Tracert is the one you're looking for I believe.
--XombieJer
Assuming you have a Cisco router, you add a static route with the command ip route.... Therefore, you delete it with the command no ip route....Assuming you have a Cisco router, you add a static route with the command ip route.... Therefore, you delete it with the command no ip route....Assuming you have a Cisco router, you add a static route with the command ip route.... Therefore, you delete it with the command no ip route....Assuming you have a Cisco router, you add a static route with the command ip route.... Therefore, you delete it with the command no ip route....
your command would be show ip route or sh ip route static
Showi ip route
ip default gateway
Show IP route
You use /P with the Route Add command
run the command: route -n You may need to be root (or use sudo) to run that command, or at least call its full path /sbin/route or /usr/sbin/route route --help will give you additional info, as will man route
the default gateway is the most common static route used in a host computer. netstat -r is the command line command to obtain the routing table.
route#debug ip routing
show ip route
The "show ip route" command in Cisco devices will display the administrative distance of routes along with other routing information.
iptable in Linux