Provided by:
divine_0.8-3_i386 
NAME
divine.conf - configuration file for divine
SYNOPSIS
/etc/divine.conf
DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/divine.conf lists all the networks this machine will be
used in. In particular, the file lists the IP numbers of this machine
in the different networks, the network mask, one or several IP numbers
to try to reach in that network, the default gateway, the DNS
configuration and web proxy settings.
It needs not be world readable (but does not contain passwords or other
critical information).
FIELDS
Each line contains (in this order, separated by colons) the following
fields:
IP/netmask
This is simply the IP and netmask of this machine in this
network. The netmask is specified as the number of bits from
the left that are one, so 255.255.255.0, for example, would be
written as /24.
ip[|ip...]
You have to give at least one IP number that is always up in
that network, for example the standard gateway. Please note
that the IP number has to be on the same LAN, since ARP requests
are not routed.
default gateway
This is the IP number of the default gateway in this network.
alternative resolv.conf
Once divine found out in which network you are, it will unlink
/etc/resolv.conf and create a symbolic link to this value. I
recommend using resolv.conf.work, resolv.conf.home and similar
file names for this. make install will copy your resolv.conf to
resolv.conf.default so it is not accidentally lost when you play
with divine.
web proxy
This is an IP number or host name of your web proxy.
web proxy port
This is the numeric port of the web proxy you are using
(probably 3128, 80, 8080 or 8000).
script This is the name of a script (or other executable) that you want
divine to run when this configuration is detected. Use this for
stuff that I forgot, maybe having a symlink scheme like the
/etc/resolv.conf one for /etc/printcap or change /etc/issue to
reflect the configuration. Use your imagination.
description
This is simply so you can keep the entries apart, and divine
will display this name when it identified the network.
COMMENTS
You can put comment lines in /etc/divine.conf if they start with a hash
sign (#).
EXAMPLE
# IP/netmask:ip[|ip...]:default_gw:resolv.conf.whatever:proxy:port:description
10.0.0.2/24:10.0.0.1|10.0.0.3:10.0.0.1:resolv.conf.default:10.0.0.1:3128:Home
160.45.45.167/23:160.45.44.1:160.45.44.1:resolv.conf.mathe:http-proxy.fu-berlin.de:80:Uni
FILES
/etc/divine.conf