$NetBSD: patch-an,v 1.2 2009/02/11 08:06:17 obache Exp $ --- docs/hping2.8.orig 2003-08-09 01:50:52.000000000 +0000 +++ docs/hping2.8 @@ -14,6 +14,10 @@ hping2 \- send (almost) arbitrary TCP/IP ] [ .B \-\-fast ] [ +.B \-\-faster +] [ +.B \-\-flood +] [ .B \-I .I interface ] [ @@ -98,6 +102,8 @@ hping2 \- send (almost) arbitrary TCP/IP ] [ .B \-\-tcpexitcode ] [ +.B \-\-tcp-mss +] [ .B \-\-tcp-timestamp ] [ .B \-\-tr-stop @@ -181,6 +187,9 @@ Alias for -i u10000. Hping will send 10 .I --faster Alias for -i u1. Faster then --fast ;) (but not as fast as your computer can send packets due to the signal-driven design). .TP +.I --flood +Send packets as fast as possible. +.TP .I -n --numeric Numeric output only, No attempt will be made to lookup symbolic names for host addresses. .TP @@ -501,6 +510,9 @@ numbers are predictable. .I -b --badcksum Send packets with a bad UDP/TCP checksum. .TP +.I --tcp-mss +Enable the TCP MSS option and set it to the given value. +.TP .I --tcp-timestamp Enable the TCP timestamp option, and try to guess the timestamp update frequency and the remote system uptime. @@ -714,4 +726,4 @@ On solaris hping does not work on the lo a solaris problem, as stated in the tcpdump-workers mailing list, so the libpcap can't do nothing to handle it properly. .SH SEE ALSO -ping(8), traceroute(8), ifconfig(8), nmap(1) \ No newline at end of file +ping(8), traceroute(8), ifconfig(8), nmap(1)