spray sends a one-way stream of packets to host using RPC, and reports how many were received, as well as the transfer rate. The host
argument can be either a name or an Internet address.
spray is not useful as a networking benchmark, as it uses unreliable connectionless transports, UDP for example. spray can report a large number of packets dropped
when the drops were caused by spray sending packets faster than they can be buffered locally, that is, before the packets get to the network medium.
OPTIONS
-ccount
Specify how many packets to send. The default value of count is the number of packets required to make the total stream size 100000 bytes.
-ddelay
Specify how many microseconds to pause between sending each packet. The default is 0.
-llength
The length parameter is the numbers of bytes in the Ethernet packet that holds the
RPC call message. Since the data is encoded using XDR, and XDR only deals with 32 bit quantities, not all values of length are possible, and spray rounds up
to the nearest possible value. When length is greater than 1514, then the RPC call can no longer be encapsulated in one Ethernet packet, so the length
field no longer has a simple correspondence to Ethernet packet size. The default value of length is 86 bytes, the size of the RPC and UDP headers.
-tnettype
Specify class of transports. Defaults to netpath. See rpc(3NSL) for a description of supported classes.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following
attributes: