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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Listing IPs from the dhcpd.conf Post 303007409 by RudiC on Thursday 16th of November 2017 07:27:17 AM
Old 11-16-2017
Quote:
Originally Posted by hermouche
. . . so ?!
I was thinking about applying some exercise and creativity? How about

Code:
awk -F"[ ;]*" '
/^subnet/       {SUBNET = $2
                }
/^ *host.* {/   {getline
                 TMP = $4
                 getline
                 FXIP[$3] = TMP
                }
END             {sub (/[^.]*$/, "", SUBNET)
                 for (i=1; i<25; i++)   {TMP = sprintf ("%s%d", SUBNET, i) 
                                         printf "iptables -I FORWARD -s %s", TMP
                                          if (TMP in FXIP)       print " -p tcp -m multiport --dports  110,143,25,465,585,993,995,80,443 -m mac --mac-source " FXIP[TMP] " -j  ACCEPT"
                                           else                 print " -j DROP"
                                        }
                 for ( f in FXIP) print FXIP[f], f , " > ./etc_ethers"
                }
' dhcpd.conf
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.1 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.2 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.3 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.4 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.5 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.6 -p tcp -m multiport --dports 110,143,25,465,585,993,995,80,443 -m mac --mac-source 00:71:CC:6E:A3:33 -j ACCEPT
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.7 -p tcp -m multiport --dports 110,143,25,465,585,993,995,80,443 -m mac --mac-source C0:38:96:72:8B:5B -j ACCEPT
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.8 -p tcp -m multiport --dports 110,143,25,465,585,993,995,80,443 -m mac --mac-source 08:ED:B9:08:94:09 -j ACCEPT
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.9 -p tcp -m multiport --dports 110,143,25,465,585,993,995,80,443 -m mac --mac-source D0:53:49:CB:FE:0F -j ACCEPT
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.10 -p tcp -m multiport --dports 110,143,25,465,585,993,995,80,443 -m mac --mac-source C4:8E:8F:8F:45:A7 -j ACCEPT
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.11 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.12 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.13 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.14 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.15 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.16 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.17 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.18 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.19 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.20 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.21 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.22 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.23 -j DROP
iptables -I FORWARD -s 192.168.0.24 -j DROP
D0:53:49:CB:FE:0F 192.168.0.9  > ./etc_ethers
08:ED:B9:08:94:09 192.168.0.8  > ./etc_ethers
C0:38:96:72:8B:5B 192.168.0.7  > ./etc_ethers
00:71:CC:6E:A3:33 192.168.0.6  > ./etc_ethers
C4:8E:8F:8F:45:A7 192.168.0.10  > ./etc_ethers

Be aware that
- this prints out a subset (1 - 25) of the IP range in question, intentionally
- fakes the redirection into an "ethers" file
- could be enhanced to calculate the IP range from subnet and netmask instead of using fixed IPs
 

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SHTOOL-FIXPERM.TMP(1)					      GNU Portable Shell Tool					     SHTOOL-FIXPERM.TMP(1)

NAME
shtool-fixperm - GNU shtool file permission fixing command SYNOPSIS
shtool fixperm [-v|--verbose] [-t|--trace] path [path ...] DESCRIPTION
shtool fixperm fixes file permissions inside a source tree under path by cleaning up the permission bits. It determines the cleaned up permission from the already set bits. It is intended to be run before a tarball is rolled (usually with shtool tarball) out of a source tree. The trick is that this is more convenient than having to set the permissions manually or by using a large file list. OPTIONS
The following command line options are available. -v, --verbose Display some processing information. -t, --trace Enable the output of the essential shell commands which are executed. EXAMPLE
# Makefile.in dist: shtool fixperm -v * ... HISTORY
The GNU shtool fixperm command was originally written by Ralf S. Engelschall <rse@engelschall.com> in 1996 for OSSP eperl. It was later taken over into GNU shtool. SEE ALSO
shtool(1), chmod(1). 18-Jul-2008 shtool 2.0.8 SHTOOL-FIXPERM.TMP(1)
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