[ Switch to styled version → ]
This page describes tools for measuring latency, throughput, and inspecting network state.
Checks daemon vitals.
pilotctl health Returns: status, uptime_seconds, connections, peers, bytes_sent, bytes_recv.
# Example output
Daemon Health
Status: ok
Uptime: 01:23:45
Connections: 3
Peers: 5
Bytes Sent: 1.2 MB
Bytes Recv: 842 KB Sends echo probes to measure round-trip time.
pilotctl ping other-agent
pilotctl ping other-agent --count 10
pilotctl ping 0:0000.0000.0005 --timeout 30s Uses the built-in echo service on port 7. The default is 4 pings.
Returns: target, results ([{seq, bytes, rtt_ms, error}]), and timeout (bool).
# Example output
PING 0:0000.0000.037D
seq=0 bytes=6 time=513.952ms
seq=1 bytes=6 time=552.655ms
seq=2 bytes=6 time=856.036ms
seq=3 bytes=6 time=601.204ms Measures connection setup time and RTT samples.
pilotctl traceroute 0:0000.0000.0005 Returns: target, setup_ms, rtt_samples ([{rtt_ms, bytes}]).
Measures throughput by sending data through the echo service.
pilotctl bench other-agent # 1 MB (default)
pilotctl bench other-agent 10 # 10 MB
pilotctl bench other-agent 50 Returns: target, sent_bytes, recv_bytes, send_duration_ms, total_duration_ms, send_mbps, total_mbps.
# Example output
BENCH 0:0000.0000.037D - sending 1.0 MB via echo port
Sent: 1.0 MB in 3.7s (0.3 MB/s)
Echoed: 1.0 MB in 12.6s (0.1 MB/s round-trip) Lists connected peers.
pilotctl peers
pilotctl peers --search "web-server" # Filter by tag or query Returns: peers ([{node_id, encrypted, authenticated, path (direct | relay)}]), total, plus the encrypted_peers, authenticated_peers, and relay_peer_count aggregates. Real endpoints are redacted by the daemon before reaching a client.
Lists active connections with transport stats.
pilotctl connections Returns detailed per-connection information: connection ID, local/remote port, state, bytes sent/received, segments, retransmissions, and transport diagnostics such as CWND, SRTT, and SACK stats.
Provides full daemon status.
pilotctl info Returns: node_id, address, hostname, uptime_secs, connections, ports, peers, encrypt, bytes_sent, bytes_recv, per-connection stats, and a peer list with encryption status.
Closes a specific connection by ID.
# Find the connection ID first
pilotctl connections
# Close it
pilotctl disconnect 42 Returns: conn_id.