Small change to previous patch, make ranges of hosts inclusive.

This commit is contained in:
Michael DeHaan
2012-07-24 20:10:05 -04:00
parent 416b8d59a9
commit 8fa4dc3920
7 changed files with 39 additions and 45 deletions

View File

@@ -7,39 +7,38 @@
# - Groups of hosts are delimited by [header] elements
# - You can enter hostnames or ip addresses
# - A hostname/ip can be a member of multiple groups
#
# Ex 1: Ungrouped hosts, specify before any group headers.
green.bikeshed.org
blue.bikeshed.org
red.bikeshed.org
bikeshed.org
bastion.secure.bikeshed.org
green.example.com
blue.example.com
192.168.100.1
192.168.100.10
# An example for host expansion that uses the default 'beg' and an 'end'
mail[:5].example.com
# Ex 2: A collection of hosts belonging to the 'webservers' group
[webservers]
www01.bikeshed.org
www02.bikeshed.org
wheel.colors.com
alpha.example.org
beta.example.org
192.168.1.100
192.168.1.110
# Your personal website also runs a webserver:
myserver.com
# An example for host expansion that uses both a 'beg' and an 'end', with
# the 'beg' acting as a formatting hint during host name expansion
# If you have multiple hosts following a pattern you can specify
# them like this:
www[001:006].example.com
# Ex 3: A collection of database servers in the 'dbservers' group
[dbservers]
db01.intranet.mydomain.net
10.25.1.56
db02.intranet.mydomain.net
10.25.1.56
10.25.1.57
# Perhaps you serve a db off your personal server too:
myserver.com
# An example for host expansion that uses a regular 'beg' and a regular
# 'end'
# Here's another example of host ranges, this time there are no
# leading 0s:
db-[99:101]-node.example.com