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| REFDBA(1) | RefDB Manual | REFDBA(1) | 
NAME¶
refdba - the administration client of RefDBSYNOPSIS¶
Interactive mode:refdba [-c pager-command]
  [-e  log-destination] [-f stdin]
  [-h] [-i IP-address]
  [-l log-level] [ -L log-file]
  [-p  port] [-q] [-T time]
  [-u name] [-v] [-V]
  [-w password] [ -x]
  [-y confdir]
 
Non-Interactive mode:
Batch mode:
refdba -C command
  [-c pager-command]
  [-e log-destination] [ -f stdin]
  [-i IP-address] [-l log-level]
  [-L  log-file] [-p port] [-q]
  [ -T time] [-u name]
  [-w  password] [-x]
  [-y confdir]
DESCRIPTION¶
refdba is a command-line client providing the commands to administer RefDB(7) databases, users, and styles. refdba can be started in an interactive mode, providing a command prompt. Type ? or help to see a list of available commands. Alternatively you can start refdba in non-interactive mode. refdba will execute the requested command and return. In this mode refdba will accept input on stdin for a variety of commands, allowing Unix piping.OPTIONS¶
-c pager-commandThe command line of the pager that is to be used. Instead
  of a pager you can of course specify any valid command that accepts data on
  stdin. Use "stdout" to request data output to stdout. This is the
  default, but you may want to specify it on the command line if you need to
  temporarily override a default pager setting in your configuration file.
-C command
The command to be run in non-interactive mode. You can
  supply all options and parameters that the command accepts on the refdba
  command line.
-e log-destination
log-destination can have the values 0, 1, or 2, or the
  equivalent strings stderr, syslog, or file, respectively.
  This value specifies where the log information goes to. 0 (zero) means the
  messages are sent to stderr. They are immediately available on the screen but
  they may interfere with command output. 1 will send the output to the syslog
  facility. Keep in mind that syslog must be configured to accept log messages
  from user programs, see the syslog(8) man page for further information.
  Unix-like systems usually save these messages in /var/log/user.log. 2 will
  send the messages to a custom log file which can be specified with the
  -L option.
-f stdin
Read data from stdin. refdbc usually knows when it should
  read from stdin. However, a few commands use data supplied in the command line
  but also allow to read from a file. Use this option to force refdbc to read
  from stdin in addition to values supplied on the command line.
-h
Displays help and usage screen, then exits.
-i IP-address
Set the IP address of the box which is running the
  application server refdbd(1). Instead of the IP address you can also specify
  the hostname as long as it can be properly resolved by your system.
-l log-level
Specify the priority up to which events are logged. This
  is either a number between 0 and 7 or one of the strings emerg,
  alert, crit, err, warning, notice,
  info, debug, respectively (see also Log level definitions).
  -1 disables logging completely. A low log level like 0 means that only
  the most critical messages are logged. A higher log level means that less
  critical events are logged as well. 7 will include debug messages. The latter
  can be verbose and abundant, so you want to avoid this log level unless you
  need to track down problems.
-L log-file
Specify the full path to a log file that will receive the
  log messages. Typically this would be /var/log/refdba.
-p port
Set the port of the box which is running the application
  server.
-q
Start without reading the configuration files. The client
  will use the compile-time defaults for all values that you do not set with
  command-line switches. Useful for debugging config files.
-T time
Set the timeout for client/application server dialogue in
  seconds. A connection with unsuccessful read or write attempts will be
  considered as dead and taken down after this amount of time has elapsed.
-u name
Set the username for the database access. Note: This
  username need not be identical to the login name of the user. This is the
  username required to access the database server.
-v
Prints version and copyright information, then
  exits.
-V
Switches to verbose mode.
-w password
Set the password for the database access. Note: This
