Provided by: libnet-ipv6addr-perl_0.96-1_all bug

NAME

       Net::IPv6Addr - Check and manipulate IPv6 addresses

VERSION

       This documents version 0.96 of Net::IPv6Addr corresponding to git commit
       64f42c10634b707ccd482644a0fae855d488d5d6 <https://github.com/benkasminbullock/net-
       ipv6addr/commit/64f42c10634b707ccd482644a0fae855d488d5d6> released on Sat Oct 6 15:05:27 2018 +0900.

SYNOPSIS

           use Net::IPv6Addr;
           my $addr = "dead:beef:cafe:babe::f0ad";
           Net::IPv6Addr::ipv6_parse($addr);
           my $x = Net::IPv6Addr->new($addr);
           print $x->to_string_preferred(), "\n";

       produces output

           dead:beef:cafe:babe:0:0:0:f0ad

       (This example is included as synopsis.pl <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/synopsis.pl> in the distribution.)

DESCRIPTION

       "Net::IPv6Addr" can check whether strings contain valid IPv6 addresses, and convert them into various
       formats.

       All of "new", "is_ipv6", and "ipv6_parse" can process the following formats:

       Preferred form: x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x
           "2001:db8:0:0:0:ff00:42:8329"

           This  is  the  form  described as the "preferred form" in section 2.2 of "RFC1884" et al. Output with
           "to_string_preferred".

       Compressed form with double colon: x::x etc.
           "2001:db8::ff00:42:8329"

           This is the "canonical text representation format" of "RFC5952".  Output with "to_string_compressed".

       Mixed IPv4/IPv6 format: x:x:x:x:x:x:d.d.d.d
           "2001:db8:0:0:0:ff00:0.66.131.41"

           Output with "to_string_ipv4".

       Mixed IPv4/IPv6 with compression: x::x:d.d.d.d, etc.
           "2001:db8::ff00:0.66.131.41"

           Output with "to_string_ipv4_compressed".

       Base-85-encoded: [0-9A-Za-z!#$%&()*+;<=>?@^_`{|}~-]{20}
           "9R}vSQ9RqiCvG6zn?Zyh"

           This encoding was given in "RFC1924" as an April Fool's joke. Output with "to_string_base85".

       In addition, the following formats can be output:

       Big integers
           An IPv6 can be changed to a Math::BigInt object or a digit string using "to_bigint". Big integers can
           also be input with "from_bigint".

       Arrays
           An IPv6 can be processed into its component pieces with "to_array" or "to_intarray".

       Reverse-address pointer
           An IPv6  can  be  processed  into  its  reverse-address  pointer,  as  defined  by  "RFC1886",  using
           "to_string_ip6_int".

METHODS AND FUNCTIONS

       All of the following except "new" serve as both object methods and standalone functions.

   new
           my $ni = Net::IPv6Addr->new ('dead:beef:cafe:babe::f0ad');

       Create  a  new  Net::IPv6Addr  object  from a string. Internally, the object is a blessed array reference
       containing the eight parts of the address as integers.

       Parameters

       A string to be interpreted as an IPv6 address.

       Returns

       A "Net::IPv6Addr" object if successful.

       Notes

       Throws an exception if the string isn't a valid address.

   ipv6_parse
           my ($ni, $pl) = ipv6_parse ('dead:beef:cafe:babe::f0ad');

       Parameters

       Either a string containing an IPv6 address string, which may also include a "/" character and  a  numeric
       prefix length,

           my ($x, $y) = ipv6_parse ("a::/24");

       or an IPv6 address string, with an optional second argument consisting of a numeric prefix length:

           my ($x, $y) = ipv6_parse('a::', '24');

       Returns

       Called  in  array context, the return value is a list consisting of the address string and the prefix, if
       it parses correctly. Called in scalar context, the address and prefix are concatenated with "/".

       Notes

       Throws an exception on malformed input.

   is_ipv6
           my $niok = is_ipv6 ('dead:beef:cafe:babe::f0ad');

       Parameters

       Identical to "ipv6_parse".

       Returns

       This returns the return value of "ipv6_parse", called in scalar context, if it does parse out  correctly,
       otherwise it returns "undef". Unlike "ipv6_parse", "is_ipv6" does not throw exceptions.

   ipv6_chkip
           my $niok = ipv6_chkip ('dead:beef:cafe:babe::f0ad');

       Parameters

       An IPv6 address string, without a prefix.

       Returns

       A true value if it's a valid address; a false value if not.

   to_string_preferred
           use Net::IPv6Addr 'to_string_preferred';
           print to_string_preferred ('dead:beef:cafe:babe::f0ad');

       produces output

           dead:beef:cafe:babe:0:0:0:f0ad

       (This    example    is    included    as    preferred.pl    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/preferred.pl> in the distribution.)

