laitimes

A powerful library of PHP tools for handling IPv4 and IPv6 network addresses

author:Not bald programmer
A powerful library of PHP tools for handling IPv4 and IPv6 network addresses
PHP library for handling network addresses (IPv4 and IPv6).

Installation

composer require s1lentium/iptools           

use

IP Operations

IPv4

$ip = new IP('192.168.1.1');
echo $ip->version;// IPv4           

IPv6

$ip = new IP('fc00::');
echo $ip->version; // IPv6           

Resolve IP from integers, binary, and hexadecimal

echo (string)IP::parse(2130706433); // 127.0.0.1
echo (string)IP::parse('0b11000000101010000000000100000001') // 192.168.1.1
echo (string)IP::parse('0x0a000001'); // 10.0.0.1           

or

echo (string)IP::parseLong(2130706433); // 127.0.0.1
echo (string)IP::parseBin('11000000101010000000000100000001'); // 192.168.1.1
echo (string)IP::parseHex('0a000001'); // 10.0.0.1           

Convert IP to other formats

echo IP::parse('192.168.1.1')->bin // 11000000101010000000000100000001
echo IP::parse('10.0.0.1')->hex // 0a000001
echo IP::parse('127.0.0.1')->long // 2130706433           

other

  • maxPrefixLength address represents the maximum number of digits in IPv4 and IPv6 to 32.
  • octetsCount octets in IP addresses: 4 for IPv4 and 16 for IPv6
  • The name of the reverse DNS PTR for the reversePointer address:
echo new IP::parse('192.0.2.5')->reversePointer // 5.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa
echo new IP::parse('2001:db8::567:89ab')->reversePointer // b.a.9.8.7.6.5.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.8.b.d.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa           

Network Operations

echo Network::parse('192.0.0.1 255.0.0.0')->CIDR; // 192.0.0.0/8
echo (string)Network::parse('192.0.0.1/8')->netmask; // 255.0.0.0
echo (string)Network::parse('192.0.0.1'); // 192.0.0.1/32           

The IP address in the network

$excluded = Network::parse('192.0.0.0/8')->exclude(new IP('192.168.1.1'));
foreach($excluded as $network) {
 echo (string)$network . '<br>';
}           
192.0.0.0/9
192.128.0.0/11
192.160.0.0/13
192.168.0.0/24
192.168.1.0/32
192.168.1.2/31
...
192.192.0.0/10           

Subnets in the network

$excluded = Network::parse('192.0.0.0/8')->exclude(new Network('192.168.1.0/24'));
foreach($excluded as $network) {
 echo (string)$network . '<br>';
}           
192.0.0.0/9
192.128.0.0/11
192.160.0.0/13
192.168.0.0/24
192.168.2.0/23
...
192.192.0.0/10           

Split the network into equal networks

$networks = Network::parse('192.168.0.0/22')->moveTo('24');
foreach ($networks as $network) {
 echo (string)$network . '<br>';
}           
192.168.0.0/24
192.168.1.0/24
192.168.2.0/24
192.168.3.0/24           

Iterate over the network IP address

$network = Network::parse('192.168.1.0/24');
foreach($network as $ip) {
 echo (string)$ip . '<br>';
}           
192.168.1.0
...
192.168.1.255           

To get a web host address range:

$hosts = Network::parse('192.168.1.0/24')->hosts // Range(192.168.1.1, 192.168.1.254);
foreach($hosts as $ip) {
	echo (string)$ip . '<br>';
}           
192.168.1.1
...
192.168.1.254           

Calculate the network IP address

echo count(Network::parse('192.168.1.0/24')) // 254           

Range operations

Define the scope in different formats

$range = new Range(new IP('192.168.1.0'), new IP('192.168.1.255'));
$range = Range::parse('192.168.1.0-192.168.1.255');
$range = Range::parse('192.168.1.*');
$range = Range::parse('192.168.1.0/24');           

Check if the IP is in range

echo Range::parse('192.168.1.1-192.168.1.254')->contains(new IP('192.168.1.5')); // true
echo Range::parse('::1-::ffff')->contains(new IP('::1234')); // true           

Iterative range IP addresses

$range = Range::parse('192.168.1.1-192.168.1.254');
foreach($range as $ip) {
	echo (string)$ip . '<br>';
}           
192.168.1.1
...
192.168.1.254           

Obtain a network that fits the specified IP address range

$networks = Range::parse('192.168.1.1-192.168.1.254')->getNetworks();

foreach($networks as $network) {
 echo (string)$network . '<br>';
}           
192.168.1.1/32
192.168.1.2/31
192.168.1.4/30
192.168.1.8/29
192.168.1.16/28
192.168.1.32/27
192.168.1.64/26
192.168.1.128/26
192.168.1.192/27
192.168.1.224/28
192.168.1.240/29
192.168.1.248/30
192.168.1.252/31
192.168.1.254/32           

IP addresses in the calculation range

echo count(Range::parse('192.168.1.1-192.168.1.254')) // 254           

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