root / HServer / 00.Server / 00.Program / node_modules / ipaddr.js / README.md
이력 | 보기 | 이력해설 | 다운로드 (8.12 KB)
1 |
# ipaddr.js — an IPv6 and IPv4 address manipulation library [](https://travis-ci.org/whitequark/ipaddr.js) |
---|---|
2 |
|
3 |
ipaddr.js is a small (1.9K minified and gzipped) library for manipulating |
4 |
IP addresses in JavaScript environments. It runs on both CommonJS runtimes |
5 |
(e.g. [nodejs]) and in a web browser. |
6 |
|
7 |
ipaddr.js allows you to verify and parse string representation of an IP |
8 |
address, match it against a CIDR range or range list, determine if it falls |
9 |
into some reserved ranges (examples include loopback and private ranges), |
10 |
and convert between IPv4 and IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses. |
11 |
|
12 |
[nodejs]: http://nodejs.org |
13 |
|
14 |
## Installation |
15 |
|
16 |
`npm install ipaddr.js` |
17 |
|
18 |
or |
19 |
|
20 |
`bower install ipaddr.js` |
21 |
|
22 |
## API |
23 |
|
24 |
ipaddr.js defines one object in the global scope: `ipaddr`. In CommonJS, |
25 |
it is exported from the module: |
26 |
|
27 |
```js |
28 |
var ipaddr = require('ipaddr.js'); |
29 |
``` |
30 |
|
31 |
The API consists of several global methods and two classes: ipaddr.IPv6 and ipaddr.IPv4. |
32 |
|
33 |
### Global methods |
34 |
|
35 |
There are three global methods defined: `ipaddr.isValid`, `ipaddr.parse` and |
36 |
`ipaddr.process`. All of them receive a string as a single parameter. |
37 |
|
38 |
The `ipaddr.isValid` method returns `true` if the address is a valid IPv4 or |
39 |
IPv6 address, and `false` otherwise. It does not throw any exceptions. |
40 |
|
41 |
The `ipaddr.parse` method returns an object representing the IP address, |
42 |
or throws an `Error` if the passed string is not a valid representation of an |
43 |
IP address. |
44 |
|
45 |
The `ipaddr.process` method works just like the `ipaddr.parse` one, but it |
46 |
automatically converts IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses to their IPv4 counterparts |
47 |
before returning. It is useful when you have a Node.js instance listening |
48 |
on an IPv6 socket, and the `net.ivp6.bindv6only` sysctl parameter (or its |
49 |
equivalent on non-Linux OS) is set to 0. In this case, you can accept IPv4 |
50 |
connections on your IPv6-only socket, but the remote address will be mangled. |
51 |
Use `ipaddr.process` method to automatically demangle it. |
52 |
|
53 |
### Object representation |
54 |
|
55 |
Parsing methods return an object which descends from `ipaddr.IPv6` or |
56 |
`ipaddr.IPv4`. These objects share some properties, but most of them differ. |
57 |
|
58 |
#### Shared properties |
59 |
|
60 |
One can determine the type of address by calling `addr.kind()`. It will return |
61 |
either `"ipv6"` or `"ipv4"`. |
62 |
|
63 |
An address can be converted back to its string representation with `addr.toString()`. |
64 |
Note that this method: |
65 |
* does not return the original string used to create the object (in fact, there is |
66 |
no way of getting that string) |
67 |
* returns a compact representation (when it is applicable) |
68 |
|
69 |
A `match(range, bits)` method can be used to check if the address falls into a |
70 |
certain CIDR range. |
71 |
Note that an address can be (obviously) matched only against an address of the same type. |
72 |
|
73 |
For example: |
74 |
|
75 |
```js |
76 |
