12-11-2007
ah, cool...thanks!
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Ok,
I use the command tar -cvf /home/output/test.tar /home/input on one UNIX server, lets call it sneezy. I FTP the tared file over to another server, lets call it bashful. Use the tar -xvf test.tar command and get a error indicating that it is looking for the same directory as where the... (3 Replies)
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Ok,
I use the command tar -cvf ~kw4691/output/test.tar ~kw4691/input on one UNIX server, lets call it sneezy. I FTP the tared file over to another server, lets call it bashful. Use the tar -xvf test.tar command and get the error
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Hi,
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
net::subnets
Net::Subnets(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Net::Subnets(3pm)
NAME
Net::Subnets - Computing Subnets In Large Scale Networks
SYNOPSIS
use Net::Subnets;
my $sn = Net::Subnets->new;
$sn->subnets(@subnets);
if (my $subnetref = $sn->check($address)) {
...
}
my ($lowipref, highipref) = $sn->range($subnet);
my $listref = $sn->list(($lowipref, $highipref));
DESCRIPTION
Very fast matches large lists of IP addresses against many CIDR subnets and calculates IP address ranges.
This is a simple and efficient example for subnet matching:
use Net::Subnets;
my @subnets = qw(10.0.0.0/24 10.0.1.0/24);
my @addresses = qw/10.0.0.1 10.0.1.2 10.0.3.1/;
my $sn = Net::Subnets->new;
$sn->subnets(@subnets);
my $results;
foreach my $address (@addresses) {
if (my $subnetref = $sn->check($address)) {
$results .= "$address: $$subnetref
";
}
else {
$results .= "$address: not found
";
}
}
print($results);
This is a simple example for range calculation:
use Net::Subnets;
my @subnets = qw(10.0.0.0/24 10.0.1.0/24);
my $sn = Net::Subnets->new;
my $results;
foreach my $subnet (@subnets) {
my ($lowipref, $highipref) = $sn->range($subnet);
$results .= "$subnet: $$lowipref - $$highipref
";
}
print( $results );
This is a simple example for list generation:
use Net::Subnets;
my $lowip = '192.168.0.1';
my $highip = '192.168.0.100';
my $sn = Net::Subnets->new;
my $listref = $sn->list(($lowip, $highip));
foreach my $address (@$listref) {
# do something cool
}
METHODS
"new"
my $subnets = Net::Subnets->new;
Creates an "Net::Subnets" object.
"subnets"
$subnets->subnets([qw(10.0.0.0/24 10.0.1.0/24)]);
The C<subnets> method lets you prepare a list of CIDR subnets.
"check"
my $match = $subnets->check($address);
The C<check> method lets you check an IP address against the previously
prepared subnets.
"range"
my ($lowest, $highest) = $subnets->range($subnet)
The C<range> method lets you calculate the IP address range of a subnet.
"list"
my $list = $subnets->list($lowest, $highest);
The C<list> method lets you calculate a list containing all IP addresses
in a given range.
AUTHOR
Sebastian Riedel (sri@cpan.org), Juergen Peters (juergen.peters@taulmarill.de)
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2003-2009, Sebastian Riedel.
This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License version 2.0.
perl v5.10.1 2009-12-18 Net::Subnets(3pm)