X-Git-Url: http://gitweb.michael.orlitzky.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=hath.cabal;h=79315979ce73e4a6c9bafb7d9c72f20df401ebb5;hb=HEAD;hp=7ffd9e3d4fb409c38de90c69f82a712cb22673e8;hpb=2c15b93fff33b907d567ba14c380831c4d81b054;p=hath.git diff --git a/hath.cabal b/hath.cabal index 7ffd9e3..7931597 100644 --- a/hath.cabal +++ b/hath.cabal @@ -6,14 +6,15 @@ maintainer: Michael Orlitzky homepage: https://michael.orlitzky.com/code/hath.xhtml bug-reports: mailto:michael@orlitzky.com category: Utils -license: AGPL-3.0-only +license: AGPL-3.0-or-later license-file: doc/LICENSE build-type: Simple extra-source-files: + doc/COPYING doc/man1/hath.1 test/shell/*.test synopsis: - Hath manipulates network blocks in CIDR notation. + Manipulates network blocks in CIDR notation description: Hath is a Haskell program for working with network blocks in CIDR notation. When dealing with blocks of network addresses, there are a @@ -29,62 +30,8 @@ description: * List them. - Hath has several modes to perform these functions: - - * __Regexed__ - This computes a (Perl-compatible) regular expression matching - the input CIDR blocks. It's the default mode of operation. - - * __Reduced__ - This combines small blocks into larger ones where possible, and - eliminates redundant blocks. The output should be equivalent to - the input, though. - - * __Duped__ - Shows only the blocks that would be removed by reduce; that is, it - shows the ones that would get combined into larger blocks or are - simply redundant. - - * __Diffed__ - Shows what would change if you used reduce. Uses diff-like - notation. - - * __Listed__ - List the IP addresses contained within the given CIDRs. - - /Examples/: - - Compute a (Perl-compatible) regular expression matching - the input CIDR blocks. It's the default mode of operation. - - @ - $ echo \"10.0.0.0\/29 10.0.0.8\/29\" | hath - ((10)\.(0)\.(0)\.(15|14|13|12|11|10|9|8|7|6|5|4|3|2|1|0)) - @ - - Combine two \/24s into a \/23: - - @ - $ echo \"10.0.0.0\/24 10.0.1.0\/24\" | hath reduced - 10.0.0.0/23 - @ - - List the addresses in 192.168.0.240\/29: - - @ - $ echo 192.168.0.240\/29 | hath listed - 192.168.0.240 - 192.168.0.241 - 192.168.0.242 - 192.168.0.243 - 192.168.0.244 - 192.168.0.245 - 192.168.0.246 - 192.168.0.247 - @ - - The command-line syntax and complete set of options are documented in - the man page. + Hath has several modes to perform these functions. The command-line + syntax and complete set of options are documented in the man page. executable hath