netparser
Parse and manipulate IPv4 and IPv6 network addresses
Installation
npm install netparser
Examples
import * as netparser from 'netparser';
netparser.baseAddress('b011:a2c2:7328:cc01:4ee7:e2ec:6269:babf/73');
// returns 'b011:a2c2:7328:cc01:4e80::'
netparser.broadcastAddress('192.168.0.50/24');
// returns '192.168.0.255'
netparser.findUnusedSubnets('192.168.0.0/22', ['192.168.1.0/24', '192.168.2.32/30']);
// returns ['192.168.0.0/24', '192.168.2.0/27', '192.168.2.36/30', '192.168.2.40/29', '192.168.2.48/28', '192.168.2.64/26', '192.168.2.128/25', '192.168.3.0/24']
netparser.ip(' [2001:db8:122:344:0:0:0::0:0:0:1] ');
// returns '2001:db8:122:344::1'
netparser.network(' 192.168.000.000/24 ');
// returns '192.168.0.0/24'
netparser.networkComesBefore('192.168.0.0/24', '10.0.0.0/8');
// returns false
netparser.networkContainsSubnet('192.168.0.0/16', '192.168.0.0/24');
// returns true
netparser.networksIntersect('192.168.0.0/23', '192.168.1.0/24');
// returns true
netparser.nextAddress('192.168.0.0');
// returns '192.168.0.1'
netparser.nextNetwork('192.168.0.0/24');
// returns '192.168.1.0/24'
netparser.rangeOfNetworks('192.168.1.2', '192.168.2.2');
// returns ['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', '192.168.1.128/25', '192.168.2.0/31', '192.168.2.2/32']
netparser.sort(['255.255.255.255', '192.168.0.0/16', '192.168.2.3/31']);
// returns ['192.168.0.0/16', '192.168.2.3/31', '255.255.255.255/32']
netparser.summarize(['192.168.1.1', '192.168.0.0/16', '192.168.2.3/31']);
// returns ['192.168.0.0/16']
var matcher = new netparser.Matcher(['192.168.0.0/24', '192.168.2.0/23', '192.168.4.0/24']);
matcher.has('192.168.3.0');
// returns true
FYI
- For simplicity, all functions will only ever return
String, String[], boolean, or null
. - By default the library will fail silently and
null
is returned when errors are encountered. To override this setting set the optionalthrowErrors
parameter toTrue
. - By default the library will conveniently mask out provided
network
values to their base address when such an operation makes sense. To override this setting set the optionalstrict
parameter toTrue
where applicable.
Benchmarks
npm run bench
'index.bench.ts' output:
baseAddress (netparser) x 1,881,378 ops/sec ±0.66% (95 runs sampled)
baseAddress (ip-address) x 1,355,975 ops/sec ±0.64% (88 runs sampled)
baseAddress (ipaddr.js) x 509,825 ops/sec ±2.07% (89 runs sampled)
baseAddress (netmask) x 326,042 ops/sec ±3.84% (82 runs sampled)
contains (netparser) x 883,418 ops/sec ±1.53% (84 runs sampled)
contains (ip-address) x 901,704 ops/sec ±1.44% (90 runs sampled)
contains (ipaddr.js) x 59,005 ops/sec ±13.38% (65 runs sampled)
contains (netmask) x 304,785 ops/sec ±1.77% (88 runs sampled)
'match.bench.ts' output:
create (netparser) x 11.91 ops/sec ±5.55% (34 runs sampled)
create (cidr-matcher) x 5.13 ops/sec ±5.43% (17 runs sampled)
create (ipaddr.js) x 28.78 ops/sec ±4.83% (50 runs sampled)
query (netparser) x 145,604 ops/sec ±1.25% (91 runs sampled)
query (cidr-matcher) x 1,035 ops/sec ±3.74% (83 runs sampled)
query (ipaddr.js) x 16.22 ops/sec ±1.76% (44 runs sampled)
API
Docs generated using docts
Function
baseAddress
BaseAddress returns the base address for a given subnet address
Source code:<>
baseAddress( ) ⇒
null | string
<>
▪ networkAddressstring
- A network address like 192.168.0.4/24
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
broadcastAddress
BroadcastAddress returns the broadcast address for an IPv4 address.
