Libin Wen
Libin Wen

Reputation: 444

How can I check Internet access using a Bash script on Linux?

In my school, the Internet is not available (every night after 23:00 the school will kill the Internet connection, to put us to bed >..<), Then the ping will never stop, though I have used the parameter ping -w1 ....

That is, when I use: ping -q -w1 -c1 8.8.8.8 to check if the Internet connection is up/down, it will be there without any output and doesn't exit, just like I am using a single cat.

I don't know why it's like this, But I think the problem is related to the school-internet-service. Any suggestion? (I think wget may be a good alternative, but how can I use it?)

Upvotes: 21

Views: 79321

Answers (10)

Atropo
Atropo

Reputation: 12561

Using wget:

#!/bin/bash
    
wget -q --tries=10 --timeout=20 --spider http://google.com
if [[ $? -eq 0 ]]; then
    echo "Online"
else
    echo "Offline"
fi

Upvotes: 42

Scooby-2
Scooby-2

Reputation: 167

A variation on Majal's solution is just to test the return code from ping, which returns 0 if the site responds, 1 if there is no reply and 2 if the network is unreachable.

    ping -c 1 -t 5 8.8.8.8 2&>1
    rc=$?
    [[ $rc -eq 0 ]] && { echo "Connected to the Internet" ; exit 0 ; } \
 || [[ $rc -eq 1 ]] && { echo "No reply from Google DNS" ; exit 1 ; } \
 || [[ $rc -eq 2 ]] && { echo "Network unreachable" ; exit 2 ; }

Using ping has the advantage of not needing to download anything, improving the speed of the test.

Upvotes: 1

John Wooten
John Wooten

Reputation: 745

I decided to combine a few of the previous answers, so I could later create a plot showing ups, downs, and their durations:

#!/bin/bash
#
# pinger is a bash shell script that monitors the network
# status every 15 seconds and records if it is up '1' or down '0'
# into the file log.csv from whence it may be plotted.
#
# author: J. W. Wooten, Ph.D.
# since: 11/12/2019
# version: 1.0
#
TIMESTAMP=`date +%s`
while [ 1 ]
  do
    nc -z -w 5 8.8.8.8 53  >/dev/null 2>&1
online=$?
    TIME=`date +%s`
    if [ $online -eq 0 ]; then
      echo "`date +%Y-%m-%d_%H:%M:%S_%Z` 1 $(($TIME-$TIMESTAMP))" | tee -a log.csv
    else
      echo "`date +%Y-%m-%d_%H:%M:%S_%Z` 0 $(($TIME-$TIMESTAMP))" | tee -a log.csv
    fi
    TIMESTAMP=$TIME
    sleep 15
  done;

This outputs to a CSV file every 15 seconds. Using Excel or Numbers, you can read the file and create a plot which will show when the Internet connection was not available and also the duration. If it changes from your sleep interval, then it is spending time trying to connect. I hope to add the ability to send me a text when it detects network is down next.

Upvotes: 1

Majal
Majal

Reputation: 1741

Reliable old ping in a separate Bash script:

#!/bin/bash
ipaddr='8.8.8.8' # Google's public DNS server
[[ -z `ping -c1 $ipaddr |& grep -o 'Network is unreachable'` ]] || exit 1
[[ -z `ping -c3 $ipaddr |& grep -o '100% packet loss'` ]] && exit 0 || exit 1

Put this in a separate script. It will handle different network situations as (1) not being connected to a network, (2) connected to the network, but cannot access the Internet (or at least Google), and (3) connected to the Internet.


You may later use the exit code of the script to check connectivity, e.g.

~$ script-name && echo online || echo offline

Upvotes: 1

Cyril R
Cyril R

Reputation: 61

Use:

#!/bin/bash

INTERNET_STATUS="UNKNOWN"
TIMESTAMP=`date +%s`
while [ 1 ]
 do
    ping -c 1 -W 0.7 8.8.4.4 > /dev/null 2>&1
    if [ $? -eq 0 ] ; then
        if [ "$INTERNET_STATUS" != "UP" ]; then
            echo "UP   `date +%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%Z` $((`date +%s`-$TIMESTAMP))";
            INTERNET_STATUS="UP"
        fi
    else
        if [ "$INTERNET_STATUS" = "UP" ]; then
            echo "DOWN `date +%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%Z` $((`date +%s`-$TIMESTAMP))";
            INTERNET_STATUS="DOWN"
        fi
    fi
    sleep 1
 done;

The output will produce something like:

./internet_check.sh

UP   2016-05-10T23:23:06BST 4
DOWN 2016-05-10T23:23:25BST 19
UP   2016-05-10T23:23:32BST 7

The number in the end of a line shows duration of previous state, i.e. 19 up, 7 seconds down.

Upvotes: 6

Crist&#243;bal Ganter
Crist&#243;bal Ganter

Reputation: 119

Using the example above. I wrote this script to log the state of your connection: https://gist.github.com/cganterh/ffc2fffa8263857cbece

First, save the following code into a name.sh file.

#!/bin/bash

while true
do
    wget -q --tries=10 --timeout=20 -O - http://google.com > /dev/null
    if [[ $? -eq 0 ]]; then
        echo $(date) "1" | tee -a log.csv
    else
        echo $(date) "0" | tee -a log.csv
    fi
    sleep 5
done

Then, execute name.sh file in terminal, and then check the log state information in log.csv of the same folder.

Upvotes: 2

Lizen Kohlhaas
Lizen Kohlhaas

Reputation: 29

Install fping: > fewer problems than ping.

fping google.com | grep alive

To use, for example, like:

#!/bin/bash

itest=$(fping google.com | grep alive)

while [ "$itest" == "" ]
        do
        sleep 5
        itest=$(fping google.com | grep alive)
done
echo now online

Upvotes: 2

Andrew
Andrew

Reputation: 231

If the school actually turns off their router instead of redirecting all traffic to a "why aren't you in bed" page, then there's no need to download an entire web page or send HTTP headers. All you have to do is just make a connection and check if someone's listening.

nc -z 8.8.8.8 53

This will output "Connection to 8.8.8.8 port 53 [tcp/domain] succeeded!" and return a value of 0 if someone's listening.

If you want to use it in a shell script:

nc -z 8.8.8.8 53  >/dev/null 2>&1
online=$?
if [ $online -eq 0 ]; then
    echo "Online"
else
    echo "Offline"
fi

Upvotes: 23

user3439968
user3439968

Reputation: 3538

Without wget

#!/bin/bash

echo -e "GET http://google.com HTTP/1.0\n\n" | nc google.com 80 > /dev/null 2>&1

if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
    echo "Online"
else
    echo "Offline"
fi

Enjoy ;)

Upvotes: 3

suspectus
suspectus

Reputation: 17288

Use the timeout option -t:

ping -q -t 5 -w1 -c1 8.8.8.8 t

Upvotes: 2

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