Provided by: libnet-cidr-set-perl_0.19-1_all bug

NAME

       Net::CIDR::Set - Manipulate sets of IP addresses

VERSION

       version 0.19

SYNOPSIS

         use Net::CIDR::Set;

         my $priv = Net::CIDR::Set->new( '10.0.0.0/8', '172.16.0.0/12',
           '192.168.0.0/16' );
         for my $ip ( @addr ) {
           if ( $priv->contains( $ip ) ) {
             print "$ip is private\n";
           }
         }

DESCRIPTION

       "Net::CIDR::Set" represents sets of IP addresses and allows standard set operations (union, intersection,
       membership test etc) to be performed on them.

       In spite of the name it can work with sets consisting of arbitrary ranges of IP addresses - not just CIDR
       blocks.

       Both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are handled - but they may not be mixed in the same set. You may explicitly
       set the personality of a set:

         my $ip4set = Net::CIDR::Set->new({ type => 'ipv4 }, '10.0.0.0/8');

       Normally this isn't necessary - the set will guess its personality from the first data that is added to
       it.

ATTRIBUTES

   type
       Either "ipv4", "ipv6" or the name of a coder class.

       See Net::CIDR::Set::IPv4 and Net::CIDR::Set::IPv6 for examples of coder classes.

METHODS

   new
       Create a new Net::CIDR::Set. All arguments are optional. May be passed a list of list of IP addresses or
       ranges which, if present, will be passed to "add".

       The first argument may be a hash reference which will be inspected for named options. Currently the only
       option that may be passed is "type".

   invert
       Invert (negate, complement) a set in-place.

         my $set = Net::CIDR::Set->new;
         $set->invert;

   copy
       Make a deep copy of a set.

         my $set2 = $set->copy;

   add
       Add a number of addresses or ranges to a set.

         $set->add(
           '10.0.0.0/8',
           '192.168.0.32-192.168.0.63',
           '127.0.0.1'
         );

       It is legal to add ranges that overlap with each other and/or with the ranges already in the set.
       Overlapping ranges are merged.

   remove
       Remove a number of addresses or ranges from a set.

         $set->remove(
           '8.8.0.0/16',
           '158.152.1.58'
         );

       There is no requirement that the addresses being removed be members of the set.

   merge
       Merge the contents of other sets into this set.

         $set = Net::CIDR::Set->new;
         $set->merge($s1, $s2);

   contains
       A synonym for "contains_all".

   contains_all
       Return true if the set contains all of the supplied addresses.  Given this set:

         my $set = Net::CIDR::Set->new('244.188.12.0/12');

       this condition is true:

         if ( $set->contains_all('244.188.12.128/32') ) {
           # ...
         }

       while this condition is false:

         if ( $set->contains_all('244.188.12.0/8') ) {
           # ...
         }

   contains_any
       Return true if there is any overlap between the supplied addresses/ranges and the contents of the set.

   complement
       Return a new set that is the complement of this set.

         my $inv = $set->complement;

   union
       Return a new set that is the union of a number of sets. This is equivalent to a logical OR between sets.

         my $everything = $east->union($west);

   intersection
       Return a new set that is the intersection of a number of sets. This is equivalent to a logical AND
       between sets.

         my $overlap = $north->intersection($south);

   xor
       Return a new set that is the exclusive-or of existing sets.

         my $xset = $this->xor($that);

       The resulting set will contain all addresses that are members of one set but not the other.

   diff
       Return a new set containing all the addresses that are present in this set but not another.

         my $diff = $this->diff($that);

   is_empty
       Return a true value if the set is empty.

         if ( $set->is_empty ) {
           print "Nothing there!\n";
         }

   superset
       Return true if this set is a superset of the supplied set.

   subset
       Return true if this set is a subset of the supplied set.

   equals
       Return true if this set is identical to another set.

         if ( $set->equals($foo) ) {
           print "We have the same addresses.\n";
         }

   iterate_addresses
       Return an iterator (a closure) that will return each of the addresses in the set in ascending order. This
       code

         my $set = Net::CIDR::Set->new('192.168.37.0/24');
         my $iter = $set->iterate_addresses;
         while ( my $ip = $iter->() ) {
           print "Got $ip\n";
         }

       outputs 256 distinct addresses from 192.168.37.0 to 192.168.27.255.

   iterate_cidr
       Return an iterator (a closure) that will return each of the CIDR blocks in the set in ascending order.
       This code

         my $set = Net::CIDR::Set->new('192.168.37.9-192.168.37.134');
         my $iter = $set->iterate_cidr;
         while ( my $cidr = $iter->() ) {
           print "Got $cidr\n";
         }

       outputs

         Got 192.168.37.9
         Got 192.168.37.10/31
         Got 192.168.37.12/30
         Got 192.168.37.16/28
         Got 192.168.37.32/27
         Got 192.168.37.64/26
         Got 192.168.37.128/30
         Got 192.168.37.132/31
         Got 192.168.37.134