  password need not be identical to the login password of the user. This is the
  password required to access the database server.
-x
Send passwords unencrypted.
-y confdir
Specify the directory where the global configuration
  files are Note: By default, all RefDB applications look for their
  configuration files in a directory that is specified during the configure step
  when building the package. That is, you don't need the -y option unless
  you use precompiled binaries in unusual locations, e.g. by relocating a rpm
  package.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
The exit code is 0 if all went fine. It will be 1 if the command (when run in batch mode) or the last command (when run in interactive mode) returned an error, or if there was a general error condition during startup like a lack of available memory.CONFIGURATION¶
refdba evaluates the refdbarc configuration file at startup to initialize itself.| Variable | Default | Comment | 
| logfile | /var/log/refdba.log | The full path of a custom log file. This is used only if logdest is set appropriately. If you start refdba from the command line as a regular user, you should specify a file that you have write access to (you may not be allowed to create /var/log/refdb.log or write to this file as a regular user). | 
| logdest | 2 | The destination of the log information. 0 = print to stderr (this is mainly intended for debugging, as it may visually interfere with command output); 1 = use the syslog facility; 2 = use a custom logfile. The latter needs a proper setting of logfile. | 
| loglevel | 6 | The log level up to which messages will be logged. A low setting (0) allows only the most important messages, a high setting (7) allows all messages including debug messages. -1 means nothing will be logged. | 
| pager | stdout | The command line of a pager that accepts the output of refdb on stdin to allow scrolling and other nifty things. “stdout” sends the data to stdout. | 
| passwd | * | The password which is used for authentication with the database server. It is potentially evil to store unencrypted passwords in disk files. At least make sure that the configuration file is not readable for anyone else. The default setting causes refdba to ask for your password interactively. | 
| port | 9734 | The port on which refdbd listens. Change this for all clients and the server if this value interferes with another program using this port. | 
| serverip | 127.0.0.1 | The IP address or hostname of the machine where refdbd runs. Use the default (localhost) address if the clients and refdbd run on the same machine. | 
| timeout | 180 | The timeout in seconds. After this time has elapsed, a stalled connection is taken down. Increase this value if you encounter frequent timeout errors due to high network traffic or refdbd overload. | 
| username | login name | The username which is used for authentication with the database server. This may be different from the login name of the user. | 
| verbose | f | Set this to t if you prefer verbose error messages. | 
| no_encrypt | f | If set to 't', passwords are transmitted unencrypted. The default is to encrypt passwords. | 
COMMANDS¶
All commands consist of a single word which specifies the command. This may be followed by arguments and/or switches. The general syntax rules of the getopts library apply.addstyle¶
Synopsisaddstyle [-c command] [-h]
  [[-o filename] | [-O filename]]
  {style-file...}
Adds one or more bibliography style specifications from the input file(s).
-c command
Specifies a command that will receive the output instead
  of the default pager. This may be a different pager, any command that takes
  input on stdin, or the string “stdout” to send the data to
  stdout without using a pager.
-h
Displays the online help about the addstyle
  command.
-o filename
Write the output to filename instead of to
  stdout.
-O filename
Append the output to filename instead of writing
  it to stdout.
style-file
All other arguments are interpreted as the names of files
  containing style specifications.
refdba: addstyle j.biol.chem.xml pharmacol.rev.xml
adduser¶
Synopsisadduser {-d database} [-h]
  {-H host-IP} [-R]
  [-W password] {[ -f file] |
  [username...]}
Grants access rights to a refdb database to the given users. Specify the
  database with the -d option.
 
