Provided by: libnet-subnet-perl_1.03-1_all bug

NAME

       Net::Subnet - Fast IP-in-subnet matcher for IPv4 and IPv6, CIDR or mask.

SYNOPSIS

           use Net::Subnet;

           # CIDR notation
           my $is_rfc1918 = subnet_matcher qw(
               10.0.0.0/8
               172.16.0.0/12
               192.168.0.0/16
           );

           # Subnet mask notation
           my $is_rfc1918 = subnet_matcher qw(
               10.0.0.0/255.0.0.0
               172.16.0.0/255.240.0.0
               192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0
           );

           print $is_rfc1918->('192.168.1.1') ? 'yes' : 'no';  # prints "yes"
           print $is_rfc1918->('8.8.8.8')     ? 'yes' : 'no';  # prints "no"

           # Mixed IPv4 and IPv6
           my $in_office_network = subnet_matcher qw(
               192.168.1.0/24
               2001:db8:1337::/48
           );

           $x = $in_office_network->('192.168.1.1');            # $x is true
           $x = $in_office_network->('2001:db8:dead:beef::5');  # $x is false

           my $classifier = subnet_classifier qw(
               192.168.1.0/24
               2001:db8:1337::/48
               10.0.0.0/255.0.0.0
           );

           $x = $classifier->('192.168.1.250');        # $x is '192.168.1.0/24'
           $x = $classifier->('2001:db8:1337::babe');  # $x is '2001:db8:1337::/48'
           $x = $classifier->('10.2.127.1');           # $x is '10.0.0.0/255.0.0.0'
           $x = $classifier->('8.8.8.8');              # $x is undef

           # More specific subnets (smaller subnets) must be listed first
           my @subnets = sort_subnets(
               '192.168.0.0/24',  # second
               '192.168.0.1/32',  # first
               '192.168.0.0/16',  # third
           );
           my $classifier = subnet_classifier @subnets;

DESCRIPTION

       This is a simple but fast pure Perl module for determining whether a given IP address is in a given set
       of IP subnets. It's iterative, and it doesn't use any fancy tries, but because it uses simple bitwise
       operations on strings it's still very fast.

       All documented functions are exported by default.

       Subnets have to be given in "address/mask" or "address/length" (CIDR) format.  The Socket and Socket6
       modules are used to normalise addresses, which means that any of the address formats supported by
       inet_aton and inet_pton can be used with Net::Subnet.

FUNCTIONS

   subnet_matcher(@subnets)
       Returns a reference to a function that returns true if the given IP address is in @subnets, false it it's
       not.

   subnet_classifier(@subnets)
       Returns a reference to a function that returns the element from @subnets that matches the given IP
       address, or undef if none matched.

   sort_subnets(@subnets)
       Returns @subnets in reverse order of prefix length and prefix; use this with subnet_matcher or
       subnet_classifier if your subnet list has overlapping ranges and it's not already sorted most-specific-
       first.

TRICKS

   Generating PTR records for IPv6
       If you need to classify an IP address, but want some other value than the original subnet string, just
       use a hash. You could even use code references; here's an example of how to generate dynamic reverse DNS
       records for IPv6 addresses:

           my %ptr = (
               '2001:db8:1337:d00d::/64' => sub {
                   my $hostname = get_machine_name(shift);
                   return $hostname =~ /\.$/ ? $hostname : "$hostname.example.org.";
               },
               '2001:db8:1337:babe::/64' => sub {
                   my $hostname = get_machine_name(shift);
                   return $hostname =~ /\.$/ ? $hostname : "$hostname.example.net.";
               },
               '::/0' => sub {
                   (my $ip = shift) =~ s/:/x/g;
                   return "$ip.unknown.example.com.";
               },
           );
           my $classifier = subnet_classifier sort_subnets keys %ptr;

           while (my $ip = readline) {
               # We get IP addresses from STDIN and return the hostnames on STDOUT

               print $ptr{ $classifier->($ip) }->($ip), "\n";
           }

   Matching ::ffff:192.168.1.200
       IPv4 subnets only match IPv4 addresses. If you need to match IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses, i.e. IPv4
       addresses with "::ffff:" stuck in front of them, simply remove that part before matching:

           my $matcher = subnet_matcher qw(192.168.1.0/22);
           $ip =~ s/^::ffff://;
           my $boolean = $matcher->($ip);

       Alternatively, translate the subnet definition to IPv6 notation: "1.2.3.0/24" becomes
       "::ffff:1.2.3.0/120". If you do this, hexadecimal addresses such as "::ffff:102:304" will also match, but
       IPv4 addresses without "::ffff:" will no longer match unless you include "1.2.3.0/24" as well.

           my $matcher = subnet_matcher qw(::ffff:192.168.1.0/118 192.168.1.0/22);
           my $boolean = $matcher->($ip);

CAVEATS

       No argument verification is done; garbage in, garbage out. If you give it hostnames, DNS may be used to
       resolve them, courtesy of the Socket and Socket6 modules.

AUTHOR

       Juerd Waalboer <juerd#@tnx.nl>

LICENSE

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
       itself.