<command arg="-root"/>
- <string id="ping" _label="Ping Subnet" arg="-ping %"/>
+ <select id="ping">
+ <option id="none" _label="Ping mode..."/>
+ <option id="24" _label="Ping subnet/24 (254 hosts)" arg-set="-ping subnet/24"/>
+ <option id="25" _label="Ping subnet/25 (126 hosts)" arg-set="-ping subnet/25"/>
+ <option id="26" _label="Ping subnet/26 (62 hosts)" arg-set="-ping subnet/26"/>
+ <option id="27" _label="Ping subnet/27 (31 hosts)" arg-set="-ping subnet/27"/>
+ <option id="28" _label="Ping subnet/28 (14 hosts)" arg-set="-ping subnet/28"/>
+ <option id="29" _label="Ping subnet/29 (6 hosts)" arg-set="-ping subnet/29"/>
+ <option id="30" _label="Ping subnet/30 (2 hosts)" arg-set="-ping subnet/30"/>
+ <option id="ssh" _label="Ping known SSH hosts" arg-set="-ping /etc/hosts,$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts,$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts2"/>
+ </select>
<hgroup>
<number id="acount" type="spinbutton" arg="-team-a-count %"
<string id="aname" _label="Team A Name" arg="-team-a-name %"/>
<string id="bname" _label="Team B Name" arg="-team-b-name %"/>
+ <boolean id="dns" _label="Resolve Host Names" arg-unset="-no-dns"/>
+ <boolean id="times" _label="Show Ping Times" arg-unset="-no-times"/>
+
<!-- #### -ping-timeout [3000] -->
<!-- #### -ttl [90] -->
- <!-- #### -font [fixed] -->
- <!-- #### -background [#000000] -->
- <!-- #### -sweep-color [#00FF00] -->
- <!-- #### -scope-color [#003300] -->
- <!-- #### -grid-color [#00AA00] -->
- <!-- #### -text-color [#FFFF00] -->
-
<_description>
-This program draws a simulation of a sonar screen. Written by
-default, it displays a random assortment of ``bogies'' on the screen,
-but if compiled properly, it can ping (pun intended) your local
-network, and actually plot the proximity of the other hosts on your
-network to you. It would be easy to make it monitor other sources of
-data, too. (Processes? Active network connections? CPU usage per
-user?) Written by Stephen Martin.
+This program draws a sonar screen that pings (get it?) the hosts on
+your local network, and plots their distance (response time) from you.
+The three rings represent ping times of approximately 2.5, 70 and 2,000
+milliseconds respectively.
+
+Alternately, it can run a simulation that doesn't involve hosts.
+
+(If pinging doesn't work, you may need to make the executable be setuid.)
+
+Written by Stephen Martin and Jamie Zawinski; 1998.
</_description>
</screensaver>