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8:1234::1"); |
77 |
var range = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8::"); |
78 |
|
79 |
addr.match(range, 32); // => true |
80 |
``` |
81 |
|
82 |
Alternatively, `match` can also be called as `match([range, bits])`. In this way, |
83 |
it can be used together with the `parseCIDR(string)` method, which parses an IP |
84 |
address together with a CIDR range. |
85 |
|
86 |
For example: |
87 |
|
88 |
```js |
89 |
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8:1234::1"); |
90 |
|
91 |
addr.match(ipaddr.parseCIDR("2001:db8::/32")); // => true |
92 |
``` |
93 |
|
94 |
A `range()` method returns one of predefined names for several special ranges defined |
95 |
by IP protocols. The exact names (and their respective CIDR ranges) can be looked up |
96 |
in the source: [IPv6 ranges] and [IPv4 ranges]. Some common ones include `"unicast"` |
97 |
(the default one) and `"reserved"`. |
98 |
|
99 |
You can match against your own range list by using |
100 |
`ipaddr.subnetMatch(address, rangeList, defaultName)` method. It can work with a mix of IPv6 or IPv4 addresses, and accepts a name-to-subnet map as the range list. For example: |
101 |
|
102 |
```js |
103 |
var rangeList = { |
104 |
documentationOnly: [ ipaddr.parse('2001:db8::'), 32 ], |
105 |
tunnelProviders: [ |
106 |
[ ipaddr.parse('2001:470::'), 32 ], // he.net |
107 |
[ ipaddr.parse('2001:5c0::'), 32 ] // freenet6 |
108 |
] |
109 |
}; |
110 |
ipaddr.subnetMatch(ipaddr.parse('2001:470:8:66::1'), rangeList, 'unknown'); // => "tunnelProviders" |
111 |
``` |
112 |
|
113 |
The addresses can be converted to their byte representation with `toByteArray()`. |
114 |
(Actually, JavaScript mostly does not know about byte buffers. They are emulated with |
115 |
arrays of numbers, each in range of 0..255.) |
116 |
|
117 |
```js |
118 |
var bytes = ipaddr.parse('2a00:1450:8007::68').toByteArray(); // ipv6.google.com |
119 |
bytes // => [42, 0x00, 0x14, 0x50, 0x80, 0x07, 0x00, <zeroes...>, 0x00, 0x68 ] |
120 |
``` |
121 |
|
122 |
The `ipaddr.IPv4` and `ipaddr.IPv6` objects have some methods defined, too. All of them |
123 |
have the same interface for both protocols, and are similar to global methods. |
124 |
|
125 |
`ipaddr.IPvX.isValid(string)` can be used to check if the string is a valid address |
126 |
for particular protocol, and `ipaddr.IPvX.parse(string)` is the error-throwing parser. |
127 |
|
128 |
`ipaddr.IPvX.isValid(string)` uses the same format for parsing as the POSIX `inet_ntoa` function, which accepts unusual formats like `0xc0.168.1.1` or `0x10000000`. The function `ipaddr.IPv4.isValidFourPartDecimal(string)` validates the IPv4 address and also ensures that it is written in four-part decimal format. |
129 |
|
130 |
[IPv6 ranges]: https://github.com/whitequark/ipaddr.js/blob/master/src/ipaddr.coffee#L186 |
131 |
[IPv4 ranges]: https://github.com/whitequark/ipaddr.js/blob/master/src/ipaddr.coffee#L71 |
132 |
|
133 |
#### IPv6 properties |
134 |
|
135 |
Sometimes you will want to convert IPv6 not to a compact string representation (with |
136 |
the `::` substitution); the `toNormalizedString()` method will return an address where |
137 |
all zeroes are explicit. |
138 |
|
139 |
For example: |
140 |
|
141 |
```js |
142 |
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:0db8::0001"); |
143 |
addr.toString(); // => "2001:db8::1" |
144 |
addr.toNormalizedString(); // => "2001:db8:0:0:0:0:0:1" |
