Provided by: libparanoid-perl_0.34-1_all bug

NAME

       Paranoid::Network::IPv6 - IPv6-related functions

VERSION

       $Id: IPv6.pm,v 0.1 2012/05/29 21:37:44 acorliss Exp $

SYNOPSIS

DESCRIPTION

       This module contains a few convenience functions for working with IPv6 addresses.

       By default only the subroutines themselves are imported.  Requesting :all will also import
       the constants as well.

SUBROUTINES/METHODS

   ipv6NetConvert
           @net = ipv6NetConvert($netAddr);

       This function takes an IPv4 network address in string format and converts it into and
       array of arrays.  The arrays will contain the base network address, the broadcast address,
       and the netmask, each split into native 32bit integer format chunks.  Each sub array is
       essentially what you would get from:

           @chunks = unpack 'NNNN', inet_pton(AF_INET6, '::1');

       using '::1' as the sample IPv6 address.

       The network address must have the netmask in CIDR format.  In the case of a single IP
       address, the array with only have one subarray, that of the IP itself, split into 32bit
       integers.

       Passing any argument to this function that is not a string representation of an IP address
       (including undef values) will cause this function to return an empty array.

   ipv6NetPacked
           @net = ipv6NetPacked('fe80::/64');

       This function is a wrapper for ipv6NetConvert, but instead of subarrays each element is
       the packed (opaque) string as returned by inet_pton.

   ipv6NetIntersect
           $rv = ipv6NetIntersect($net1, $net2);

       This function tests whether an IP or subnet intersects with another IP or subnet.  The
       return value is essentially boolean, but the true value can vary to indicate which is a
       subset of the other:

           -1: destination range encompasses target range
            0: both ranges do not intersect at all
            1: target range encompasses destination range

       The function handles the same string formats as ipv6NetConvert, but will allow you to test
       single IPs in integer format as well.

CONSTANTS

       These are only imported if explicity requested or with the :all tag.

   MAXIPV6CIDR
       Simply put: 64.  This is the largest CIDR notation supported in IPv6.

   IPV6REGEX
       Regular expression:

                                   qr/
                                   :(?::[abcdef\d]{1,4}){1,7}                 |
                                   [abcdef\d]{1,4}(?:::?[abcdef\d]{1,4}){1,7} |
                                   (?:[abcdef\d]{1,4}:){1,7}:
                                   /smix;

       You can use this for validating IP addresses as such:

           $ip =~ m#^@{[ IPV6REGEX ]}$#;

       or to extract potential IPs from  extraneous text:

           (@ips) = ( $string =~ m#(@{[ IPV6REGEX ]})#g);

   IPV6CIDRRGX
       Regular expression:

           qr#(@{[ IPV6REGEX ]})(?:/(\d+))?#sm

       By default this will extract an IP or CIDR notation network address:

           ($net, $mask) = ( $ip =~ m#^@{[ IPV6CIDRRGX ]}$# );

       In the case of a simple IP address $mask will be undefined.

   IPV6BASE
       This is the ordinal index of the base network address as returned by ipv6NetConvert.

   IPV6BRDCST
       This is the ordinal index of the broadcast address as returned by ipv6NetConvert.

   IPV6MASK
       This is the ordinal index of the network mask as returned by ipv6NetConvert.

DEPENDENCIES

       o   Paranoid

       o   Paranoid::Network::Socket

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

AUTHOR

       Arthur Corliss (corliss@digitalmages.com)

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

       This software is licensed under the same terms as Perl, itself.  Please see
       http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.

       (c) 2012, Arthur Corliss (corliss@digitalmages.com)