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, none; if used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format.

       Returns

       The IPv6 address, formatted in the "preferred" way (as detailed by "RFC1884" et al).

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

   to_string_compressed
           use Net::IPv6Addr 'to_string_compressed';
           print to_string_compressed ('dead:beef:0000:0000:0000:0000:cafe:babe');

       produces output

           dead:beef::cafe:babe

       (This   example    is    included    as    compressed.pl    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/compressed.pl> in the distribution.)

       This provides the "canonical text representation format" of "RFC5952".

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, none; if used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format.

       Returns

       The  IPv6  address  in the "compressed" ("RFC1884" et al.) or "canonical" ("RFC5952") format. Hexadecimal
       numbers are reduced to lower case, consecutive zero elements are reduced to double  colons,  and  leading
       zeros  are  removed  from  strings of hexadecimal digits. All treatment of ambiguities is as per RFC5952.
       (See t/rfc5952.t <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-IPv6Addr-0.96/t/rfc5952.t> for tests.)

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

   to_string_ipv4
           use Net::IPv6Addr ':all';
           print to_string_ipv4_compressed ('dead:beef:0:3:2:1:cafe:babe');

       produces output

           dead:beef::3:2:1:202.254.186.190

       (This   example   is   included   as   to-string-ipv4.pl    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/to-string-ipv4.pl> in the distribution.)

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, none; if used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format.

       Returns

       The IPv6 address in the IPv4 format detailed by "RFC1884" et al.

       Notes

       When used as a subroutine, invalid input will generate an exception.

       From  version  "0.95", this allows any IPv6 address to be produced, not just the restricted forms allowed
       previously.

   to_string_ipv4_compressed
           use Net::IPv6Addr ':all';
           print to_string_ipv4_compressed ('dead:beef:0:3:2:1:cafe:babe');

       produces output

           dead:beef::3:2:1:202.254.186.190

       (This  example  is  included  as   to-string-ipv4-comp.pl   <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/to-string-ipv4-comp.pl> in the distribution.)

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, none; if used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format.

       Returns

       The IPv6 address in the compressed IPv4 format detailed by "RFC1884" et al.

       Notes

       When used as a subroutine, invalid input will generate an exception.

       From  version  "0.95", this allows any IPv6 address to be produced, not just the restricted forms allowed
       previously.

   to_string_base85
       Parameters

       If used as an object method, none; if used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format.

       Returns

       The IPv6 address in the style detailed by "RFC1924".

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

       The base 85 encoding described in "RFC1924" was an April Fool's joke.

   to_bigint
           use Net::IPv6Addr 'to_bigint';
           my $int = to_bigint ('dead::beef');
           my $ipobj = Net::IPv6Addr->new ('dead::beef');
           my $int2 = $ipobj->to_bigint ();
           print "$int\n$int2\n";

       produces output

           295986882420777848964380943247191621359
           295986882420777848964380943247191621359

       (This    example    is    included     as     bigint.pl     <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/bigint.pl> in the distribution.)

       Convert an IPv6 address into a Math::BigInt object containing the IP address as a single number.

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, none; if used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format.

       Returns

       The BigInt representation of the given IPv6 address.

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

       See also "from_bigint", "to_intarray" and "to_array".

   to_array
           use Net::IPv6Addr 'to_array';
           my @int = to_array ('dead::beef');
           my $ipobj = Net::IPv6Addr->new ('dead::beef');
           my @int2 = $ipobj->to_array ();
           print "@int\n@int2\n";

       produces output

           dead 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 beef
           dead 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 beef

       (This     example     is     included     as    array.pl    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/array.pl> in the distribution.)

       Convert an IPv6 address into an array of eight hexadecimal numbers.

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, none; if used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format.

       Returns

       An array [0..7] of 16-bit hexadecimal numbers (strings).

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

       See also "to_intarray" and "to_bigint".

   to_intarray
           use Net::IPv6Addr 'to_array';
           my @int = to_array ('dead::beef');
           my $ipobj = Net::IPv6Addr->new ('dead::beef');
           my @int2 = $ipobj->to_array ();
           print "@int\n@int2\n";

       produces output

           dead 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 beef
           dead 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 beef

       (This    example    is     included     as     array.pl     <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/array.pl> in the distribution.)

       Convert an IPv6 address into an array of eight integer numbers.

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, none; if used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format.

       Returns

       An array [0..7] of numbers.