Note
 
 
If a user is not yet known to the database server, refdb will create an account
  with the default access rights (=none). If you do not specify a password for
  the new user with the -W option (see below), the user will have access
  to the database server with the default password "refdb". In most
  cases this is not a good thing.
A new user will automatically get access to the internal refdb database refdb.
Some database engines like SQLite do not support access control. The
  adduser command is not supported with these engines and will just
  return an explanatory message.
-d database
Specifies the reference database for which the access
  rights should apply.
-f file
Reads a whitespace-separated list of usernames from
  file.
-h
Displays the online help about the adduser
  command.
-H hostname
hostname specifies the host the refdb application
  server runs on. If it runs on the same machine as the database server, you may
  specify “localhost” as hostname. Use “%” as
  hostname to allow access from all addresses except localhost. Otherwise, the
  hostname argument can be either a hostname, an IP address, or a subnet that
  specifies one or more computers to allow access from. You can add the same
  user several times with different hostnames.
 
Note
 
 
This option is only supported by MySQL. It is ignored if you use PostgreSQL as
  your database server. Please see the PostgreSQL documentation for help on how
  to manipulate host-based access control with the pg_hba.conf file.
-R
Use this option to grant read-only access for the user.
  By default, users are granted read/write access. Users with read-only access
  can basically only retrieve references and notes.
-W password
Set the password for a new user. The password is
  encrypted before transferring it to the application server. If the user
  already exists, his password will be changed accordingly.
username
All other arguments are interpreted as usernames. If
  neither a username argument nor an input file is specified, refdba attempts to
  read a whitespace-separated list of names from stdin. To force refdba to read
  from stdin in addition to explicitly named users, use the -f
  stdin option.
refdba: adduser -d db1 -N newpassjim
refdba: adduser -d db1 -H mono.mycomp.com jim jane
If you as the refdb administrator do not have GRANT permission on your database
  server, the adduser command is bound to fail. As a security-minded
  person your database administrator might refuse to run refdba regardless of
  how often you ensure him it doesn't contain malicious code. He'll want to do
  it the hard way, and this is what he needs to do:
•If you use MySQL as your database server, each
  new user needs at least entries in the mysql.user and mysql.db tables. Your
  database administrator might have set up his own rules, but in general the
  mysql.user table should grant no privileges to the user, whereas the mysql.db
  table should grant INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE, DELETE permissions to each user for
  the refdb database and SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, CREATE, DROP privileges
  for each reference database the user should have access to. Make sure to
  mention that the Host field in mysql.user must contain the name or address of
  the box that runs refdbd, which is not necessarily identical with the
  workstation of the user.
•If you prefer PostgreSQL instead, things are a
  little simpler. When you create a refdb database, a new group will be created
  to manage access to this database. All your database administrator needs to do
  is to add the new user to the groups refdbuser (granting access to the common
  refdb database) and <dbname>user, where <dbname> is the name of
  the reference database the user should be allowed to access.
addword¶
Synopsisaddword [-h] {[-f file] |
  [word...]...}
Most bibliography styles use standardized abbreviations of the journal names.
  Most data sources specify these abbreviations without dots, as in "Mol
  Cell Biol". If the words are to be abbreviated with dots (as in
  "Mol. Cell Biol.") in the bibliography, refdb needs to know which
  tokens in the abbreviated name are indeed abbreviated (e.g. "Mol."),
  and which are full words (e.g. "Cell"). To this end, refdb keeps a
  list of reserved words which are known not to be abbreviations of something
  else. refdb ships with a fairly complete list of such words, but if you detect
  errors or omissions, the addword command comes in handy.
-f file
Read a whitespace-separated list of journal title words
  from file.
-h
Displays the online help about the addword
  command.
word
All other arguments are interpreted as reserved words. If
  neither a word list nor an input file is specified, refdba attempts to read a
  whitespace-separated list of words from stdin. To force refdba to read from
  stdin in addition to explicitly listed words, use the -f stdin
  option.
 
Note
 
 
refdb will convert all reserved words to uppercase internally, so it does not
  matter which case you provide these words in.
refdba: addword -f wordlist FOO BAR
confserv¶
Synopsisconfserv {command} [value]
Configures the application server while it is running and does some tricks with
  the refdb helper databases as well. Some of the commands modify variables that
  can be set as command line arguments or with the init file. See Running the
  refdbd daemon for more information about these variables.
 
Note
 
 
This command will only reconfigure refdbd transiently. All changes are lost when
  the application server is restarted. To make permantent changes to the
  configuration, edit the init-file or change the command-line parameters in the
  script that starts refdbd. Please note also that remote administration must be
  enabled for this command to work.
The following commands are available:
stop
Stops the application server.
 
