-.IP \fB\-\-input\fR,\ \fB\-i\fR
-Specify the input file containing a list of CIDRs, rather than using
-stdin (the default).
+.IP \fB\-\-barriers\fR,\ \fB\-b\fR
+(regexed mode only)
+
+Place barriers in front/back of the regex to prevent, for
+example, '127.0.0.1' from matching '127.0.0.100'. The downside is that
+the resulting regexp will match something that is not an IP address.
+This can interfere with things like \fIgrep -o\fR.
+
+Without \fB\-\-barriers\fR, you can match things you shouldn't:
+
+.nf
+.I $ echo 127.0.0.100 | grep -P $(echo 127.0.0.1/32 | hath)
+127.0.0.100
+.fi
+
+Using \fB\-\-barriers\fR can prevent this:
+.nf
+.I $ echo 127.0.0.100 | grep -P $(echo 127.0.0.1/32 | hath -b)
+.I $ echo $?
+1
+.fi
+
+But, this may also cause the regex to match something that isn't an IP
+address:
+.nf
+.I $ echo x127.0.0.1x | grep -Po $(echo 127.0.0.1/32 | hath -b)
+x127.0.0.1x
+.fi
+.SH BUGS
+
+Send bugs to michael@orlitzky.com.