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@@ -272,7 +272,7 @@ can specify a useful set of rules, but the author has not tested this.
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The `$RANGE` control operation is a variation on the same general idea
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as the (BIND9-specific) `$GENERATE` control operation, but is, in the
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author's opinion, a bit easier both to use and to read. For all but
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-the most esoteric uses, it takes three of four arguments:
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+the most esoteric uses, it takes three or four arguments:
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1. A format string to generate the name field of the resulting RRs.
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@@ -296,7 +296,7 @@ octet of the start address.
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Examples:
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- ; Access points using generate(). This is equivalent to:
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+ ; Access points using $RANGE. This is equivalent to:
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;
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; ap-101 10.0.1.101
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; ap-102 10.0.1.102
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@@ -305,9 +305,9 @@ Examples:
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$RANGE ap-{:d} 10.0.1.101 10.0.1.200
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- ; Switches, also using $RANGE, but with numbering explicitly
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- ; specified rather than inferred from the IPv4 addressing,
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- ; equivalent to:
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+ ; Switches, also using $RANGE, but with the numeric input to the
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+ ; format string explicitly specified rather than inferred from the
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+ ; IPv4 addressing. Equivalent to:
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;
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; sw-1 10.0.3.17
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; sw-2 10.0.3.18
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