Note
 
 
This command affects only the refdbd parent process. Any children that may be
  currently serving clients will continue to do so until they are done.
ping
Checks whether the application server is still alive and
  well. If this is the case, it will report the process IDs of the child that
  handles your query and of the parent. If not, the connection will time out
  with no response.
serverip value
Sets the database server IP address to
  value.
timeout value
Sets the timeout in seconds to value.
logdest value
Sets the destination of log output to value.
  Possible values are 0 (stderr), 1 (the system syslog facility), 2 (a private
  log file as defined by logfile).
logfile value
Sets the filename of the log file to value.
loglevel value
Sets the maximum level of messages to be logged to
  value. 0 means that only critical errors will be logged, 7 means that
  all messages including the extremely verbose debug messages will be logged. -1
  disables logging completely.
refdba: confserv loglevel 7
createdb¶
Synopsiscreatedb [-E encoding] [-h]
  {dbname...}
Creates a new database with the name dbname. Several databases may be
  specified in a single call of this command.
-E encoding
Select a character encoding for the new database. This is
  currently only supported by MySQL and PostgreSQL. If you use a different
  engine, this option is ignored. Please see the documentation of your database
  engine installation for available encodings. The value passed with the
  -E option should be the IANA[1] encoding name. If you do not use
  this option, the new database will use the default encoding of the database
  server unless your refdbdrc configuration file sets a default with a
  "db_encoding" entry.
-h
Displays the online help about the createdb
  command.
name
The name of the reference database. The name must not
  contain a colon (':') or a dash ('-') due to the citation formats in documents
  using RefDB. The allowed characters may be further restricted by the database
  engine you use. The database name should also be considered case-insensitive,
  i.e. don't try to create a database "mybase" if you already have one
  called "MYBASE". Also, avoid using names which are SQL reserved
  words as this is doomed to fail. Unfortunately, this includes the all too
  convenient name "references". Try "refs" or
  "biblio" instead.
 
Tip
 
 
Prepend a constant string like “rd” to all refdb database names.
  This speeds up retrieving refdb databases with the listdb command if
  your database engine manages additional, non-RefDB databases. Use a simple
  regular expression like “rd%” to restrict your search to RefDB
  databases.
refdba: createdb db1 -E UTF-8 db2
refdb contains two plain-text SQL scripts (installed in
  /usr/local/share/refdb/sql) to create database tables just like the
  createdb command does. These scripts are preferable to the command in
  these cases:
•You do not have database administrator
  permissions and have to ask your admin to create the databases for you. Your
  admin might prefer to run the script as he can easily find out what it is
  going to do.
•You want to integrate refdb with an existing or a
  custom database system. In that case you want the refdb-specific tables in an
  existing database in addition to non-refdb tables.
The following procedures are equivalent to running the createdb command. If you
  want to add the tables to an existing database, please adapt the scripts
  and/or the procedures accordingly.
•If you're running MySQL, use the following
  commands (provide additional options like username and password as required):
#~ mysql -e "CREATE DATABASE dbname"
#~ mysql dbname < empty.mysql.dump
•If you're using PostgreSQL, the following
  sequence should work (again, provide additional options like username and
  password as required):
The empty.pgsql.dump.in script contains the commands to create a database and to
  set appropriate access rights for a new group of database users. Therefore it
  is a good idea to replace the string "refdbtest" with the intended
  name of your new database. The sed command in the first line does just
  this. You may also edit a few more things, like the encoding. The second
  command actually creates the database, a new group, grants privileges to this
  group, and creates all necessary tables and sequences. template1 is a
  PostgreSQL system database. The psql command requires the name of an
  existing database as an argument, but in this case you could use any other
  existing database just as well.#~ sed 's/refdbtest/dbname/g' < empty.pgsql.dump.in > empty.pgsql.dump
#~ psql template1 < empty.pgsql.dump
deletedb¶
Synopsisdeletedb [-h] {dbname...}
Deletes the database with the name dbname. Several databases may be
  specified in a single call of this command.
 
Caution
 
 
The database structure and the data will be gone, really gone, so be careful
  with this command. Think twice and, if in doubt, at least make a backup first
  to avoid extensive hairpulling.
-h
Displays a brief usage message and returns to the
  prompt.
dbname
The name of the database to be deleted.
refdba: deletedb db1 db2
deletestyle¶
Synopsisdeletestyle [-h] {unix-regexp}
Deletes the bibliography styles whose names match the Unix regular expression
  unix-regexp.
 
Note
 
 
Some database engines, like SQLite, do not support Unix-style regular
  expressions. Use SQL regular expressions instead.
-h
Displays a brief usage message and returns to the
  prompt.
unix-regexp
The remaining arguments are interpreted as a regular
  expression which specifies the style or styles to be deleted.
refdba: deletestyle J\..*
deleteuser¶
Synopsisdeleteuser {-d database} [-h]
  { -H host-IP} {-R} {[-f file]
  | [ username...]}
Revokes access rights to a refdb database from the given users.
 