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

       See also "to_array" and "to_bigint".

   to_string_ip6_int
           use Net::IPv6Addr 'to_string_ip6_int';
           my $s = to_string_ip6_int ('dead::beef');
           my $ipobj = Net::IPv6Addr->new ('dead::beef');
           my $s2 = $ipobj->to_string_ip6_int ();
           print "$s\n$s2\n";

       produces output

           f.e.e.b.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.d.a.e.d.IP6.INT.
           f.e.e.b.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.d.a.e.d.IP6.INT.

       (This    example   is   included   as   string-ip6-int.pl   <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/string-ip6-int.pl> in the distribution.)

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, none; if used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format.

       Returns

       The reverse-address pointer as defined by "RFC1886".

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

       The reverse process of converting these into Net::IPv6Addr objects is not supported.

   in_network_of_size
           use Net::IPv6Addr 'in_network_of_size';
           my $obj = in_network_of_size ('dead:beef:cafe:babe:dead:beef:cafe:babe', 42);
           print $obj->to_string_compressed ();

       produces output

           dead:beef:cac0::

       (This    example     is     included     as     inos.pl     <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/inos.pl> in the distribution.)

       Given  an  input  IPv6 address $x, this returns the $n most-significant bits of $x as a new Net::IPv6Addr
       object.

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, network size in bits:

           my $obj = $x->in_network_of_size (64);

       If used as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format and a network size in bits:

           my $obj = in_network_of_size ($addr, 64);

       Network size may also be given with "/" notation:

           my $obj = in_network_of_size ("$addr/64");

       Returns

       The $n most-significant bits of $x as a new Net::IPv6Addr object.

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

       Prior to version "0.9", this did not work correctly unless the net size was a multiple of sixteen.

   in_network
           use Net::IPv6Addr;
           my $obj = Net::IPv6Addr->new ('dead:beef:cafe:babe:dead:beef:cafe:babe');
           if ($obj->in_network ('dead:beef:ca0::/21')) {
               print $obj->to_string_compressed, " is in network.\n";
           }

       produces output

           dead:beef:cafe:babe:dead:beef:cafe:babe is in network.

       (This    example     is     included     as     inet.pl     <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/inet.pl> in the distribution.)

       Parameters

       If used as an object method, a network and its size in bits

           my $ok = $x->in_network ("aa:bb:cc:dd::", 64);

       If  used  as a subroutine, an IPv6 address string in any format, followed by a network address string and
       its size in bits.

           my $addr = 'fd00::54:20c:29fe:fe14:ab4b';
           my $ok = Net::IPv6Addr::in_network ($addr, "aa:bb:cc:dd::", 64);

       The network size may also be given with the / notation after the network address string:

           my $ok = $x->in_network("aa:bb:cc:dd::/64");

       Returns

       A true value if the address $x is a member of the network given as the argument, or false otherwise.

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

       Prior to version "0.9", this did not work correctly unless the net size was a multiple of sixteen.

   from_bigint
           use Net::IPv6Addr 'from_bigint';
           print from_bigint ('12345678901234567890')->to_string_compressed ();

       produces output

           ::ab54:a98c:eb1f:ad2

       (This   example   is    included    as    from-bigint.pl    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-
       IPv6Addr-0.96/examples/from-bigint.pl> in the distribution.)

       Given  a  string  or  a  Math::BigInt  object  containing a number, this converts it into a Net::IPv6Addr
       object.

       Parameters

       A string or a Math::BigInt object. If the input is a scalar, it's converted into a Math::BigInt object.

       Returns

       A Net::IPv6Addr object

       Notes

       Invalid input will generate an exception.

       This function was added in "0.95".

EXPORTS

       As of  version  0.96,  "from_bigint",  "in_network",  "in_network_of_size",  "ipv6_chkip",  "ipv6_parse",
       "is_ipv6",    "to_array",   "to_bigint",   "to_intarray",   "to_string_base85",   "to_string_compressed",
       "to_string_ip6_int", "to_string_ipv4", "to_string_ipv4_compressed", "to_string_preferred" may be exported
       on demand. All the exported functions may be exported using

           use Net::IPv6Addr ':all';

DEPENDENCIES

       Net::IPv4Addr
           This is used to parse IPv4 addresses.

       Math::Base85
           This is used to parse "RFC1924" (April Fool's) addresses.

       Math::BigInt
           This is used by the "RFC1924" (April Fool's) address routines and by "to_bigint" and "from_bigint".

   Reverse dependencies
       Search grep.cpan.me for uses of this module <http://grep.cpan.me/?q=Net%3A%3AIPv6Addr%5Cb>

SEE ALSO

   RFCs
       The following RFCs (requests for comment, internet standards documentation) contain information on IPv6.

       Addressing Architecture series

       These are all the same standard, with updates. The most recent one is the active one.

