I found a command-line program that did this once before, used it for a
while and then forgot about it until right now and I'll be damned if I
can find it again.
A command line IP calculator that takes an address range and give it
back in cidr format.
I found an online one that does this here:
On Fri, Dec 25, 2009 at 05:05:53PM -0600, Frank Cox wrote:
Does anyone know what it's called and where it can be found?
/bin/ipcalc - part of the initscripts package.
John
--
If man does find the solution for world
I found a command-line program that did this once before, used it for a
while and then forgot about it until right now and I'll be damned if I
can find it again.
A command line IP calculator that takes an address range and give it
back in cidr format.
I found an online one that does this
On Fri, 2009-12-25 at 17:14 -0600, Barry Brimer wrote:
I like the one at http://jodies.de/ipcalc-archive/ipcalc-0.41/ipcalc
which also gives Cisco wildcard masks as well as all the other useful
things.
I'm pretty sure this is the one that I was using before.
Thanks loads for the help.
--
On Fri, 2009-12-25 at 17:09 -0600, John R. Dennison wrote:
Does anyone know what it's called and where it can be found?
/bin/ipcalc - part of the initscripts package.
As far as I can tell, that one doesn't do ranges (from a.b.c.0 to
a.b.e.255 stuff). At least, if it does I
On Fri, Dec 25, 2009 at 05:41:29PM -0600, Frank Cox wrote:
As far as I can tell, that one doesn't do ranges (from a.b.c.0 to
a.b.e.255 stuff). At least, if it does I haven't figured out the magic
incantation to get it to do that.
No, it indeed does not. My brain skipped over the
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