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arping is a computer software tool for discovering and probing hosts on a computer network. Arping probes hosts on the examined network link by sending link layer frames using the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) request method addressed to a host identified by its MAC address of the network interface.[1] The utility program may use ARP to resolve an IP address provided by the user.
The function of arping is analogous to the utility ping that probes the network with the Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) at the Internet Layer of the Internet Protocol Suite.
Two popular arping implementations exist. One is part of Linux iputils suite,[2] and cannot resolve MAC addresses to IP addresses. The other arping implementation, written by Thomas Habets,[3] can ping hosts by MAC address as well as by IP address, and adds more features. Having both arping implementations on a system may introduce conflicts. Some Linux distros handle this by removing iputils arping along with dependent packages like NetworkManager if Habets's arping is installed. Others (e.g. Debian-based distros like Ubuntu) have iputils-arping split into a separate package to avoid this problem.
In networks employing repeaters that implement proxy ARP, the ARP response may originate from such proxy hosts and not directly from the probed target.
Example
editExample session output of arping from iputils:
ARPING 192.168.39.120 from 192.168.39.1 eth0 Unicast reply from 192.168.39.120 [00:01:80:38:F7:4C] 0.810ms Unicast reply from 192.168.39.120 [00:01:80:38:F7:4C] 0.607ms Unicast reply from 192.168.39.120 [00:01:80:38:F7:4C] 0.602ms Unicast reply from 192.168.39.120 [00:01:80:38:F7:4C] 0.606ms Sent 4 probes (1 broadcast(s)) Received 4 response(s)
Example session output from Thomas Habets's arping:
ARPING 192.168.16.96 60 bytes from 00:04:5a:4b:b6:ec (192.168.16.96): index=0 time=292.000 usec 60 bytes from 00:04:5a:4b:b6:ec (192.168.16.96): index=1 time=310.000 usec 60 bytes from 00:04:5a:4b:b6:ec (192.168.16.96): index=2 time=256.000 usec ^C --- 192.168.16.96 statistics --- 3 packets transmitted, 3 packets received, 0% unanswered (0 extra)