       RFC1884 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1884.txt>
           IPv6 Addressing Architecture - December 1995

       RFC2373 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2373.txt>
           IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture - July 1998

       RFC3513 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3513.txt>
           Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) Addressing Architecture - April 2003

       RFC4291 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4291.txt>
           IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture - February 2006

       Other

       RFC1886 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1886.txt>
           DNS Extensions to support IP version 6 - December 1995

       RFC1924 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1924.txt>
           A Compact Representation of IPv6 Addresses - 1 April 1996

           This was an April Fool's joke.

       RFC5952 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc5952.txt>
           A Recommendation for IPv6 Address Text Representation - August 2010

           This contains a "recommendation for a canonical text representation format of IPv6  addresses"  which
           corresponds to the output of "to_string_compressed" in this module.

       The links go to the plain text online versions of the RFCs.

   Other CPAN modules
       There  are  a  very large number of CPAN modules which deal with IPv6 addresses. The following list gives
       all the ones I know about which overlap with this module, in alphabetical order.

       Data::Validate::IP
           This module uses Socket to validate IP addresses. It offers  a  number  of  facilities  for  special-
           purpose sub networks, like "is_discard_ipv6", which are not offered in Net::IPv6Addr.

       IPv6::Address
           Its  description  says  "A  pure  Perl IPv6 address manipulation library. Emphasis on manipulation of
           prefixes and addresses."

           It insists on having a prefix with the IP address, so

               my $ipv6 = IPv6::Address->new ('2001:0:0:1:0:0:0:1');

           actually fails, you have to use

               my $ipv6 = IPv6::Address->new ('2001:0:0:1:0:0:0:1/64');

       Net::IP
           Features binary IPs (strings like '101001'), etc.

       Net::IP::Minimal
           It's a simplified version of "Net::IP".

       Net::IPAddress::Util
           It's a "Version-agnostic representation of an IP address". I have not tried this module.

       Net::IPv6Address
           This module is broken and strongly not recommended.

       NetAddr::IP
       NetAddr::IP::Lite
           These are two things in the same distribution. The documentation is quite offputting, but there are a
           lot of users of the module and stars on metacpan.

       Regexp::IPv6
           This module consists of a regex for validating IPv6s. Because this module had a lot more  and  better
           tests than Net::IPv6Addr, I included the tests and one regex from "Regexp::IPv6" in this module. (See
           t/Regexp-IPv6.t  <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/Net-IPv6Addr-0.96/t/Regexp-IPv6.t>)  Unlike
           "Net::IPv6Addr", "Regexp::IPv6"  disallows  "::",  "the  unspecified  addresses".  See  the  module's
           documentation for details.

   Other
       Online validator
           <https://www.helpsystems.com/intermapper/ipv6-test-address-validation>

HISTORY

       This module was originally written by Tony Monroe in 2001 to simplify the task of maintaining DNS records
       after he set himself up with Freenet6.

       In  2017  the  module  was  adopted  by  Ben  Bullock with the help of Neil Bowers as part of "CPAN day".
       Significant changes to the module since then include the following:

       0.8 Exporting of some functions was added. Prior to this, everything had to be done  fully-qualified,  as
           in "Net::IPv6Addr::to_string_compressed".

       0.9 "in_network" and "in_network_of_size" were fixed to allow more kinds of previxes.

       0.92
           The  valid  format consisting of a compressed-but-non-zero six-element IPv6 followed by an IPv4, such
           as "fe80::204:61ff:254.157.241.86", is accepted by the module.

       0.95
           The "from_bigint" method was added and the documentation updated  to  reflect  the  current  internet
           standards.

           The  restriction  on  mixed  address inputs removed in "0.92" was also removed in the output routines
           "to_string_ipv4" and "to_string_ipv4_compressed".

AUTHOR

       Tony Monroe(*)

       The module's interface resembles Net::IPv4Addr by Francis J. Lacoste <francis dot  lacoste  at  iNsu  dot
       COM>.

       Some fixes and subroutines from Jyrki Soini <jyrki dot soini at sonera dot com>.

       (*)  The  current  module  maintainer  (BKB) does not have any contact information for Tony Monroe. Those
       wishing to contact him can  do  so  via  Neil  Bowers  (see  his  CPAN  user  page  for  contact  details
       <https://metacpan.org/author/NEILB>).

LICENSE

       This  distribution  is  copyright  (c)  2001-2002  Tony  Monroe.   All rights reserved.  This software is
       distributed under the same license terms  as  Perl  itself.   This  software  comes  with  NO  WARRANTIES
       WHATSOEVER, express, implied, or otherwise.

perl v5.28.1                                       2019-02-28                                 Net::IPv6Addr(3pm)