use ClusterSSH::Host;
my $host = ClusterSSH::Host->new({
hostname => 'hostname',
});
my $host = ClusterSSH::Host->parse_host_string('username@hostname:1234');
Object representing a host. Include details to contact the host such as
hostname/ipaddress, username and port.
- $host=ClusterSSH::Host->new ({ hostname => 'hostname'
})
- Create a new host object. 'hostname' is a required arg,
'username' and 'port' are optional. Raises exception if an error
occurs.
- $host->get_hostname
- $host->get_username
- $host->get_port
- $host->get_master
- $host->get_geometry
- $host->get_type
- Return specific details about the host
- $host->set_username
- $host->set_port
- $host->set_master
- $host->set_geometry
- $host->set_type
- Set specific details about the host after its been
created.
- get_realname
- If the server name provided is not an IP address (either
IPv4 or IPv6) attempt to resolve it and return the discovered names.
- get_givenname
- Alias to get_hostname, for use when " get_realname
" might return something different
- parse_host_string
- Given a host string, returns a host object. Parses hosts
such as
- check_ssh_hostname
- Check the objects hostname to see whether or not it may be
configured within the users $HOME/.ssh/config
configuration file
- read_ssh_file
- Method to ease reading in ssh configuration files. Used for
grabbing hostnames for validation when used in clusters
- host
- 192.168.0.1
- user@host
- [email protected]
- host:port
- [1234:1234:1234::4567]:port
- 1234:1234:1234::4567
and so on. Cope with IPv4 and IPv6 addresses - raises a warning if the IPv6
address is ambiguous (i.e. in the last example, is the 4567 part of the IPv6
address or a port definition?) and assumes it is part of address. Use brackets
to avoid seeing warning.