#-- # Ruby Whois # # An intelligent pure Ruby WHOIS client and parser. # # Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Simone Carletti #++ require 'whois/record/parser/base' require 'whois/record/parser/scanners/verisign' module Whois class Record class Parser # # = whois.nic.tv parser # # Parser for the whois.nic.tv server. # class WhoisNicTv < Base include Scanners::Ast property_supported :disclaimer do node("Disclaimer") end property_supported :domain do node("Domain Name") { |raw| raw.downcase } end property_not_supported :domain_id property_supported :referral_whois do node("Whois Server") end property_supported :referral_url do node("Referral URL") end property_supported :status do node("Status") end property_supported :available? do node("Registrar").nil? end property_supported :registered? do !available? end property_supported :created_on do node("Creation Date") { |raw| Time.parse(raw) } end property_supported :updated_on do node("Updated Date") { |raw| Time.parse(raw) } end property_supported :expires_on do node("Expiration Date") { |raw| Time.parse(raw) } end property_supported :registrar do # Return nil because when the response contains more than one registrar section # the response can be messy. See, for instance, the Verisign response for google.com. nil end property_supported :nameservers do Array.wrap(node("Name Server")).reject { |value| value =~ /no nameserver/i }.map do |name| Nameserver.new(name.downcase) end end # Initializes a new {Scanners::Verisign} instance # passing the {#content_for_scanner} # and calls +parse+ on it. # # @return [Hash] def parse Scanners::Verisign.new(content_for_scanner).parse end end end end end