NANOGers, Can someone please point me in the direction of an rwhoisd solution to be run on a CentOS Linux platform? ARIN is now punting rwhois queries to us and frankly i've been unable to find an easy to install/use solution to answer these queries. I've seen the rwhoisd at projects.arin.net but the documentation on it is ghastly to say the least. Hopefully someone knows of an easier solution or at least a tutorial somewhere? -- Jeffrey Lyon, Leadership Team jeffrey.lyon@blacklotus.net | http://www.blacklotus.net Black Lotus Communications of The IRC Company, Inc. Look for us at HostingCon 2009 in Washington, DC on August 10th - 12th at Booth #401.
On Sat, 2009-06-06 at 10:37 -0400, Jeffrey Lyon wrote:
NANOGers,
Can someone please point me in the direction of an rwhoisd solution to be run on a CentOS Linux platform? ARIN is now punting rwhois queries to us and frankly i've been unable to find an easy to install/use solution to answer these queries. I've seen the rwhoisd at projects.arin.net but the documentation on it is ghastly to say the least.
Hopefully someone knows of an easier solution or at least a tutorial somewhere?
If you happen to find one I'd like to know about it as well...
Gregory, So far i've received a few replies, one of them containing something of a tutorial. If it works i'll post my adaptation of it on the web for all to reference. Thanks, Jeff On Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 11:03 AM, Gregory McLean<gmclean@xilogix.net> wrote:
On Sat, 2009-06-06 at 10:37 -0400, Jeffrey Lyon wrote:
NANOGers,
Can someone please point me in the direction of an rwhoisd solution to be run on a CentOS Linux platform? ARIN is now punting rwhois queries to us and frankly i've been unable to find an easy to install/use solution to answer these queries. I've seen the rwhoisd at projects.arin.net but the documentation on it is ghastly to say the least.
Hopefully someone knows of an easier solution or at least a tutorial somewhere?
If you happen to find one I'd like to know about it as well...
-- Jeffrey Lyon, Leadership Team jeffrey.lyon@blacklotus.net | http://www.blacklotus.net Black Lotus Communications of The IRC Company, Inc. Look for us at HostingCon 2009 in Washington, DC on August 10th - 12th at Booth #401.
I used this guide and it worked quite well. The writer was using FreeBSD but I installed onto Ubuntu and ran into little to no issues. http://www.unixadmin.cc/rwhois/ ---Chris On Jun 6, 2009, at 10:37 AM, Jeffrey Lyon wrote:
NANOGers,
Can someone please point me in the direction of an rwhoisd solution to be run on a CentOS Linux platform? ARIN is now punting rwhois queries to us and frankly i've been unable to find an easy to install/use solution to answer these queries. I've seen the rwhoisd at projects.arin.net but the documentation on it is ghastly to say the least.
Hopefully someone knows of an easier solution or at least a tutorial somewhere?
-- Jeffrey Lyon, Leadership Team jeffrey.lyon@blacklotus.net | http://www.blacklotus.net Black Lotus Communications of The IRC Company, Inc.
Look for us at HostingCon 2009 in Washington, DC on August 10th - 12th at Booth #401.
Can someone please point me in the direction of an rwhoisd solution to be run on a CentOS Linux platform? ARIN is now punting rwhois queries to us and frankly i've been unable to find an easy to install/use solution to answer these queries. I've seen the rwhoisd at projects.arin.net but the documentation on it is ghastly to say the least.
If you use IPPlan to manage your IP allocations, it comes with a whois daemon that'll automagically use the information from your IPPlan sql database. Chris
Do you have a link to the information on how to get that setup? ---Chris On Jun 10, 2009, at 1:05 PM, Chris Stone wrote:
Can someone please point me in the direction of an rwhoisd solution to be run on a CentOS Linux platform? ARIN is now punting rwhois queries to us and frankly i've been unable to find an easy to install/use solution to answer these queries. I've seen the rwhoisd at projects.arin.net but the documentation on it is ghastly to say the least.
If you use IPPlan to manage your IP allocations, it comes with a whois daemon that'll automagically use the information from your IPPlan sql database.
Chris
participants (4)
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Chris Stone
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Chris Wallace
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Gregory McLean
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Jeffrey Lyon