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# Net::Patricia - Patricia Trie perl module for fast IP address lookups # Copyright (C) 2000-2005 Dave Plonka # Copyright (C) 2009 Dave Plonka & Philip Prindeville # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, # MA 02110-1301, USA. # Dave Plonka <plonka@doit.wisc.edu> # Philip Prindeville <philipp@redfish-solutions.com> # Anton Berezin <tobez@tobez.org> package Net::Patricia; use strict; use warnings; require 5.008; use version; use Carp; use vars qw($VERSION @ISA @EXPORT); use Socket qw(AF_INET AF_INET6); BEGIN { require Exporter; require DynaLoader; @ISA = qw(Exporter DynaLoader); @EXPORT = qw(AF_INET AF_INET6); } '$Revision: 1.22 $' =~ m/(\d+)\.(\d+)((_\d+)|)/ && ( $VERSION = "$1.$2$3"); bootstrap Net::Patricia $VERSION; sub new { my ($class, $type) = @_; $type ||= AF_INET; if ($type == AF_INET) { return bless _new(32), 'Net::Patricia::AF_INET'; } if ($type == AF_INET6) { return bless _new(128), 'Net::Patricia::AF_INET6'; } croak "new: unimplemented type"; } ## ## Compat functions ## sub _ip_bits { my ($self, $str) = @_; my $bits; if (ref ($self) eq 'Net::Patricia::AF_INET6') { $bits = ($str =~ s|/(\d+)$||) ? $1 : 128; } else { $bits = ($str =~ s|/(\d+)$||) ? $1 : 32; } ($str,$bits); } sub add_string { croak "add_string: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self,$str,$data) = @_; $data = $str unless @_ > 2; $self->add($self->_ip_bits($str),$data); } sub match_string { croak "match_string: wrong number of args" if (@_ != 2); my ($self,$str) = @_; $self->match($self->_ip_bits($str)) } sub match_exact_string { croak "match_exact_string: wrong number of args" if (@_ != 2); my ($self,$str) = @_; $self->exact($self->_ip_bits($str)) } sub match_exact_integer { shift->exact_integer(@_) } sub remove_string { croak "remove_string: wrong number of args" if (@_ != 2); my ($self,$str) = @_; $self->remove($self->_ip_bits($str)) } BEGIN { eval { my $class = 'Net::CIDR::Lite'; eval "require $class"; }; last if (@_); sub add_cidr { croak "add_cidr: wrong number of args" if (@_ != 3); my ($self, $range, $data) = @_; my $cidr = Net::CIDR::Lite->new(); $cidr->add_range($range); my @list = (); for ($cidr->list()) { push(@list, $_) if ($self->add_string($_, $data)); } @list; } sub remove_cidr { croak "remove_cidr: wrong number of args" if (@_ != 2); my ($self, $range) = @_; my $cidr = Net::CIDR::Lite->new(); $cidr->add_range($range); my @list = (); for ($cidr->list()) { push(@list, $_) if ($self->remove_string($_)); } @list; } } ## ## AF_INET ## package Net::Patricia::AF_INET; use Carp; use Socket qw(AF_INET inet_aton inet_ntoa); use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT); BEGIN { require Exporter; require DynaLoader; @ISA = qw(Exporter DynaLoader Net::Patricia); @EXPORT = qw(AF_INET); } sub add { croak "add: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 4); my ($self, $ip, $bits, $data) = @_; $data = (defined $bits ? "$ip/$bits" : $ip) if (@_ < 4); my $packed = inet_aton($ip); croak("invalid key") unless (defined $packed); $bits = 32 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_add(AF_INET, $packed, $bits, $data); } sub add_integer { croak "add_integer: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 4); my ($self, $num, $bits, $data) = @_; my $packed = pack("N", $num); my $ip = inet_ntoa($packed); croak("invalid address") unless (defined $ip); $data = (defined $bits ? "$ip/$bits" : $ip) if (@_ < 4); $bits = 32 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_add(AF_INET, $packed, $bits, $data); } sub match_integer { croak "match_integer: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $num, $bits) = @_; $bits = 32 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_match(AF_INET, pack("N",$num), $bits); } sub exact_integer { croak "exact_integer: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $num, $bits) = @_; $bits = 32 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_exact(AF_INET, pack("N",$num), $bits); } sub match { croak "match: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $ip, $bits) = @_; my $packed = inet_aton($ip); croak("invalid key") unless (defined $packed); $bits = 32 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_match(AF_INET, $packed, $bits); } sub exact { croak "exact: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $ip, $bits) = @_; my $packed = inet_aton($ip); croak("invalid key") unless (defined $packed); $bits = 32 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_exact(AF_INET, $packed, $bits); } sub remove { croak "remove: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $ip, $bits) = @_; my $packed = inet_aton($ip); croak("invalid key") unless (defined $packed); $bits = 32 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_remove(AF_INET, $packed, $bits); } sub remove_integer { croak "remote_integer: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $num, $bits) = @_; $bits = 32 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_remove(AF_INET, pack("N",$num), $bits); } ## ## AF_INET6 ## package Net::Patricia::AF_INET6; use Carp; use Socket qw(AF_INET6); use Socket6 qw(inet_pton inet_ntop); use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT); BEGIN { require Exporter; require DynaLoader; @ISA = qw(Exporter DynaLoader Net::Patricia); @EXPORT = qw(AF_INET6); } sub add { croak "add: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 4); my ($self, $ip, $bits, $data) = @_; $data = (defined $bits ? "$ip/$bits" : $ip) if (@_ < 3); my $packed = inet_pton(AF_INET6, $ip); croak("invalid key") unless (defined $packed); $bits = 128 if (@_ < 4); $self->SUPER::_add(AF_INET6, $packed, $bits, $data); } sub add_integer { croak "add_integer: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 4); my ($self, $num, $bits, $data) = @_; my $packed = pack("N", $num); my $ip = inet_ntop(AF_INET6, $packed); croak("invalid address") unless (defined $ip); $data = (defined $bits ? "$ip/$bits" : $ip) if (@_ < 3); $bits = 128 if (@_ < 4); $self->SUPER::_add(AF_INET6, $packed, $bits, $data); } sub match_integer { croak "match_integer: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $num, $bits) = @_; $bits = 128 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_match(AF_INET6, pack("N",$num), $bits); } sub exact_integer { croak "exact_integer: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $num, $bits) = @_; $bits = 128 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_exact(AF_INET6, pack("N",$num), $bits); } sub match { croak "match: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $ip, $bits) = @_; my $packed = inet_pton(AF_INET6, $ip); croak("invalid key") unless (defined $packed); $bits = 128 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_match(AF_INET6, $packed, $bits); } sub exact { croak "exact: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $ip, $bits) = @_; my $packed = inet_pton(AF_INET6, $ip); croak("invalid key") unless (defined $packed); $bits = 128 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_exact(AF_INET6, $packed, $bits); } sub remove { croak "remove: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $ip, $bits) = @_; my $packed = inet_pton(AF_INET6, $ip); croak("invalid key") unless (defined $packed); $bits = 128 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_remove(AF_INET6, $packed, $bits); } sub remove_integer { croak "remote_integer: wrong number of args" if (@_ < 2 || @_ > 3); my ($self, $num, $bits) = @_; $bits = 128 if (@_ < 3); $self->SUPER::_remove(AF_INET6, pack("N",$num), $bits); } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Net::Patricia - Patricia Trie perl module for fast IP address lookups =head1 SYNOPSIS use Net::Patricia; my $pt = new Net::Patricia; $pt->add_string('127.0.0.0/8', \$user_data); $pt->match_string('127.0.0.1'); $pt->match_exact_string('127.0.0.0'); $pt->match_integer(2130706433); # 127.0.0.1 $pt->match_exact_integer(2130706432, 8); # 127.0.0.0 $pt->remove_string('127.0.0.0/8'); $pt->climb(sub { print "climbing at node $_[0]\n" }); undef $pt; # automatically destroys the Patricia Trie # IPv6 support: $pt = new Net::Patricia AF_INET6; $pt->add_string('2001:db8::/32'); $pt->add_string('2001:db8:0:dead::/64'); $pt->add_string('2001:db8:0:beef::/64'); $pt->climb(sub { print "climbing at node $_[0]\n" }); print $pt->match_string('2001:db8:0:dead::1'), "\n"; # IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses: $pt->add_string('::ffff:0:0/96'); for my $cidr (qw( 192.0.2.0/24 192.0.2.0/25 192.0.2.128/25 )) { my($ip, $len) = split(m|/|, $cidr); $pt->add_string("::ffff:$ip/" . (96+(defined($len)? $len : 32)), $cidr); } $pt->climb(sub { print "climbing at node $_[0]\n" }); print $pt->match_string("::ffff:" . "192.0.2.129"), "\n"; =head1 DESCRIPTION