Lines Matching full:sent
16 port on the given target host. Your standard input is then sent to the host,
17 and anything that comes back across the connection is sent to your standard
137 The -v switch controls the verbosity level of messages sent to standard error.
164 "open" immediately, no data is sent until something is read from standard
172 To obtain a hex dump file of the data sent either way, use "-o logfile". The
190 when someone else connects to your port 1234, the file is sent to them whether
220 normally sent to the net the same way, but the -i switch specifies an "interval
376 inbound connections are generally sent to such specifically-bound listeners
414 verbose" switch usage will tell you how many of each were sent and received
546 sent in and feed your own back out. At the very least you can log a hex dump
628 packet was sent from *another* "internal" UDP server, there are many that still
645 for that connection increasing but never getting sent, that's another symptom.
707 meantime. The second single-byte UDP probe is then sent. Under BSD kernels,
775 a specific check to ensure that packets from 127.0.0.1 are never sent to the
801 must contain hop1, hop2, ..., destination. When a source-routed packet is sent
805 the outbound packet is sent from your chosen source address to the first
916 work is sent off to functions in what is hopefully a straightforward way.