table of contents
| PRIPS(1) | General Commands Manual | PRIPS(1) |
NAME¶
prips —
print the IP addresses in a given range
SYNOPSIS¶
prips |
[-c] [-d
delim] [-e
exclude] [-f
format] [-i
incr] start
end |
prips |
[-c] [-d
delim] [-e
exclude] [-f
format] [-i
incr] CIDR-block |
prips |
-h |
DESCRIPTION¶
Theprips tool can be used to print all of the IP
addresses in a given range. It can enhance tools that only work on one host at
a time, e.g. whois(1).
The prips tool accepts the following
command-line options:
ENVIRONMENT¶
Theprips tool's operation is not influenced by any
environment variables.
FILES¶
Theprips tool's operation is not influenced by any
files.
EXAMPLES¶
Display all the addresses in a reserved subnet:prips 192.168.32.0
192.168.32.255The same, using CIDR notation:
prips 192.168.32.0/24Display only the usable addresses in a class A reserved subnet using a space instead of a newline for a delimiter:
prips -d 32 10.0.0.1
10.255.255.255Display every fourth address in a weird block:
prips -i 4 192.168.32.7
192.168.33.5Determine the smallest CIDR block containing two addresses:
prips -c 192.168.32.5
192.168.32.11DIAGNOSTICS¶
Theprips utility exits 0 on success,
and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO¶
ipsc(1), gipsc(1)STANDARDS¶
No standards were harmed in the writing of theprips
tool.
HISTORY¶
Theprips tool was originally written by
Daniel Kelly and later adopted by
Peter Pentchev. This manual page was originally written by
Juan Alvarez for the Debian GNU/Linux system and later added to the
prips distribution and converted to mdoc
format by
Peter Pentchev.
AUTHORS¶
Daniel Kelly ⟨dan@vertekcorp.com⟩Juan Alvarez ⟨jalvarez@fluidsignal.com⟩
Peter Pentchev ⟨roam@ringlet.net⟩
BUGS¶
Please report any bugs in theprips tool to its current
maintainer,
Peter Pentchev.
| March 1, 2011 | Linux 4.19.0-10-amd64 |