This module uses a Patricia Trie data structure to quickly perform IP address prefix matching for applications such as IP subnet, network or routing table lookups. The data structure is based on a radix tree using a radix of two, so sometimes you see patricia implementations called "radix" as well. The term "Trie" is derived from the word "retrieval" but is pronounced like "try". Patricia stands for "Practical Algorithm to Retrieve Information Coded as Alphanumeric", and was first suggested for routing table lookups by Van Jacobsen. Patricia Trie performance characteristics are well-known as it has been employed for routing table lookups within the BSD kernel since the 4.3 Reno release. The BSD radix code is thoroughly described in "TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 2" by Wright and Stevens and in the paper ``A Tree-Based Packet Routing Table for Berkeley Unix'' by Keith Sklower. =head1 METHODS =over 4 =item B<new> - create a new Net::Patricia object $pt = new Net::Patricia; This is the class' constructor - it returns a C<Net::Patricia> object upon success or undef on failure. The constructor takes an optional argument (of AF_INET or AF_INET6, defaulting to the former), and creates a tree with address and mask values of that type as keys. The C<Net::Patricia> object will be destroyed automatically when there are no longer any references to it. =item B<add_string> $pt->add_string(key_string[,user_data]); The first argument, key_string, is a network or subnet specification in canonical form, e.g. "10.0.0.0/8", where the number after the slash represents the number of bits in the netmask. If no mask width is specified, the longest possible mask is assumed, i.e. 32 bits for AF_INET addresses. The second argument, user_data, is optional. If supplied, it should be a SCALAR value (which may be a perl reference) specifying the user data that will be stored in the Patricia Trie node. Subsequently, this value will be returned by the match methods described below to indicate a successful search. Remember that perl references and objects are represented as SCALAR values and therefore the user data can be complicated data objects. If no second argument is passed, the key_string will be stored as the user data and therfore will likewise be returned by the match functions. On success, this method returns the user_data passed as the second argument or key_string if no user data was specified. It returns undef on failure. =item B<match_string> $pt->match_string(key_string); This method searches the Patricia Trie to find a matching node, according to normal subnetting rules for the address and mask specified. The key_string argument is a network or subnet specification in canonical form, e.g. "10.0.0.0/8", where the number after the slash represents the number of bits in the netmask. If no mask width value is specified, the longest mask is assumed, i.e. 32 bits for AF_INET addresses. If a matching node is found in the Patricia Trie, this method returns the user data for the node. This method returns undef on failure. =item B<match_exact_string> $pt->match_exact_string(key_string); This method searches the Patricia Trie to find a matching node. Its semantics are exactly the same as those described for C<match_string> except that the key must match a node exactly. I.e. it is not sufficient that the address and mask specified merely falls within the subnet specified by a particular node. =item B<match_integer> $pt->match_integer(integer[,mask_bits]); This method searches the Patricia Trie to find a matching node, according to normal subnetting rules for the address and mask specified. Its semantics are similar to those described for C<match_string> except that the key is specified using an integer (i.e. SCALAR), such as that returned by perl's C<unpack> function for values converted using the "N" (network-ordered long). Note that this argument is not a packed network-ordered long. Just to be completely clear, the integer argument should be a value of the sort produced by this code: use Socket; $integer = unpack("N", inet_aton("10.0.0.0")); =item B<match_exact_integer> $pt->match_exact_integer(integer[,mask_bits]); This method searches the Patricia Trie to find a matching node. Its semantics are exactly the same as C<match_integer> except that the key must match a node exactly. I.e. it is not sufficient