Ralf,
Thanks for this idea. I have installed netcat on the windows box, and of
course it is already on the linux box. Am struggling at the moment with
how to use it, but will persvere
Steve
On 06/09/2016 12:13, Ralf Brinkmann wrote:
Am 06.09.2016 um 11:49 schrieb Hodges:
Anyway I set the firewall open to any machine on the local network when
I first hit the problem
hello Steve,
some years ago I made some tests with netcat to verify the network speed
between certain servers and the bacula host.
I'm not familiar with Bacula issues on Windows but there is a netcat
Windows version that might help:
https://joncraton.org/blog/46/netcat-for-windows/
# netcat -h
[v1.10]
connect to somewhere: netcat [-options] hostname port[s] [ports] ...
listen for inbound: netcat -l -p port [-options] [hostname] [port]
options:
-g gateway source-routing hop point[s], up to 8
-G num source-routing pointer: 4, 8, 12, ...
-h this cruft
-i secs delay interval for lines sent, ports
scanned
-l listen mode, for inbound connects
-n numeric-only IP addresses, no DNS
-o file hex dump of traffic
-p port local port number
-r randomize local and remote ports
-s addr local source address
-t answer TELNET negotiation
-u UDP mode
-v verbose [use twice to be more verbose]
-w secs timeout for connects and final net reads
-z zero-I/O mode [used for scanning]
port numbers can be individual or ranges: lo-hi [inclusive]
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