WHAT IS MTR?

  mtr combines the functionaly of the 'traceroute' and 'ping' programs 
  in a single network diagnostic tool.

  As mtr starts, it investigates the network connection between the host
  mtr runs on and a user-specified destination host.  After it
  determines the address of each network hop between the machines, 
  it sends a sequence ICMP ECHO requests to each one to determine the 
  quality of the link to each machine.  As it does this, it prints
  running statistics about each machine.

  mtr is distributed under the GNU General Public License. 
  See the COPYING file for details.  

WHAT'S NEW?

  v0.19
	Fixed a type-o in curses.c

  v0.18
	Fixed the network code to work properly under FreeBSD.  
	Hopefully this will fix some other operating systems too.
	Also, fixed a build problem and the DNS hanging bug.

  v0.17
        Fixed the configure script to always like with the math
	library.  Added an icon.

  v0.16
	Added one #include to select.c.  Some people were unable
	to build mtr without this line.  

  v0.15
	Both the build process and the networking code have
	been cleaned up and reorganized.  mtr now builds 
	cleanly with GTK+ 0.99.8.  

INSTALLING

  To begin mtr, first use the included configure script:

	./configure

  The configure script will generate a Makefile.  Build mtr:

	make

  After compiling, install:

	make install

  Note that mtr must be suid-root because it requires access to raw IP 
  sockets.  

WHERE CAN I GET THE LATEST VERSION OR MORE INFORMATION?

  See the mtr web page at 'http://www.mkimball.org/mtr.html'.

  Subscribe to the mtr mailing list.  All mtr related announcements
  are posted to the mtr mailing list.  To subscribe, send email to
  'majordomo@lists.xmission.com' with 'subscribe mtr' in the body of
  the message.  To send a message to the mailing list, mail to 
  'mtr@lists.xmission.com'.

  Bug reports and feature requests should be sent to the mtr 
  mailing list.

CREDITS

  Thanks to everyone who has provided feedback on mtr.  

  Thanks especially to those of you who have sent me code:

	Brian Casey, Mircea Damian, Anand Kumria, Russell Nelson,
	Aaron Scarisbrick, Andrew Stesin, Juha Takala, and anyone who
        has slipped through the cracks of my mail file.
