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Full Discussion: Network Solution
Special Forums IP Networking Network Solution Post 302254069 by disturbe_d on Monday 3rd of November 2008 02:02:43 PM
Old 11-03-2008
Network Solution

Hello Guys:

This is more of a personal problem. I work for a University and the Univ has given me an ip address range 135.123.39.2 - 135.123.39.254 for my lab. Every time I bring a computer for the lab, I have to ask the university to add the dns name to the dns server. Recently we have split up within the lab and we are having trouble coexisting. So we want to separate. Now the whole setup is like this

rouetr -> firewall -> switch -> workstations/servers

There is only one port coming out of the the router and going to the my linux firewall (bridge mode) and then to the switch where i distribute all the IP tot he rest of my machine. Now I am trying to understand the University setup. This is a Class B address (135.123.39). But if I wanted to separate within or ask the univ to separate,

1) How they would do it and

2) How can I do it ?

I want to know all my options. I would be glad to provide you with more info if needed

Thanks Smilie
 

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Net::Whois::Parser(3pm) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Net::Whois::Parser(3pm)

NAME
Net::Whois::Parser - module for parsing whois information SYNOPSIS
use Net::Whois::Parser; my $info = parse_whois( domain => $domain ); my $info = parse_whois( raw => $whois_raw_text, domain => $domain ); my $info = parse_whois( raw => $whois_raw_text, server => $whois_server ); $info = { nameservers => [ { domain => 'ns.example.com', ip => '123.123.123.123' }, { domain => 'ns.example.com' }, ], emails => [ 'admin@example.com' ], domain => 'example.com', somefield1 => 'value', somefield2 => [ 'value', 'value2' ], ... }; # Your own parsers sub my_parser { my ( $text ) = @_; return { nameservers => [ { domain => 'ns.example.com', ip => '123.123.123.123' }, { domain => 'ns.example.com' }, ], emails => [ 'admin@example.com' ], somefield => 'value', somefield2 => [ 'value', 'value2' ], }; } $Net::Whois::Parser::PARSERS{'whois.example.com'} = &my_parser; $Net::Whois::Parser::PARSERS{'DEFAULT'} = &my_default_parser; # If you want to get all values of fields from all whois answers $Net::Whois::Parser::GET_ALL_VALUES = 1; # example # Net::Whois::Raw returns 2 answers $raw = [ { text => 'key: value1' }, { text => 'key: value2'}]; $data = parse_whois(raw => $raw); # If flag is off parser returns # { key => 'value2' }; # If flag is on parser returns # { key => [ 'value1', 'value2' ] }; # If you want to convert some field name to another: $Net::Whois::Parser::FIELD_NAME_CONV{'Domain name'} = 'domain'; # If you want to format some fields. # I think it is very useful for dates. $Net::Whois::Parser::HOOKS{'expiration_date'} = [ &format_date ]; DESCRIPTION
Net::Whois::Parser module provides Whois data parsing. You can add your own parsers for any whois server. FUNCTIONS
parse_whois(%args) Returns hash of whois data. Arguments: 'domain' - domain 'raw' - raw whois text 'server' - whois server 'which_whois' - option for Net::Whois::Raw::whois. Default value is QRY_ALL CHANGES
See file "Changes" in the distribution AUTHOR
Ivan Sokolov, "<ivsokolov@cpan.org>" COPYRIGHT &; LICENSE Copyright 2009 Ivan Sokolov This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.14.2 2012-01-20 Net::Whois::Parser(3pm)
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