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- From: "Roger L. Costello" <costello@mitre.org>
- To: xml-dev@ic.ac.uk, "Etkind,Wendy C." <etkind@mitre.org>, "Schneider,John C." <jcs@mitre.org>, "Cokus,Michael S." <msc@mitre.org>, JTauber@bowstreet.com
- Date: Wed, 22 Dec 1999 14:19:52 -0500
Andrew Greene pointed out that the regular expression was allowing
things like 08 and 09 to appear as a field in the IP, and many (all?)
implementations treat a number beginning with "0" as an octal value.
Here's the latest solution, containing the R.E. that Andrew sent to me
which does not have this deficiency: (thanks Andrew!)
<datatype name="IP" source="string">
<pattern value="(([1-9]?[0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])\.){3}
([1-9]?[0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])"/>
<annotation>
<info>
Datatype for representing IP addresses. Examples,
129.83.64.255, 64.128.2.71, etc.
This datatype restricts each field of the IP address
to have a value between zero and 255, i.e.,
[0-255].[0-255].[0-255].[0-255]
Note: in the value attribute (above) the regular
expression has been split over two lines. This is
for readability purposes only. In practice the R.E.
would all be on one line.
</info>
</annotation>
</pattern>
</datatype>
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