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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Date& Time change in linux beyond few days back Post 302241380 by rajendra44 on Monday 29th of September 2008 07:54:20 AM
Old 09-29-2008
Hi u can use this below perl

Code:
perl -e'@x=localtime time-86400;printf"%4d%02d%02d\n",$x[5]+1900,$x[4]+1,$x[3]'

change this value 86400 according millsec
 

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Net::DNS::Update(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       Net::DNS::Update(3)

NAME
Net::DNS::Update - Create a DNS update packet SYNOPSIS
use Net::DNS; $update = new Net::DNS::Update( 'example.com', 'IN' ); $update->push( prereq => nxrrset('foo.example.com. A') ); $update->push( update => rr_add('foo.example.com. 86400 A 192.168.1.2') ); DESCRIPTION
Net::DNS::Update is a subclass of Net::DNS::Packet, to be used for making DNS dynamic updates. Programmers should refer to RFC2136 for dynamic update semantics. WARNING: This code is still under development. Please use with caution on production nameservers. METHODS
new $update = new Net::DNS::Update; $update = new Net::DNS::Update( 'example.com' ); $update = new Net::DNS::Update( 'example.com', 'HS' ); Returns a Net::DNS::Update object suitable for performing a DNS dynamic update. Specifically, it creates a packet with the header opcode set to UPDATE and the zone record type to SOA (per RFC 2136, Section 2.3). Programs must use the push() method to add RRs to the prerequisite, update, and additional sections before performing the update. Arguments are the zone name and the class. If the zone is omitted, the default domain will be taken from the resolver configuration. If the class is omitted, it defaults to IN. EXAMPLES
The first example below shows a complete program; subsequent examples show only the creation of the update packet . Add a new host #!/usr/bin/perl use Net::DNS; # Create the update packet. my $update = new Net::DNS::Update('example.com'); # Prerequisite is that no A records exist for the name. $update->push( pre => nxrrset('foo.example.com. A') ); # Add two A records for the name. $update->push( update => rr_add('foo.example.com. 86400 A 192.168.1.2') ); $update->push( update => rr_add('foo.example.com. 86400 A 172.16.3.4') ); # Send the update to the zone's primary master. my $resolver = new Net::DNS::Resolver; $resolver->nameservers('primary-master.example.com'); my $reply = $resolver->send($update); # Did it work? if ($reply) { if ( $reply->header->rcode eq 'NOERROR' ) { print "Update succeeded "; } else { print 'Update failed: ', $reply->header->rcode, " "; } } else { print 'Update failed: ', $resolver->errorstring, " "; } Add an MX record for a name that already exists my $update = new Net::DNS::Update('example.com'); $update->push( prereq => yxdomain('example.com') ); $update->push( update => rr_add('example.com MX 10 mailhost.example.com') ); Add a TXT record for a name that doesn't exist my $update = new Net::DNS::Update('example.com'); $update->push( prereq => nxdomain('info.example.com') ); $update->push( update => rr_add('info.example.com TXT "yabba dabba doo"') ); Delete all A records for a name my $update = new Net::DNS::Update('example.com'); $update->push( prereq => yxrrset('foo.example.com A') ); $update->push( update => rr_del('foo.example.com A') ); Delete all RRs for a name my $update = new Net::DNS::Update('example.com'); $update->push( prereq => yxdomain('byebye.example.com') ); $update->push( update => rr_del('byebye.example.com') ); Perform a DNS update signed using a BIND key file my $update = new Net::DNS::Update('example.com'); $update->push( update => rr_add('foo.example.com A 10.1.2.3') ); $update->push( update => rr_add('bar.example.com A 10.4.5.6') ); $update->sign_tsig( "$dir/Khmac-sha512.example.com.+165+01018.private" ); The corresponding public key file may also be used: $update->sign_tsig( "$dir/Khmac-sha512.example.com.+165+01018.key" ); Another way to perform a signed update my $key_name = 'tsig-key'; my $key = 'awwLOtRfpGE+rRKF2+DEiw=='; my $update = new Net::DNS::Update('example.com'); $update->push( update => rr_add('foo.example.com A 10.1.2.3') ); $update->push( update => rr_add('bar.example.com A 10.4.5.6') ); $update->sign_tsig( $key_name, $key ); Perform a signed update with a customized TSIG record my $key_name = 'tsig-key'; my $key = 'awwLOtRfpGE+rRKF2+DEiw=='; my $tsig = new Net::DNS::RR("$key_name TSIG $key"); $tsig->fudge(60); my $update = new Net::DNS::Update('example.com'); $update->push( update => rr_add('foo.example.com A 10.1.2.3') ); $update->push( update => rr_add('bar.example.com A 10.4.5.6') ); $update->push( additional => $tsig ); BUGS
This code is still under development. Please use with caution on production nameservers. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1997-2002 Michael Fuhr. Portions Copyright (c) 2002-2004 Chris Reinhardt. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
perl, Net::DNS, Net::DNS::Packet, Net::DNS::Header, Net::DNS::RR, Net::DNS::Resolver, RFC 2136, RFC 2845 perl v5.18.2 2014-01-16 Net::DNS::Update(3)
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