Show's per IP of how many requests they did to the Apache webserver
The first sort is necessary for ips in a list to be actually unique.
Same as the rest, but handle IPv6 short IPs. Also, sort in the order that you're probably looking for. Show Sample Output
Get your ip address, hostname, ASN and geolocation information. If you want just one field as a text response you can also get that,eg curl ipinfo.io/ip Show Sample Output
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10768160/ip-address-converter Show Sample Output
parses the output of ifconfig to show only the configured ip address (in this case from interface eth0). the regexp is quick'n'dirty im sure it can be done in a better way. --> this alias does not show your "internet ip" when you're in a nat-environment Show Sample Output
This command will output 1 if the given argument is a valid ip address and 0 if it is not. Show Sample Output
This obey that you don't match any broadcast or network addresses and stay between 1.1.1.1 - 254.254.254.254
If used without arguments, returns own IP info. If used with argument, returns info about the parsed argument. Show Sample Output
Provides a cleaner output plus some more details about the IP address. Also, a flaw was corrected where the URL provided the results in Spanish by default. Show Sample Output
Grabs your external public IP. Show Sample Output
export THISOS="`uname -s`" if [ "$THISOS" = "SunOS" ] then export THISRELEASE="`uname -r`" ping1() { ping -s $1 56 1 | egrep "^64"; } elif [ "$THISOS" = "AIX" ] then export THISRELEASE="`uname -v`.`uname -r`" ping1() { ping -w ${2:-1} $1 56 1 | egrep "^64"; } elif [ "$THISOS" = "Linux" ] then export THISRELEASE="`uname -r`" ping1() { ping -c 1 -w ${2:-1} $1 | egrep "^64"; } fi
Reciprocally, we could get the node name from a give Tor IP address => ip2node() { curl -s -d "QueryIP=$1" http://torstatus.blutmagie.de/tor_exit_query.php | grep -oP "Server name:.*'>\K\w+" ; } ip2node 204.8.156.142 BostonUCompSci Show Sample Output
lynx -dump ip.nu
Your IP address is 0.0.0.0
cut -f1,2 - IP range 16 cut -f1,2,3 - IP range 24 cut -f1,2,3,4 - IP range 24 Show Sample Output
That's the easiest way to do it. -I (or capital i) display all network addresses of a host
avoiding UUOC! cut can handle files as well. No neet for a cat.
Gives the DNS listed IP for the host you're on... or replace `hostname` with any other host Show Sample Output
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