Note
 
 
Some database engines like SQLite do not support access control. The
  adduser command is not supported with these engines and will just
  return an explanatory message.
refdb will only revoke the access rights to the specified database. It will
  revoke neither access rights to the internal database refdb, nor will it
  revoke database server access. You can revoke access to the internal database
  by specifying "refdb" with the -d option. To revoke access to
  the database server, please use the command line utilities of your database
  server.
-d database
Specify the name of the database.
-f filename
Read the usernames from filename
-h
Displays the online help about the deleteuser
  command.
-H hostname
Specify the hostname or IP address for which to modify
  the access rights. This must be the same name that you used for a previous
  call to adduser.
 
Note
 
 
This option is only supported by MySQL. It is ignored if you useother database
  engines.
-R
Revokes read-only access.
username
All other arguments are interpreted as usernames. If
  neither a username argument nor an input file is specified, refdba attempts to
  read a whitespace-separated list of names from stdin. To force refdba to read
  from stdin in addition to explicitly named users, use the -f
  stdin option.
refdba: deleteuser -d -H % db1jim
deleteword¶
Synopsisdeleteword [-h] {[-f file] |
  [ word...]...}
This command performs the reverse operation of addword. The specified reserved
  words will be removed from the list.
-f
Read a whitespace-separated list of words from
  file.
-h
Displays the online help about the addword
  command.
word
All other arguments are interpreted as reserved words. If
  neither a word list nor an input file is specified, refdba attempts to read a
  whitespace-separated list of words from stdin. To force refdba to read from
  stdin in addition to explicitly listed words, use the -f stdin
  option.
 
Note
 
 
refdb will convert all reserved words to uppercase internally, so it does not
  matter in which case you provide these words.
refdba: deleteword -f wordlist FOO BAR
getstyle¶
Synopsisgetstyle [-c] [-h] [[-o] |
  [-O]] { style...}
Retrieves one or more bibliography style specifications from the database and
  formats them as an XML file.
-c command
Specify a command that will receive the output instead of
  the default pager. This may be a different pager, any command that takes input
  on stdin, or the string “stdout” to send the data to stdout
  without using a pager.
-h
Displays the online help about the getstyle
  command.
-o
Write the output to a file instead of to stdout.
-O
Append the output to a file instead of writing it to
  stdout
 
Warning
 
 
Be careful with the append ( -O) option. refdb will output the processing
  instructions, the doctype line, and one CITESTYLE element for each
  individually requested style. If you concatenate the results of several
  getstyle calls, the resulting XML file will not be well-formed without
  further processing. In order to write several styles into a single XML file,
  use a single getstyle call and list all required styles as arguments.
  This will output the styles wrapped in a STYLESET element, resulting in a
  valid XML file.
style
All other arguments are interpreted as the names of
  bibliography styles.
refdba: getstyle -o j.biol.chem.xml J.Biol.Chem.
help¶
Synopsishelp
?
Displays a brief summary of the available commands.
refdba: help
listdb¶
Synopsislistdb [-h] [database-regexp]
Lists all available databases if no argument is specified. If
  database-regexp is specified, only the databases matching this
  expression will be listed.
 
Note
 
 
In order to tell refdb reference databases apart from other databases maintained
  by your database server, refdbd has to peek into each database returned by the
  database server. Depending on the number of available databases this may take
  some time. Therefore it may be a good idea to use a common prefix for all
  refdb databases as explained in the section about the createdb command.
-h
Displays a help message explaining the listdb
  command.
database-regexp
A valid SQL regular expression which limits the output to
  matching database names.
refdba: listdb db%
liststyle¶
Synopsisliststyle [-h] [style-regexp]
Lists all available bibliography styles that match style-regexp. If no
  argument is given, all available styles will be listed. This may or may
  not be what you want.
-h
Displays a help message explaining the listdb
  command.
style-regexp
A valid Unix regular expression which limits the output
  to matching style names.
 
Note
 
 
Some database engines, like SQLite, do not support Unix-style regular
  expressions. Use SQL regular expressions instead.
refdba: liststyle ^J.*
listuser¶
Synopsislistuser {-d database} [-h]
  [name-regexp]
Lists all available users of the specified database that match
  name-regexp. If no argument is given, all available users will
  be listed. This may or may not be what you want.
-d database
Specify the database name.
-h
Displays a help message explaining the listdb
  command.
name-regexp
A valid Unix regular expression which limits the output
  to matching database user names.
 
