
A. OLCmd Reference
7800-A2-GB32-00
January 2002
A-13
OLCmd dbip
IP addresses are maintained in the statistics database as single decimal integers.
For example, the IP address 135.26.10.37 is maintained in the database as
–2028336603. The dbip command converts a single integer into a dotted decimal
address (four decimal integers separated by periods), or a dotted decimal address
into a single integer.
Format:
OLCmd dbip
address
Where:
Example:
The following are valid uses of the dbip command (shown with responses):
OLCmd dbip -2023301243
-2023301243 = 135.102.223.133
OLCmd dbip 174195980
174195980 = 10.98.5.12
OLCmd dbip 200.23.132.10
200.23.132.10 = 937982966
address
May be a positive or negative decimal integer, or four
decimal integers from 0–255 separated by periods. A
negative number is denoted by a leading hyphen.
Summary of Contents for OpenLane SLM 5.5
Page 1: ...OpenLane SLM 5 5 Administrator s Guide Document No 7800 A2 GB32 00 January 2002...
Page 22: ...2 Installing OpenLane on Solaris 2 12 January 2002 7800 A2 GB32 00...
Page 34: ...3 Installing OpenLane on Windows 3 12 January 2002 7800 A2 GB32 00...
Page 46: ...5 Apache User Access Authentication 5 4 January 2002 7800 A2 GB32 00...
Page 64: ...7 OpenLane Maintenance 7 12 January 2002 7800 A2 GB32 00...
Page 70: ...8 Building and Using a Firmware Library 8 6 January 2002 7800 A2 GB32 00...
Page 104: ...A OLCmd Reference A 34 January 2002 7800 A2 GB32 00...
Page 108: ...B Using XML to Produce Reports B 4 January 2002 7800 A2 GB32 00...