CHECKING CONNECTIONS USING RPC WITH THE RPCPING UTILITY 311
-4 Forces Route to use Internet Protocol Version 4 (IPv4) calls, even when the system normally
uses IPv6.
-6 Forces Route to use Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) calls, even when the system normally
uses IPv4. Even though newer versions of Windows include some level of IPv6 support, most
systems still use IPv4 and will do so for several more years.
Checking Connections using RPC with the RPCPing Utility
The Remote Procedure Call (RPC) Ping (RPCPing) utility lets you check RPC connections to a
server with the same efficiency as other ping variants described in this chapter. Most people associate
the RPC protocol with the Component Object Model (COM). However, in today??™s computing
environment, it??™s better to view RPC as application-to-application communication. For example,
you might want to test the connectivity between a local copy of Outlook and Exchange Server. This
utility uses the following syntax:
RPCPing [-t
] [-s ] [-e
|-f [,MajorVer]] [-O [-i <#_iterations>] [-u ] [-a ]
[-N ] [-I ] [-C ]
[-T {Static | Dynamic}]
[-M {Anonymous | Identify | Impersonate | Delegate}]
[-S ] [-P ] [-F ]
[-H ] [-o ]
[-B ] [-b]
[-R {None | Default | }] [-E] [-q] [-c]
[-A ] [-U ]
[-r ] [-v {1 | 2 | 3}] [-d]
The following list describes each of the command line arguments.
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