Note
 
 
Some database engines, like SQLite, do not support Unix-style regular
  expressions. Use SQL regular expressions instead.
refdba: listuser -d refs ^mo.*
listword¶
Synopsislistword [-h] {word-regexp}
Lists all available reserved journal words that match unix-regexp. If no
  argument is given, all available words will be listed. This may or may
  not be what you want.
 
Note
 
 
Keep in mind that the journal words are uppercased internally. You should write
  your unix-regexp using all caps accordingly.
-h
Displays a help message explaining the listdb
  command.
word-regexp
A valid Unix regular expression which limits the output
  to matching journal title words.
 
Note
 
 
Some database engines, like SQLite, do not support Unix-style regular
  expressions. Use SQL regular expressions instead.
 
Note
 
 
For a brief description of the purpose of reserved words, see the addword
  command.
refdba: listword ^BIO.*
scankw¶
Synopsisscankw {-d database}
  [-h]
This command schedules a full keyword scan in the database specified with the
  -d option. The abstract field as well as all title fields of all
  references found in the database are scanned for the presence of all keywords
  available in the database. If a match is found and the keyword is not yet
  associated with that reference, the keyword is added to that reference. As the
  time required to perform this operation increases with both the number of
  references and the number of keywords, the keyword scan is performed in the
  background and the command returns immediately on the client side. See the
  server log for the results.
As this command will cause a huge number of database accesses it is best
  scheduled to run automatically as a cron job at a time of low use, either
  nightly or on weekends.
Please note the difference between the full keyword scan and the automatic
  keyword scan which can be requested by the refdbd command line switch
  -K or the corresponding configuration variable keyword_scan. The
  full keyword scan is "retrospective", i.e. it will add keywords that
  were added later to previously existing references. The automatic keyword scan
  will only add existing keywords to newly added references, thus causing less
  impact on the database performance while users are likely to access the
  database.
-d database
Specify the database name.
-h
Displays a help message explaining the listdb
  command.
set¶
Synopsisset [-h] [varname] [varvalue]
The set command displays or modifies the values of configuration
  variables.
If you call set without any arguments, it will display a list of all
  configuration variables with their current values.
If you call set with one argument, it will display the current value of
  this particular variable.
If you call set with two arguments, it will set the variable (first
  argument) to the new value (second argument) for the current session. To
  specify an empty value, use two quotation marks like this:"".
 
Note
 
 
For obvious reasons, set will never display the current password although
  you can certainly change the password with this command. To make sure no one
  else sees the new password that you enter, run the command set passwd
  *. You will then be asked to enter a password which will not be echoed on
  the screen.
This command is not available in batch mode, use the command line switches
  instead. In the interactive mode, the changes to the configuration variables
  are limited to the current session. If you want to change the values
  permanently, you should rather edit one of the configuration files.
-h
Displays a help message explaining the listdb
  command.
varname
The name of the variable whose value should be displayed
  or set.
varvalue
The new value of the variable to be set.
refdba: set timeout 90
verbose¶
Synopsisverbose [-h]
Toggles the verbose mode on or off. If the verbose mode is on, the error
  messages and warnings may be some more comprehensible.
-h
Displays a help message explaining the listdb
  command.
refdba: verbose
viewstat¶
Synopsisviewstat [-h]
Shows the version numbers of the libdbi driver used to connect to your database
  server as well as the version information of that server. It also shows the
  current values of the variables that can be modified with
  confserv.
-h
Displays a help message explaining the listdb
  command.
refdba: viewstat
FILES¶
PREFIX/etc/refdb/refdbarcThe global configuration file of refdba.
$HOME/.refdbarc
The user configuration file of refdba.
SEE ALSO¶
RefDB (7), refdbd (1), refdb-backup (1), refdb-restore (1), refdbc (1). RefDB manual (local copy) PREFIX/share/doc/refdb-<version>/refdb-manual/index.html RefDB manual (web) < http://refdb.sourceforge.net/manual/index.html> RefDB on the web < http://refdb.sourceforge.net/>AUTHOR¶
refdba was written by Markus Hoenicka <markus@mhoenicka.de>.NOTES¶
- 1.
 - IANA
 
| 2005-10-15 | RefDB Manual |