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Full Discussion: Network interface-
Special Forums IP Networking Network interface- Post 302643165 by Corona688 on Friday 18th of May 2012 02:45:41 PM
Old 05-18-2012
An IP address is how you talk to another computer over an IP network. Each network card has its own IP. You try connecting to 10.0.2.15, and IP protocol will find that computer and talk to it if it's there.

It must be unique on the network -- you shouldn't have two 10.0.2.15's plugged into the same local network, they'll conflict.

An IP address, combined with its netmask, netmask are sort of a combined house and street address. The netmask defines which part is local.

Code:
MASK   255 255 255   0
  IP   192 168  56 102
Local                0-254

Meaning, 192.168.56.102 can directly talk to any other network card with an IP address of 192.168.56.anything-else. If it were 192.168.57, it would have to forward the message along to a gateway and hope it knows where it belongs.

So the IP address is a unique ID for each computer, and the subnet mask defines which block of other IPs it can talk to.
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IPv4Addr(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					       IPv4Addr(3)

NAME
Net::IPv4Addr - Perl extension for manipulating IPv4 addresses. SYNOPSIS
use Net::IPv4Addr qw( :all ); my ($ip,$cidr) = ipv4_parse( "127.0.0.1/24" ); my ($ip,$cidr) = ipv4_parse( "192.168.100.10 / 255.255.255.0" ); my ($net,$msk) = ipv4_network( "192.168.100.30" ); my $broadcast = ipv4_broadcast( "192.168.100.30/26" ); if ( ipv4_in_network( "192.168.100.0", $her_ip ) ) { print "Welcome !"; } etc. DESCRIPTION
Net::IPv4Addr provides functions for parsing IPv4 addresses both in traditional address/netmask format and in the new CIDR format. There are also methods for calculating the network and broadcast address and also to see check if a given address is in a specific network. ADDRESSES
All of Net::IPv4Addr functions accepts addresses in many format. The parsing is very liberal. All these addresses would be accepted: 127.0.0.1 192.168.001.010/24 192.168.10.10/255.255.255.0 192.168.30.10 / 21 10.0.0.0 / 255.0.0.0 255.255.0.0 Those wouldn't though: 272.135.234.0 192.168/16 Most functions accepts the address and netmask or masklength in the same scalar value or as separate values. That is either my($ip,$masklength) = ipv4_parse($cidr_str); my($ip,$masklength) = ipv4_parse($ip_str,$msk_str); USING
No functions are exported by default. Either use the ":all" tag to import them all or explicitly import those you need. FUNCTIONS
ipv4_parse my ($ip,$msklen) = ipv4_parse($cidr_str); my $cidr = ipv4_parse($ip_str,$msk_str); my ($ip) = ipv4_parse($ip_str,$msk_str); Parse an IPv4 address and in scalar context the address in CIDR format and in an array context the address and the mask length. If the parameters doesn't contains a netmask or a mask length, in scalar context only the IPv4 address is returned and in an array context the mask length is undefined. If the function cannot parse its input, it croaks. Trap it using "eval" if don't like that. ipv4_network my $cidr = ipv4_network($ip_str); my $cidr = ipv4_network($cidr_str); my ($net,$msk) = ipv4_network( $net_str, $msk_str); In scalar context, this function returns the network in CIDR format in which the address is. In array context, it returns the network address and its mask length as a two elements array. If the input is an host without a netmask of mask length, the default netmask is assumed. Again, the function croak if the input is invalid. ipv4_broadcast my ($broadcast) = ipv4_broadcast($ip_str); my $broadcast = ipv4_broadcast($ip_str,$msk_str); This function returns the broadcast address. If the input doesn't contains a netmask or mask length, the default netmask is assumed. This function croaks if the input is invalid. ipv4_network my $cidr = ipv4_network($net_str); my $cidr = ipv4_network($cidr_sstr); my ($net,$msk) = ipv4_network( $ip_str, $mask_str); In scalar context, this function returns the network in CIDR format in which the address is. In array context, it returns the network address and its mask length as a two elements array. If the input is an host without a netmask or mask length, the default netmask is assumed. Again, the function croak if the input is invalid. ipv4_in_network print "Yes" if ipv4_in_network( $cidr_str1, $cidr_str2); print "Yes" if ipv4_in_network( $ip_str1, $mask_str1, $cidr_str2 ); print "Yes" if ipv4_in_network( $ip1, $mask1, $ip2, $msk2 ); This function checks if the second network is contained in the first one and it implements the following semantics : If net1 or net2 is a magic address (0.0.0.0 or 255.255.255.255) than this function returns true. If net1 is an host, net2 will be in the same net only if it is the same host. If net2 is an host, it will be contained in net1 only if it is part of net1. If net2 is only part of net1 if it is entirely contained in net1. Trap bad input with "eval" or else. ipv4_checkip if ($ip = ipv4_checkip($str) ) { # Do something } Return the IPv4 address in the string or undef if the input doesn't contains a valid IPv4 address. ipv4_cidr2msk my $netmask = ipv4_cidr2msk( $cidr ); Returns the netmask corresponding to the mask length given in input. As usual, croaks if it doesn't like your input (in this case a number between 0 and 32). ipv4_msk2cidr my $masklen = ipv4_msk2cidr( $msk ); Returns the mask length of the netmask in input. As usual, croaks if it doesn't like your input. AUTHOR
Francis J. Lacoste <francis.lacoste@iNsu.COM> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1999, 2000 iNsu Innovations Inc. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms as perl itself. SEE ALSO
perl(1) ipv4calc(1). perl v5.12.1 2000-08-01 IPv4Addr(3)
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