gcc/libjava/java/net/InetAddress.java
Tom Tromey ee9dd3721b Initial revision
From-SVN: r26263
1999-04-07 14:42:40 +00:00

256 lines
6.5 KiB
Java

// INetAddress.java -- An Internet Protocol (IP) address.
/* Copyright (C) 1998, 1999 Cygnus Solutions
This file is part of libgcj.
This software is copyrighted work licensed under the terms of the
Libgcj License. Please consult the file "LIBGCJ_LICENSE" for
details. */
package java.net;
/**
* @author Per Bothner
* @date January 6, 1999.
*/
/*
* Written using on-line Java Platform 1.2 API Specification, as well
* as "The Java Class Libraries", 2nd edition (Addison-Wesley, 1998).
* (The latter turns out to have some errors ...)
* Status: Believed complete and correct.
*/
public final class InetAddress
{
String hostname;
byte[] address;
InetAddress (byte[] address, String hostname)
{
this.address = address;
this.hostname = hostname;
}
public boolean isMulticastAddress ()
{
int len = address.length;
if (len == 4)
return (address[0] & 0xF0) == 0xE0;
if (len == 16)
return address[0] == (byte) 0xFF;
return false;
}
public String getHostName ()
{
if (hostname == null)
lookup (null, this, false);
return hostname;
}
public byte[] getAddress ()
{
// An experiment shows that JDK1.2 returns a different byte array each
// time. This makes sense, in terms of security.
return (byte[]) address.clone();
}
/* Helper function due to a CNI limitation. */
private static InetAddress[] allocArray (int count)
{
return new InetAddress[count];
}
/* Helper function due to a CNI limitation. */
private static SecurityException checkConnect (String hostname)
{
SecurityManager s = System.getSecurityManager();
if (s == null)
return null;
try
{
s.checkConnect(hostname, -1);
return null;
}
catch (SecurityException ex)
{
return ex;
}
}
public String getHostAddress ()
{
StringBuffer sbuf = new StringBuffer(40);
int len = address.length;
int i = 0;
if (len == 16)
{ // An IPv6 address.
for (; ; i += 2)
{
if (i >= 16)
return sbuf.toString();
int x = ((address[i] & 0xFF) << 8) | (address[i+1] & 0xFF);
boolean empty = sbuf.length() == 0;
if (empty)
{
if (i == 10 && x == 0xFFFF)
{ // IPv4-mapped IPv6 address.
sbuf.append(":FFFF:");
break; // Continue as IPv4 address;
}
else if (i == 12)
{ // IPv4-compatible IPv6 address.
sbuf.append(':');
break; // Continue as IPv4 address.
}
else if (i > 0)
sbuf.append("::");
}
else
sbuf.append(':');
if (x != 0 || i >= 14)
sbuf.append(Integer.toHexString(x).toUpperCase());
}
}
for ( ; ; )
{
sbuf.append(address[i] & 0xFF);
i++;
if (i == len)
break;
sbuf.append('.');
}
return sbuf.toString();
}
public int hashCode()
{
// There hashing algorithm is not specified, but a simple experiment
// shows that it is equal to the address, as a 32-bit big-endian integer.
int hash = 0;
int len = address.length;
int i = len > 4 ? len - 4 : 0;
for ( ; i < len; i++)
hash = (hash << 8) | (address[i] & 0xFF);
return hash;
}
public boolean equals (Object obj)
{
if (obj == null || ! (obj instanceof InetAddress))
return false;
// "The Java Class Libraries" 2nd edition says "If a machine has
// multiple names instances of InetAddress for different name of
// that same machine are not equal. This is because they have
// different host names." This violates the description in the
// JDK 1.2 API documentation. A little experiementation
// shows that the latter is correct.
byte[] addr1 = address;
byte[] addr2 = ((InetAddress) obj).address;
if (addr1.length != addr2.length)
return false;
for (int i = addr1.length; --i >= 0; )
if (addr1[i] != addr2[i])
return false;
return true;
}
public String toString()
{
return getHostName()+'/'+getHostAddress();
}
/** If host is a valid numeric IP address, return the numeric address.
* Otherwise, return null. */
private static native byte[] aton (String host);
private static native InetAddress[] lookup
(String hostname, InetAddress addr, boolean all);
public static InetAddress getByName (String host)
throws UnknownHostException
{
if (host == null)
return getLocalHost();
byte[] address = aton(host);
if (address != null)
return new InetAddress(address, null);
InetAddress iaddr = new InetAddress(null, null);
lookup(host, iaddr, false);
return iaddr;
}
public static InetAddress[] getAllByName (String host)
throws UnknownHostException
{
byte[] address = aton(host);
if (address != null)
{
InetAddress[] result = new InetAddress[1];
result[0] = new InetAddress(address, null);
return result;
}
return lookup(host, null, true);
}
private static final byte[] localhostAddress = { 127, 0, 0, 1 };
private static native String getLocalHostname ();
private static InetAddress localhost = null;
public static InetAddress getLocalHost() throws UnknownHostException
{
SecurityManager s = System.getSecurityManager();
// Experimentation shows that JDK1.2 does cache the result.
// However, if there is a security manager, and the cached result
// is other than "localhost", we need to check again.
if (localhost == null
|| (s != null && localhost.address != localhostAddress))
getLocalHost(s);
return localhost;
}
private static synchronized void getLocalHost(SecurityManager s)
throws UnknownHostException
{
// Check the localhost cache again, now that we've synchronized.
if (s == null && localhost != null)
return;
String hostname = getLocalHostname();
if (s != null)
{
// "The Java Class Libraries" suggests that if the security
// manager disallows getting the local host name, then
// we use the loopback host.
// However, the JDK 1.2 API claims to throw SecurityException,
// which seems to suggest SecurityException is *not* caught.
// In this case, experimentation shows that former is correct.
try
{
// This is wrong, if the name returned from getLocalHostname()
// is not a fully qualified name. FIXME.
s.checkConnect(hostname, -1);
}
catch (SecurityException ex)
{
hostname = null;
}
}
if (hostname != null)
{
try
{
localhost = getByName(hostname);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
}
}
if (localhost == null)
localhost = new InetAddress (localhostAddress, "localhost");
}
}