iproute-1.3.2: IP Routing Table

Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

Data.IP

Contents

Description

Data structures to express IPv4, IPv6 and IP range.

Synopsis

Documentation

IP data

data IP Source

A unified IP data for IPv4 and IPv6. To create this, use the data constructors. Or use read "192.0.2.1" :: IP, for example. Also, "192.0.2.1" can be used as literal with OverloadedStrings.

>>> (read "192.0.2.1" :: IP) == IPv4 (read "192.0.2.1" :: IPv4)
True
>>> (read "2001:db8:00:00:00:00:00:01" :: IP) == IPv6 (read "2001:db8:00:00:00:00:00:01" :: IPv6)
True

Constructors

IPv4 

Fields

ipv4 :: IPv4
 
IPv6 

Fields

ipv6 :: IPv6
 

Instances

data IPv4 Source

The abstract data type to express an IPv4 address. To create this, use toIPv4. Or use read "192.0.2.1" :: IPv4, for example. Also, "192.0.2.1" can be used as literal with OverloadedStrings.

>>> read "192.0.2.1" :: IPv4
192.0.2.1

toIPv4 :: [Int] -> IPv4 Source

The toIPv4 function takes a list of Int and returns IPv4.

>>> toIPv4 [192,0,2,1]
192.0.2.1

fromIPv4 :: IPv4 -> [Int] Source

The fromIPv4 function converts IPv4 to a list of Int.

>>> fromIPv4 (toIPv4 [192,0,2,1])
[192,0,2,1]

data IPv6 Source

The abstract data type to express an IPv6 address. To create this, use toIPv6. Or use read "2001:DB8::1" :: IPv6, for example. Also, "2001:DB8::1" can be used as literal with OverloadedStrings.

>>> read "2001:db8:00:00:00:00:00:01" :: IPv6
2001:db8::1
>>> read "2001:db8:11e:c00::101" :: IPv6
2001:db8:11e:c00::101
>>> read "2001:db8:11e:c00:aa:bb:192.0.2.1" :: IPv6
2001:db8:11e:c00:aa:bb:c000:201
>>> read "2001:db8::192.0.2.1" :: IPv6
2001:db8::c000:201
>>> read "0::ffff:192.0.2.1" :: IPv6
::ffff:192.0.2.1
>>> read "0::0:c000:201" :: IPv6
::192.0.2.1
>>> read "::0.0.0.1" :: IPv6
::1

toIPv6 :: [Int] -> IPv6 Source

The toIPv6 function takes a list of Int and returns IPv6.

>>> toIPv6 [0x2001,0xDB8,0,0,0,0,0,1]
2001:db8::1

toIPv6b :: [Int] -> IPv6 Source

The toIPv6b function takes a list of Int where each member repserents a single byte and returns IPv6.

>>> toIPv6b [0x20,0x01,0xD,0xB8,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1]
2001:db8::1

fromIPv6 :: IPv6 -> [Int] Source

The toIPv6 function converts IPv6 to a list of Int.

>>> fromIPv6 (toIPv6 [0x2001,0xDB8,0,0,0,0,0,1])
[8193,3512,0,0,0,0,0,1]

fromIPv6b :: IPv6 -> [Int] Source

The fromIPv6b function converts IPv6 to a list of Int where each member represents a single byte.

>>> fromIPv6b (toIPv6b [0x20,0x01,0xD,0xB8,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1])
[32,1,13,184,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1]

IP range data

data IPRange Source

A unified data for AddrRange IPv4 and AddrRange IPv6. To create this, use read "192.0.2.0/24" :: IPRange. Also, "192.0.2.0/24" can be used as literal with OverloadedStrings.

>>> (read "192.0.2.1/24" :: IPRange) == IPv4Range (read "192.0.2.0/24" :: AddrRange IPv4)
True
>>> (read "2001:db8:00:00:00:00:00:01/48" :: IPRange) == IPv6Range (read "2001:db8:00:00:00:00:00:01/48" :: AddrRange IPv6)
True

Constructors

IPv4Range 
IPv6Range 

data AddrRange a Source

The Addr range consists of an address, a contiguous mask, and mask length. The contiguous mask and the mask length are essentially same information but contained for pre calculation.

To create this, use makeAddrRange or read "192.0.2.0/24" :: AddrRange IPv4. Also, "192.0.2.0/24" can be used as literal with OverloadedStrings.

>>> read "192.0.2.1/24" :: AddrRange IPv4
192.0.2.0/24
>>> read "2001:db8:00:00:00:00:00:01/48" :: AddrRange IPv6
2001:db8::/48

Address class

class Eq a => Addr a where Source

>>> toIPv4 [127,0,2,1] `masked` intToMask 7
126.0.0.0

Methods

masked :: a -> a -> a Source

The masked function takes an Addr and a contiguous mask and returned a masked Addr.

intToMask :: Int -> a Source

The intToMask function takes Int and returns a contiguous mask.

Instances

makeAddrRange :: Addr a => a -> Int -> AddrRange a Source

The makeAddrRange functions takes an Addr address and a mask length. It creates a bit mask from the mask length and masks the Addr address, then returns AddrRange made of them.

>>> makeAddrRange (toIPv4 [127,0,2,1]) 8
127.0.0.0/8
>>> makeAddrRange (toIPv6 [0x2001,0xDB8,0,0,0,0,0,1]) 8
2000::/8

(>:>) :: Addr a => AddrRange a -> AddrRange a -> Bool Source

The >:> operator takes two AddrRange. It returns True if the first AddrRange contains the second AddrRange. Otherwise, it returns False.

>>> makeAddrRange ("127.0.2.1" :: IPv4) 8 >:> makeAddrRange "127.0.2.1" 24
True
>>> makeAddrRange ("127.0.2.1" :: IPv4) 24 >:> makeAddrRange "127.0.2.1" 8
False
>>> makeAddrRange ("2001:DB8::1" :: IPv6) 16 >:> makeAddrRange "2001:DB8::1" 32
True
>>> makeAddrRange ("2001:DB8::1" :: IPv6) 32 >:> makeAddrRange "2001:DB8::1" 16
False

isMatchedTo :: Addr a => a -> AddrRange a -> Bool Source

The toMatchedTo function take an Addr address and an AddrRange, and returns True if the range contains the address.

>>> ("127.0.2.0" :: IPv4) `isMatchedTo` makeAddrRange "127.0.2.1" 24
True
>>> ("127.0.2.0" :: IPv4) `isMatchedTo` makeAddrRange "127.0.2.1" 32
False
>>> ("2001:DB8::1" :: IPv6) `isMatchedTo` makeAddrRange "2001:DB8::1" 32
True
>>> ("2001:DB8::" :: IPv6) `isMatchedTo` makeAddrRange "2001:DB8::1" 128
False