NAME
Net::EPP::Frame::Command::Create::Host - an instance of Net::EPP::Frame::Command::Create for host objects.
SYNOPSIS
my $create = Net::EPP::Frame::Command::Create::Host->new;
$create ->setHost('ns1.example.uk.com);
print $create ->toString(1);
|
This results in an XML document like this:
<?xml version= "1.0" encoding= "UTF-8" ?>
<epp xmlns= "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:epp-1.0"
xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:epp-1.0
epp-1.0.xsd">
<command>
<create>
<host:create
xmlns:contact= "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:host-1.0"
xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:host-1.0
host-1.0.xsd">
<host:name>ns1.example.uk.com</host:name>
</domain:create>
</create>
<clTRID>0cf1b8f7e14547d26f03b7641660c641d9e79f45</clTRIDE>
</command>
</epp>
|
OBJECT HIERARCHY
L<XML::LibXML::Node>
+----L<XML::LibXML::Document>
+----L<Net::EPP::Frame>
+----L<Net::EPP::Frame::Command>
+----L<Net::EPP::Frame::Command::Create>
+----L<Net::EPP::Frame::Command::Create::Host>
|
METHODS
my $element = $frame ->setHost( $host_name );
|
This sets the name of the object to be created. Returns the <<host:name>> element.
$frame ->setAddr({ 'ip' => '10.0.0.1' , 'version' => 'v4' });
|
This adds an IP address to the host object. EPP supports multiple addresses of different versions.
TTL Extension
$frame ->setTTLs({
A => 3600,
AAAA => 900,
});
|
Specify TTLs for glue records. The server must support the TTL extension.