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Net::Whois::RIPE is because it is stated in the requirements (./INSTALL) for using rpsltool.
> Nowadays in most cases you can just use the bgpq3 backend You mean to use bgpq3 instead of rpsltool?
Is there a way to tell rpsltool to ingore Net::Whois::RIPE not being installed? (And use the bgpq3 backend instead) Currently I get this: ``` /opt/rpsltool > ./rpsltool Can't locate Net/Whois/RIPE.pm...
From Ubuntu 22.04 LTS, `man apt-key` > Recommended: Instead of placing keys into the [/etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d](file:///etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d) directory, you can > place them anywhere on your filesystem by using the Signed-By option...
Storing the key 1:1 as `/etc/apt/keyrings/frr.asc` (root:root, 0644), and the source file as ``` curl -s https://deb.frrouting.org/frr/keys.asc | \ sudo tee /etc/apt/keyrings/frr.asc FRRVER="frr-stable" echo "deb [signed-by=/etc/apt/keyrings/frr.asc] https://deb.frrouting.org/frr $(lsb_release -s -c)...
> I don't think this is a high priority for us but thank you for pointing it out. > > @eqvinox any thoughts here? @qlyoung Personally, I think the installation...
> Out of curiosity: what is the use-case? Do you process them sequentially? I use a local exception file for internal routes. As well as import the current as0 file...
NB: The [FORT validator ](https://nicmx.github.io/FORT-validator/slurm.html) do as well, ([NICMx/FORT-validator/tree/master/src/slurm](https://github.com/NICMx/FORT-validator/tree/master/src/slurm)) > The SLURM files are defined by the --slurm flag. If the flag points to a file, the configuration is extracted...
- File: [atlasswprobe-5010-1-amd64.deb.zip](https://github.com/RIPE-NCC/ripe-atlas-software-probe/files/4210267/atlasswprobe-5010-1-amd64.deb.zip) - Checksum: atlasswprobe-5010-1-amd64.deb.zip - sha256: `565963DC6A78E2AA90CE18C106684F5BABAC8AC51F80A907A647DDB79ED20FEC` - Checksum: atlasswprobe-5010-1-amd64.deb - sha256: `D2621E8A7076A7FE4D97E2FFD59A14612FCA03CB2006C95B2BE437E34E94268F`
> You mean like this? https://github.com/Knight1/ripe-atlas_packages-test/releases Yep.