At the very least, the PathPing utility can tell you why communications are so slow on a given day.
This utility uses the following syntax:
pathping [-g host-list] [-h maximum_hops] [-i address] [-n] [-p period]
[-q num_queries] [-w timeout] [-P] [-R] [-T] [-4] [-6] target_name
The following list describes each of the command line arguments.
-g host-list Specifies that the Echo Request messages used as part of defining the path
between one point and another use the Loose Source Route option in the IP header with the set
of intermediate destinations. The PathPing utility creates the list of servers that it outputs by
extending the path between the source and destination by one machine for each call. The target
machine, the one that??™s at the end of the line, receives an Echo Request message that requests
that machine??™s name, which is why you receive a list of hosts as part of the output. This option
lets the command use a number of intermediate routers to speed the process of defining the path
between one machine and another. The results are less accurate, but you receive them faster.
NOTE The host list must use the standard dotted notation for the IP addresses and you must separate
each of the hosts with a space.
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