145 |
``` |
146 |
|
147 |
The `isIPv4MappedAddress()` method will return `true` if this address is an IPv4-mapped |
148 |
one, and `toIPv4Address()` will return an IPv4 object address. |
149 |
|
150 |
To access the underlying binary representation of the address, use `addr.parts`. |
151 |
|
152 |
```js |
153 |
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8:10::1234:DEAD"); |
154 |
addr.parts // => [0x2001, 0xdb8, 0x10, 0, 0, 0, 0x1234, 0xdead] |
155 |
``` |
156 |
|
157 |
A IPv6 zone index can be accessed via `addr.zoneId`: |
158 |
|
159 |
```js |
160 |
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8::%eth0"); |
161 |
addr.zoneId // => 'eth0' |
162 |
``` |
163 |
|
164 |
#### IPv4 properties |
165 |
|
166 |
`toIPv4MappedAddress()` will return a corresponding IPv4-mapped IPv6 address. |
167 |
|
168 |
To access the underlying representation of the address, use `addr.octets`. |
169 |
|
170 |
```js |
171 |
var addr = ipaddr.parse("192.168.1.1"); |
172 |
addr.octets // => [192, 168, 1, 1] |
173 |
``` |
174 |
|
175 |
`prefixLengthFromSubnetMask()` will return a CIDR prefix length for a valid IPv4 netmask or |
176 |
false if the netmask is not valid. |
177 |
|
178 |
```js |
179 |
ipaddr.IPv4.parse('255.255.255.240').prefixLengthFromSubnetMask() == 28 |
180 |
ipaddr.IPv4.parse('255.192.164.0').prefixLengthFromSubnetMask() == null |
181 |
``` |
182 |
|
183 |
`subnetMaskFromPrefixLength()` will return an IPv4 netmask for a valid CIDR prefix length. |
184 |
|
185 |
```js |
186 |
ipaddr.IPv4.subnetMaskFromPrefixLength(24) == "255.255.255.0" |
187 |
ipaddr.IPv4.subnetMaskFromPrefixLength(29) == "255.255.255.248" |
188 |
``` |
189 |
|
190 |
`broadcastAddressFromCIDR()` will return the broadcast address for a given IPv4 interface and netmask in CIDR notation. |
191 |
```js |
192 |
ipaddr.IPv4.broadcastAddressFromCIDR("172.0.0.1/24") == "172.0.0.255" |
193 |
``` |
194 |
`networkAddressFromCIDR()` will return the network address for a given IPv4 interface and netmask in CIDR notation. |
195 |
```js |
196 |
ipaddr.IPv4.networkAddressFromCIDR("172.0.0.1/24") == "172.0.0.0" |
197 |
``` |
198 |
|
199 |
#### Conversion |
200 |
|
201 |
IPv4 and IPv6 can be converted bidirectionally to and from network byte order (MSB) byte arrays. |
202 |
|
203 |
The `fromByteArray()` method will take an array and create an appropriate IPv4 or IPv6 object |
204 |
if the input satisfies the requirements. For IPv4 it has to be an array of four 8-bit values, |
205 |
while for IPv6 it has to be an array of sixteen 8-bit values. |
206 |
|
207 |
For example: |
208 |
```js |
209 |
var addr = ipaddr.fromByteArray([0x7f, 0, 0, 1]); |
210 |
addr.toString(); // => "127.0.0.1" |
211 |
``` |
212 |
|
213 |
or |
214 |
|
215 |
```js |
216 |
var addr = ipaddr.fromByteArray([0x20, 1, 0xd, 0xb8, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1]) |
217 |
addr.toString(); // => "2001:db8::1" |
218 |
``` |
219 |
|
220 |
Both objects also offer a `toByteArray()` method, which returns an array in network byte order (MSB). |
221 |
|
222 |
For example: |
223 |
```js |
224 |
var addr = ipaddr.parse("127.0.0.1"); |
225 |
addr.toByteArray(); // => [0x7f, 0, 0, 1] |
226 |
``` |
227 |
|
228 |
or |
229 |
|
230 |
```js |
231 |
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8::1"); |
232 |
addr.toByteArray(); // => [0x20, 1, 0xd, 0xb8, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1] |
233 |
``` |