.. | ||
lib | ||
ipaddr.min.js | ||
LICENSE | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
ipaddr.js — an IPv6 and IPv4 address manipulation library
ipaddr.js is a small (1.9K minified and gzipped) library for manipulating IP addresses in JavaScript environments. It runs on both CommonJS runtimes (e.g. nodejs) and in a web browser.
ipaddr.js allows you to verify and parse string representation of an IP address, match it against a CIDR range or range list, determine if it falls into some reserved ranges (examples include loopback and private ranges), and convert between IPv4 and IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses.
Installation
npm install ipaddr.js
or
bower install ipaddr.js
API
ipaddr.js defines one object in the global scope:
ipaddr
. In CommonJS, it is exported from the module:
var ipaddr = require('ipaddr.js');
The API consists of several global methods and two classes: ipaddr.IPv6 and ipaddr.IPv4.
Global methods
There are three global methods defined: ipaddr.isValid
,
ipaddr.parse
and ipaddr.process
. All of them
receive a string as a single parameter.
The ipaddr.isValid
method returns true
if
the address is a valid IPv4 or IPv6 address, and false
otherwise. It does not throw any exceptions.
The ipaddr.parse
method returns an object representing
the IP address, or throws an Error
if the passed string is
not a valid representation of an IP address.
The ipaddr.process
method works just like the
ipaddr.parse
one, but it automatically converts IPv4-mapped
IPv6 addresses to their IPv4 counterparts before returning. It is useful
when you have a Node.js instance listening on an IPv6 socket, and the
net.ivp6.bindv6only
sysctl parameter (or its equivalent on
non-Linux OS) is set to 0. In this case, you can accept IPv4 connections
on your IPv6-only socket, but the remote address will be mangled. Use
ipaddr.process
method to automatically demangle it.
Object representation
Parsing methods return an object which descends from
ipaddr.IPv6
or ipaddr.IPv4
. These objects
share some properties, but most of them differ.
Shared properties
One can determine the type of address by calling
addr.kind()
. It will return either "ipv6"
or
"ipv4"
.
An address can be converted back to its string representation with
addr.toString()
. Note that this method: * does not return
the original string used to create the object (in fact, there is no way
of getting that string) * returns a compact representation (when it is
applicable)
A match(range, bits)
method can be used to check if the
address falls into a certain CIDR range. Note that an address can be
(obviously) matched only against an address of the same type.
For example:
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8:1234::1");
var range = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8::");
.match(range, 32); // => true addr
Alternatively, match
can also be called as
match([range, bits])
. In this way, it can be used together
with the parseCIDR(string)
method, which parses an IP
address together with a CIDR range.
For example:
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8:1234::1");
.match(ipaddr.parseCIDR("2001:db8::/32")); // => true addr
A range()
method returns one of predefined names for
several special ranges defined by IP protocols. The exact names (and
their respective CIDR ranges) can be looked up in the source: IPv6
ranges and IPv4
ranges. Some common ones include "unicast"
(the default
one) and "reserved"
.
You can match against your own range list by using
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:
var rangeList = {
documentationOnly: [ ipaddr.parse('2001:db8::'), 32 ],
tunnelProviders: [
.parse('2001:470::'), 32 ], // he.net
[ ipaddr.parse('2001:5c0::'), 32 ] // freenet6
[ ipaddr
];
}.subnetMatch(ipaddr.parse('2001:470:8:66::1'), rangeList, 'unknown'); // => "tunnelProviders" ipaddr
The addresses can be converted to their byte representation with
toByteArray()
. (Actually, JavaScript mostly does not know
about byte buffers. They are emulated with arrays of numbers, each in
range of 0..255.)
var bytes = ipaddr.parse('2a00:1450:8007::68').toByteArray(); // ipv6.google.com
// => [42, 0x00, 0x14, 0x50, 0x80, 0x07, 0x00, <zeroes...>, 0x00, 0x68 ] bytes
The ipaddr.IPv4
and ipaddr.IPv6
objects
have some methods defined, too. All of them have the same interface for
both protocols, and are similar to global methods.
ipaddr.IPvX.isValid(string)
can be used to check if the
string is a valid address for particular protocol, and
ipaddr.IPvX.parse(string)
is the error-throwing parser.
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.
IPv6 properties
Sometimes you will want to convert IPv6 not to a compact string
representation (with the ::
substitution); the
toNormalizedString()
method will return an address where
all zeroes are explicit.
For example:
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:0db8::0001");
.toString(); // => "2001:db8::1"
addr.toNormalizedString(); // => "2001:db8:0:0:0:0:0:1" addr
The isIPv4MappedAddress()
method will return
true
if this address is an IPv4-mapped one, and
toIPv4Address()
will return an IPv4 object address.
To access the underlying binary representation of the address, use
addr.parts
.
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8:10::1234:DEAD");
.parts // => [0x2001, 0xdb8, 0x10, 0, 0, 0, 0x1234, 0xdead] addr
A IPv6 zone index can be accessed via addr.zoneId
:
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8::%eth0");
.zoneId // => 'eth0' addr
IPv4 properties
toIPv4MappedAddress()
will return a corresponding
IPv4-mapped IPv6 address.
To access the underlying representation of the address, use
addr.octets
.
var addr = ipaddr.parse("192.168.1.1");
.octets // => [192, 168, 1, 1] addr
prefixLengthFromSubnetMask()
will return a CIDR prefix
length for a valid IPv4 netmask or null if the netmask is not valid.
.IPv4.parse('255.255.255.240').prefixLengthFromSubnetMask() == 28
ipaddr.IPv4.parse('255.192.164.0').prefixLengthFromSubnetMask() == null ipaddr
subnetMaskFromPrefixLength()
will return an IPv4 netmask
for a valid CIDR prefix length.
.IPv4.subnetMaskFromPrefixLength(24) == "255.255.255.0"
ipaddr.IPv4.subnetMaskFromPrefixLength(29) == "255.255.255.248" ipaddr
broadcastAddressFromCIDR()
will return the broadcast
address for a given IPv4 interface and netmask in CIDR notation.
.IPv4.broadcastAddressFromCIDR("172.0.0.1/24") == "172.0.0.255" ipaddr
networkAddressFromCIDR()
will return the network address
for a given IPv4 interface and netmask in CIDR notation.
.IPv4.networkAddressFromCIDR("172.0.0.1/24") == "172.0.0.0" ipaddr
Conversion
IPv4 and IPv6 can be converted bidirectionally to and from network byte order (MSB) byte arrays.
The fromByteArray()
method will take an array and create
an appropriate IPv4 or IPv6 object if the input satisfies the
requirements. For IPv4 it has to be an array of four 8-bit values, while
for IPv6 it has to be an array of sixteen 8-bit values.
For example:
var addr = ipaddr.fromByteArray([0x7f, 0, 0, 1]);
.toString(); // => "127.0.0.1" addr
or
var addr = ipaddr.fromByteArray([0x20, 1, 0xd, 0xb8, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1])
.toString(); // => "2001:db8::1" addr
Both objects also offer a toByteArray()
method, which
returns an array in network byte order (MSB).
For example:
var addr = ipaddr.parse("127.0.0.1");
.toByteArray(); // => [0x7f, 0, 0, 1] addr
or
var addr = ipaddr.parse("2001:db8::1");
.toByteArray(); // => [0x20, 1, 0xd, 0xb8, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1] addr