than try to guess
    what features I (or others) will want in the future, I've only
    put in what I need now.
 
    December 16, 1997
    For some reason, the checksum bytes are in the wrong order when
    this is run under Solaris 2.X for SPARC but it works right under
    Linux x86. Since I don't know just what's wrong, I'll swap the
    bytes always and then do an htons().
 
    December 4, 2000
    Changed the struct.pack() calls to pack the checksum and ID as
    unsigned. My thanks to Jerome Poincheval for the fix.
 
 
    Last commit info:
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    $LastChangedDate: $
    $Rev: $
    $Author: $
""" 
 
 
import os, sys, socket, struct, select, time 
 
# From /usr/include/linux/icmp.h; your milage may vary. 
ICMP_ECHO_REQUEST = 8 # Seems to be the same on Solaris. 
 
 
def checksum(source_string): 
    """
    I'm not too confident that this is right but testing seems
    to suggest that it gives the same answers as in_cksum in ping.c
    """ 
    sum = 0 
    countTo = (len(source_string)/2)*2 
    count = 0 
    while count<countTo: 
        thisVal = ord(source_string[count + 1])*256 + ord(source_string[count]) 
        sum = sum + thisVal 
        sum = sum & 0xffffffff # Necessary? 
        count = count + 2 
 
    if countTo<len(source_string): 
        sum = sum + ord(source_string[len(source_string) - 1]) 
        sum = sum & 0xffffffff # Necessary? 
 
    sum = (sum >> 16)  +  (sum & 0xffff) 
    sum = sum + (sum >> 16) 
    answer = ~sum 
    answer = answer & 0xffff 
 
    # Swap bytes. Bugger me if I know why. 
    answer = answer >> 8 | (answer << 8 & 0xff00) 
 
    return answer 
 
 
def receive_one_ping(my_socket, ID, timeout): 
    """
    receive the ping from the socket.
    """ 
    timeLeft = timeout 
    while True: 
        startedSelect = time.clock() 
        whatReady = select.select([my_socket], [], [], timeLeft) 
        howLongInSelect = (time.clock() - startedSelect) 
        if whatReady[0] == []: # Timeout 
            return 
 
        timeReceived = time.clock() 
        recPacket, addr = my_socket.recvfrom(1024) 
        icmpHeader = recPacket[20:28] 
        type, code, checksum, packetID, sequence = struct.unpack( 
            "bbHHh", icmpHeader 
        ) 
        if packetID == ID: 
            bytesInDouble = struct.calcsize("d") 
            timeSent = struct.unpack("d", recPacket[28:28 + bytesInDouble])[0] 
            return timeReceived - timeSent 
 
        timeLeft = timeLeft - howLongInSelect 
        if timeLeft <= 0: 
            return 
 
 
def send_one_ping(my_socket, dest_addr, ID): 
    """
    Send one ping to the given >dest_addr<.
    """ 
    dest_addr  =  socket.gethostbyname(dest_addr) 
 
    # Header is type (8), code (8), checksum (16), id (16), sequence (16) 
    my_checksum = 0 
 
    # Make a dummy heder with a 0 checksum. 
    header = struct.pack("bbHHh", ICMP_ECHO_REQUEST, 0, my_checksum, ID, 1) 
    bytesInDouble = struct.calcsize("d") 
    data = (192 - bytesInDouble) * "Q" 
    data = struct.pack("d", time.clock()) + data 
 
    # Calculate the checksum on the data and the dummy header. 
    my_checksum = checksum(header + data) 
 
    # Now that we have the right checksum, we put that in. It's just easier 
    # to make up a new header than to stuff it into the dummy. 
    header = struct.pack( 
        "bbHHh", ICMP_ECHO_REQUEST, 0, socket.htons(my_checksum), ID, 1 
    ) 
    packet = header + data 
    my_socket.sendto(packet, (dest_addr, 1)) # Don't know about the 1 
 
 
def do_one(dest_addr, timeout): 
    """
    Returns either the delay (in seconds) or none on timeout.
    """ 
    icmp = socket.getprotobyname("icmp") 
    try: 
        my_socket = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_RAW, icmp) 
    except socket.error, (errno, msg): 
        if errno == 1: 
            # Operation not permitted 
            msg = msg + ( 
                " - Note that ICMP messages can only be sent from processes" 
                " running as root." 
            ) 
            raise socket.error(msg) 
        raise # raise the original error 
 
    my_ID = os.getpid() & 0xFFFF 
 
    send_one_ping(my_socket, dest_addr, my_ID) 
    delay = receive_one_ping(my_socket, my_ID, timeout) 
 
    my_socket.close() 
    return delay 
 
 
def verbose_ping(dest_addr, timeout = 2, count = 4): 
    """
    Send >count< ping to >dest_addr< with the given >timeout< and display
    the result.
    """ 
    for i in xrange(count): 
        print "ping %s..." % dest_addr, 
        try: 
            delay  =  do_one(dest_addr, timeout) 
        except socket.gaierror, e: 
            print "failed. (socket error: '%s')" % e[1] 
            break 
 
        if delay  ==  None: 
            print "failed. (timeout within %ssec.)" % timeout 
        else: 
            delay  =  delay * 1000 
            print "get ping in %0.4fms" % delay 
    print 
 
 
if __name__ == '__main__': 
    verbose_ping("heise.de") 
    verbose_ping("google.com") 
    verbose_ping("a-test-url-taht-is-not-available.com") 
    verbose_ping("192.168.1.1") 
 
 
#output (for me): 
##        ping heise.de... get ping in 161.5423ms 
##        ping heise.de... get ping in 161.8938ms 
##        ping heise.de... get ping in 161.8139ms 
##        ping heise.de... get ping in 161.0677ms 
## 
##        ping google.com... get ping in 55.2157ms 
##        ping google.com... get ping in 54.8570ms 
##        ping google.com... get ping in 54.9019ms 
##        ping google.com... get ping in 54.7282ms 
## 
##        ping a-test-url-taht-is-not-available.com... failed. (socket error: 'getaddrinfo failed') 
## 
##        ping 192.168.1.1... get ping in 2.6651ms 
##        ping 192.168.1.1... get ping in 3.4502ms 
##        ping 192.168.1.1... get ping in 2.0416ms 
##        ping 192.168.1.1... get ping in 1.9452ms 

3 comments:

  1. This works on Windows, but doesn't return the correct result on Linux. On Linux, it sends requests, but no replies come back.

    ReplyDelete
  2. See the updated implementation here: https://github.com/jedie/python-code-snippets/blob/master/CodeSnippets/ping.py

    ReplyDelete
  3. Here's even more updated version:
    https://github.com/jedie/python-ping/pulls/l4m3rx
    With python2/3 support, external usage of the script as lib, control over the packet size and some other stuff.

    ReplyDelete