Please note that IPv6 does not have broadcast addresses.
Source code:<>
broadcastAddress( ) ⇒
null | string
<>
▪ networkstring
- A network like 192.168.0.0/24
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
findUnusedSubnets
FindUnusedSubnets returns array of unused subnets given the aggregate and sibling subnets
Source code:<>
findUnusedSubnets( ) ⇒
null | string[]
<>
▪ aggregatestring
- An aggregate network like 192.168.0.0/24
▪ subnetsstring[]
- Array of subnetworks like ["192.168.0.0/24", "192.168.0.128/26"]
▫ strict?undefined | true | false
- Do not automatically mask addresses to baseAddresses
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
ip
Parse an IP address
Source code:<>
ip( ) ⇒
null | string
<>
▪ addressstring
- Either an address like 192.168.0.0 or subnet 192.168.0.0/24
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
network
Parse a network address
Source code:<>
network( ) ⇒
null | string
<>
▪ networkAddressstring
- A network like 192.168.0.0/24
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
networkComesBefore
NetworkComesBefore returns a bool with regards to numerical network order.
Please note that IPv4 comes before IPv6 and larger networks come before smaller ones.
Source code:<>
networkComesBefore( ) ⇒
null | true | false
<>
▪ networkstring
- A network like 192.168.0.0/24
▪ otherNetworkstring
- A network like 192.168.1.0/24
▫ strict?undefined | true | false
- Do not automatically mask addresses to baseAddresses
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
networkContainsAddress
NetworkContainsAddress validates that the address is inside the network
Source code:<>
networkContainsAddress( ) ⇒
null | true | false
<>
▪ networkstring
- A network like 192.168.0.0/24
▪ addressstring
- A network like 192.168.0.100
▫ strict?undefined | true | false
- Do not automatically mask addresses to baseAddresses
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
networkContainsSubnet
NetworkContainsSubnet validates that the network is a valid supernet
Source code:<>
networkContainsSubnet( ) ⇒
null | true | false
<>
▪ networkstring
- A network like 192.168.0.0/16
▪ subnetstring
- A network like 192.168.0.0/24
▫ strict?undefined | true | false
- Do not automatically mask addresses to baseAddresses
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
networksIntersect
NetworksIntersect returns a bool showing if the networks overlap
Source code:<>
networksIntersect( ) ⇒
null | true | false
<>
▪ networkstring
- A network like 192.168.0.0/23
▪ otherNetworkstring
- A network like 192.168.1.0/24
▫ strict?undefined | true | false
- Do not automatically mask addresses to baseAddresses
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
nextAddress
NextAddress returns the next address
Source code:<>
nextAddress( ) ⇒
null | string
<>
▪ addressstring
- An address like 192.168.0.0
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
nextNetwork
NextNetwork returns the next network of the same size.
Source code:<>
nextNetwork( ) ⇒
null | string
<>
▪ networkstring
- A network like 192.168.0.0/24
▫ strict?undefined | true | false
- Do not automatically mask addresses to baseAddresses
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
rangeOfNetworks
RangeOfNetworks returns an array of networks given a range of addresses
Source code:<>
rangeOfNetworks( ) ⇒
null | string[]
<>
▪ startAddressstring
- An address like 192.168.1.2
▪ stopAddressstring
- An address like 192.168.1.5
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
sort
Sort returns an array of sorted networks
Source code:<>
sort( ) ⇒
null | string[]
<>
▪ networkAddressesstring[]
- An array of addresses or subnets
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silentlyFunction
summarize
Summarize returns an array of aggregates given a list of networks
Source code:<>
summarize( ) ⇒
null | string[]
<>
▪ networksstring[]
- An array of addresses or subnets
▫ strict?undefined | true | false
- Do not automatically mask addresses to baseAddresses
▫ throwErrors?undefined | true | false
- Stop the library from failing silently