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RPSL2ACL(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation RPSL2ACL(1)

rpsl2acl - create a list of CIDRs from RPSL database

rpsl2acl [options]

Rpsl2acl queries a set of RPSL objects from a whois server, extracts members: records and converts them into a list of non-overlapping CIDR values. The resulting list is sorted lexicographically.

The program exits with code 0 if the file is up to date, 1 if it has successfully updated the file, 2 if some error ocurred and 3 if the command line usage was incorrect.

The following options control the output:
--acl=name
Format output as a bind ACL statement with the given name.
--comment=string
Print string as the heading comment to the output. The argument can consist of multiple lines. A "#" sign will be printed before each of them.
--outfile=FILE, -o FILE
Write the result to FILE, instead of the default "netlist".

The following options control the selection of RPSL objects and initial contents of the output list:

--add-network=arg
Add given CIDRs to the output list. Argument is a comma-separated list of CIDRs.
--from-file=FILE, -T FILE
Populate the output list with CIDRs read from FILE. The file must list each CIDR on a separate line. Empty lines and comments (introduced by "#" sign) are ignored.
--objects=objlist, -r objlist
Defines a list of objects to query. Objlist is a comma-separated list of RPSL object names.

The following options control TCP connections:

--no-persistent
Disable persistent connection. Rpsl2acl will open a new connection to the whois server for each RPSL object it is about to query.
--whois-server=server
Query this server, instead of the default "whois.ripe.net".

Options controlling log and debug output:

--log-file=FILE, -l FILE
Write the diagnostic output to FILE, instead of standard error.
--debug[=spec[,spec...]], -d[spec[,spec...]]
Set debugging level. Spec is either category or category=level, category is a debugging category name and level is a decimal verbosity level. Valid categories are: "GENERAL" and "WHOIS".
--dry-run, -n
Don't create the output file. Instead print the result on the standard output.

Informational options:

--help, -h
Show a terse help summary and exit.
--man
Print the manual page and exit.

The program reads its configuration from one of the following locations:
a. File name given by "RPSL2ACL_CONF" environment variable (if set)
b. ~/.rpsl2acl.conf
c. /etc/rpsl2acl.conf

The first existing file from this list is read. It is an error, if the $RPSL2ACL_CONF variable is set, but points to a file that does not exist. It is not an error if $RPSL2ACL_CONF is not set and neither of the two remaining files exist. It is, however, an error if any of these file exists, but is not readable.

The configuration file uses a usual UNIX configuration format. Empty lines and UNIX comments are ignored. Each non-empty line is either an option name, or option assignment, i.e. opt=val, with any amount of optional whitespace around the equals sign. Valid option names are the same as long command line options, but without the leading --. For example:

  objects = RS-FOO,RS-BAR,RS-BAZ
  aclname = mynets
  add-network = 10.0.0.0/8
  outfile = networks.inc

RPSL2ACL_CONF
The name of the configuration file to read, instead of the default /etc/rpsl2acl.conf.

axfr2acl(1).

Sergey Poznyakoff <gray@gnu.org>

Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below:
Around line 500:
=back without =over
2014-04-08 perl v5.32.1

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