that the address and mask specified merely falls within the subnet specified by a particular node. =item B<remove_string> $pt->remove_string(key_string); This method removes the node which exactly matches the the address and mask specified from the Patricia Trie. If the matching node is found in the Patricia Trie, it is removed, and this method returns the user data for the node. This method returns undef on failure. =item B<climb> $pt->climb([CODEREF]); This method climbs the Patricia Trie, visiting each node as it does so. It performs a non-recursive, "preorder" traversal. The CODEREF argument is optional. It is a perl code reference used to specify a user-defined subroutine to be called when visiting each node. The node's user data will be passed as the sole argument to that subroutine. This method returns the number of nodes successfully visited while climbing the Trie. That is, without a CODEREF argument, it simply counts the number of nodes in the Patricia Trie. Note that currently the return value from your CODEREF subroutine is ignored. In the future the climb method may return the number of times your subroutine returned non-zero, as it is called once per node. So, if you are currently relying on the climb return value to accurately report a count of the number of nodes in the Patricia Trie, it would be prudent to have your subroutine return a non-zero value. This method is called climb() rather than walk() because climbing trees (and therfore tries) is a more popular pass-time than walking them. =item B<climb_inorder> $pt->climb_inorder([CODEREF]); This method climbs the Patricia Trie, visiting each node in order as it does so. That is, it performs an "inorder" traversal. The CODEREF argument is optional. It is a perl code reference used to specify a user-defined subroutine to be called when visiting each node. The node's user data will be passed as the sole argument to that subroutine. This method returns the number of nodes successfully visited while climbing the Trie. That is, without a CODEREF argument, it simply counts the number of nodes in the Patricia Trie. Note that currently the return value from your CODEREF subroutine is ignored. In the future the climb method may return the number of times your subroutine returned non-zero, as it is called once per node. So, if you are currently relying on the climb return value to accurately report a count of the number of nodes in the Patricia Trie, it would be prudent to have your subroutine return a non-zero value. This method is called climb() rather than walk() because climbing trees (and therfore tries) is a more popular pass-time than walking them. =back =head2 Serialization Net::Patricia trees, unlike many classes with XS-level data, can be frozen and thawed using Storable. =head1 BUGS When passing a CODEREF argument to the climb method, the return value from your CODEREF subroutine is currently ignored. In the future the climb method may return the number of times your subroutine returned non-zero, as it is called once per node. So, if you are currently relying on the climb return value to accurately report a count of the number of nodes in the Patricia Trie, it would be prudent to have your subroutine return a non-zero value. =head1 AUTHOR Dave Plonka <plonka@doit.wisc.edu> Philip Prindeville <philipp@redfish-solutions.com> Anton Berezin <tobez@tobez.org> Copyright (C) 2000-2005 Dave Plonka. Copyright (C) 2009 Dave Plonka & Philip Prindeville. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This product includes software developed by the University of Michigan, Merit Network, Inc., and their contributors. See the copyright file in the patricialib sub-directory of the distribution for details. patricialib, the C library used by this perl extension, is an extracted version of MRT's patricia code from radix.[ch], which was worked on by Masaki Hirabaru and Craig Labovitz. For more info on MRT see: http://www.mrtd.net/ The MRT patricia code owes some heritage to GateD's radix code, which in turn owes something to the BSD kernel. =head1 SEE ALSO perl(1), Socket, Net::Netmask, Text::Trie, Tree::Trie. Tree::Radix and Net::RoutingTable are modules by Daniel Hagerty <hag@linnaean.org> written entirely in perl, unlike this module. At the time of this writing, they are works-in-progress but may be available at: http://www.linnaean.org/~hag/ =cut