       This is the most compact CIDR representation of the set because its limits don't fall on convenient CIDR
       boundaries.

   iterate_ranges
       Return an iterator (a closure) that will return each of the ranges in the set in ascending order. This
       code

         my $set = Net::CIDR::Set->new(
           '192.168.37.9-192.168.37.134',
           '127.0.0.1',
           '10.0.0.0/8'
         );
         my $iter = $set->iterate_ranges;
         while ( my $range = $iter->() ) {
           print "Got $range\n";
         }

       outputs

         Got 10.0.0.0/8
         Got 127.0.0.1
         Got 192.168.37.9-192.168.37.134

   as_array
       Convenience method that gathers all of the output from one of the iterators above into an array.

         my @ranges = $set->as_array( $set->iterate_ranges );

       Normally you will use one of "as_address_array", "as_cidr_array" or "as_range_array" instead.

   as_address_array
       Return an array containing all of the distinct addresses in a set. Note that this may very easily create
       a very large array. At the time of writing it is, for example, unlikely that you have enough memory for
       an array containing all of the possible IPv6 addresses...

   as_cidr_array
       Return an array containing all of the distinct CIDR blocks in a set.

   as_range_array
       Return an array containing all of the ranges in a set.

   as_string
       Return a compact string representation of a set.

Retrieving Set Contents

       The following methods allow the contents of a set to be retrieved in various representations. Each of the
       following methods accepts an optional numeric argument that controls the formatting of the returned
       addresses. It may take one of the following values:

       0   Format  each range of addresses as compactly as possible. If the range contains only a single address
           format it as such. If it  can  be  represented  as  a  single  CIDR  block  use  CIDR  representation
           (<ip>/<mask>) otherwise format it as an arbitrary range (<start>-<end>).

       1   Always  format  as  either  a  CIDR  block  or  an arbitrary range even if the range is just a single
           address.

       2   Always use arbitrary range format (<start>-<end>) even if the range is a single address  or  a  legal
           CIDR block.

       Here's an example of the different formatting options:

         my $set = Net::CIDR::Set->new( '127.0.0.1', '192.168.37.0/24',
           '10.0.0.11-10.0.0.17' );

         for my $fmt ( 0 .. 2 ) {
           print "Using format $fmt:\n";
           print "  $_\n" for $set->as_range_array( $fmt );
         }

       And here's the output from that code:

         Using format 0:
           10.0.0.11-10.0.0.17
           127.0.0.1
           192.168.37.0/24
         Using format 1:
           10.0.0.11-10.0.0.17
           127.0.0.1/32
           192.168.37.0/24
         Using format 2:
           10.0.0.11-10.0.0.17
           127.0.0.1-127.0.0.1
           192.168.37.0-192.168.37.255

       Note that this option never affects the addresses that are returned; only how they are formatted.

       For most purposes the formatting argument can be omitted; it's default value is 0 which provides the most
       general formatting.

SOURCE

       The  development  version is on github at <https://github.com/robrwo/perl-Net-CIDR-Set> and may be cloned
       from <git://github.com/robrwo/perl-Net-CIDR-Set.git>

SUPPORT

       Only the latest version of this module will be supported.

       This module requires Perl v5.14 or later.  Future releases may only support Perl versions released in the
       last ten (10) years.

       Please    report    any    bugs     or     feature     requests     on     the     bugtracker     website
       <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Net-CIDR-Set>

       When  submitting  a  bug  or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that
       illustrates the bug or desired feature.

   Reporting Security Vulnerabilities
       If the bug you are reporting has security implications which make it inappropriate to send  to  a  public
       issue tracker, then see SECURITY.md for instructions how to report security vulnerabilities.

AUTHOR

       Andy Armstrong <andy@hexten.net>

       The current maintainer is Robert Rothenberg <rrwo@cpan.org>.

       The encode and decode routines were stolen en masse from Douglas Wilson's Net::CIDR::Lite.

CONTRIBUTORS

       •   Thomas Eckardt <Thomas.Eckardt@thockar.com>

       •   Brian Gottreu <gottreu@cpan.org>

       •   Robert Rothenberg <rrwo@cpan.org>

       •   Stig Palmquist <stigtsp@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2009, 2014, 2025 by Message Systems, Inc.

       This  is  free  software;  you  can  redistribute  it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5
       programming language system itself.

perl v5.40.1                                       2025-08-15                                Net::CIDR::Set(3pm)