The word Tracert (or Traceroute) refers to tracing the route that packet information is transferred from point to point. In very simplified terms, every internet User is assigned an IP address. The IP of a computer allows it to communicate with other computers, using what is called "hops". A hop is a routing destination-middleman that "hands off" the data to the next hop and so on until it reaches its final destination. These "hops" create a trail of data about the user of that one specific computer that is sending and receiving data.
See Computer Forensics: Incident Response Essentials, by Kruse and Heiser
tracert
Short for traceroute: it is a utility program to check IP-routing. When you start it, e.g: tracert www.ibm.com
You use the traceroute command. Example, in Windows: open a command window, and type tracert wiki.answers.com.You use the traceroute command. Example, in Windows: open a command window, and type tracert wiki.answers.com.You use the traceroute command. Example, in Windows: open a command window, and type tracert wiki.answers.com.You use the traceroute command. Example, in Windows: open a command window, and type tracert wiki.answers.com.
You use the traceroute utility. In Windows, go to the command window, and type tracert, followed by an IP address or a domain name.You use the traceroute utility. In Windows, go to the command window, and type tracert, followed by an IP address or a domain name.You use the traceroute utility. In Windows, go to the command window, and type tracert, followed by an IP address or a domain name.You use the traceroute utility. In Windows, go to the command window, and type tracert, followed by an IP address or a domain name.
Use traceroute (tracert) or pathping
Traceroute. Use: tracert <ip-address> or tracert <URL>
tracert is the perfect function for you. E.x: CMD { tracert 192.168.1.1 } That will allow you to see where your data packet has traveled. The 192.168.1.1 is only an example. Hope this answer has helped you! :D
tracert, traceroute
tracert (traceroute on unix-like systems) will do this. use the command tracert /? for more information on options for this command, such as the maximum number of "hops".
the network path to a destinationAnswerTraceroute ( or Tracert )is a comp network tool used to determine the route taken by packets across the IP network. Tracert is a tool which is used on Microsoft window Operating system, while traceroute tool is available on particular Unix-like OS....Tracert n Traceroute are same in functionality bt having differt names in different Operating sys.
On windows OS the command is tracert X . instead of the X you input either IP or the destination or a domain name, Google.com for example. On Linux OS i think the command is tracepath.
traceroute on Unix varieties. tracepath on some Linux versions. tracert or pathping on MS-Windows boxes