The network controls the route, not you, and that includes your application; so what makes your application special enough to have particular routing arranged for it? That is the question. Since it's probably not magic either, it likely uses either the destination or the port number to decide where it goes. It might also be something stranger like TCP type-of-service or other unusual TCP options.
I'd attempt a connection on the port your application uses, which may be enough.
Hello Dear Friends, I'm here again
I need to know where is the permanent file for gateway configuration.
I did the following command
route add -net 0.0.0.0 5.0.0.3 ( My Gateway), but when i restart my computer i have to do it again.
What the file can i set the permanent configuration for my... (1 Reply)
hello,
I have to communicate with a distant station . But Both belong to the same area. So I do not need a gate .
But when I make a traceroute, it indicates that I pass through out a gate.
What can I do to establish a direct connexion between the both.
(with NT ) (1 Reply)
hi everybody ,
i have a solaris 5.6 box and i want to trace the route on an ip i treid traceroute but soalris 5.6 does not support it ...
is there a command that can be used equivelent to traceroute ?
thanks for your help (2 Replies)
Somewhat long story:
I have a simple Perl CGI script that uses Expect to Telnet to a device and grab some data, and then spits it back to Perl for display on the Webpage.
This works for many devices I've tried, but one device just fails, it keeps rejecting the password on this device, only... (1 Reply)
Hi,
HP-UX 11iV2, but it's probably universal (tcp/ip)
I have a production and a test server. The test server gets the application updated nightly from the production server software. The application accesses a set of process servers on a separate subnet (192.163.22.30,31,32), but reachable... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I was writing one script which includes to switch to the another telnet automatically from the present telnet server. I was using rlogin but firstly it takes the same user name of the present telnet and secondly it is prompting for the password.
But i want to switch to the another telnet... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I want to know the difference between these two services. Both are under xinetd. Both are used for enabling and disabling Telnet service. So, can somebody please explain me the difference between the two ?
Thanks in advance :) (0 Replies)
I'm having some trouble understanding the output of the route command. Specifically, the "route to" and "destination" fields. I'm guessing "route to: <address>" means when the queried host receives packets, it sends them to <address> by default, and "destination: <address>" means <address> is the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ultrix
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
regexp::common::uri::telnet
Regexp::Common::URI::telnet(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Regexp::Common::URI::telnet(3pm)NAME
Regexp::Common::URI::telnet -- Returns a pattern for telnet URIs.
SYNOPSIS
use Regexp::Common qw /URI/;
while (<>) {
/$RE{URI}{telnet}/ and print "Contains a telnet URI.
";
}
DESCRIPTION
$RE{URI}{telnet}
Returns a pattern that matches telnet URIs, as defined by RFC 1738. Telnet URIs have the form:
"telnet:" "//" [ user [ ":" password ] "@" ] host [ ":" port ] [ "/" ]
Under "{-keep}", the following are returned:
$1 The complete URI.
$2 The scheme.
$3 The username:password combo, or just the username if there is no password.
$4 The username, if given.
$5 The password, if given.
$6 The host:port combo, or just the host if there's no port.
$7 The host.
$8 The port, if given.
$9 The trailing slash, if any.
REFERENCES
[RFC 1738]
Berners-Lee, Tim, Masinter, L., McCahill, M.: Uniform Resource Locators (URL). December 1994.
SEE ALSO
Regexp::Common::URI for other supported URIs.
AUTHOR
Damian Conway (damian@conway.org)
MAINTAINANCE
This package is maintained by Abigail (regexp-common@abigail.be).
BUGS AND IRRITATIONS
Bound to be plenty.
LICENSE and COPYRIGHT
This software is Copyright (c) 2001 - 2009, Damian Conway and Abigail.
This module is free software, and maybe used under any of the following licenses:
1) The Perl Artistic License. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL.
2) The Perl Artistic License 2.0. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL2.
3) The BSD Licence. See the file COPYRIGHT.BSD.
4) The MIT Licence. See the file COPYRIGHT.MIT.
perl v5.14.2 2010-02-23 Regexp::Common::URI::telnet(3pm)