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ip.c | ||
ip.sql.in | ||
mac.c | ||
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mac.sql.in | ||
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README | ||
test.sql |
PostgreSQL type extensions for IP and MAC addresses. --------------------------------------------------- $Id: README,v 1.2 1998/02/14 17:58:03 scrappy Exp $ I needed to record IP and MAC level ethernet addresses in a data base, and I really didn't want to store them as plain strings, with no enforced error checking, so I put together the accompanying code as my first experiment with adding a data type to PostgreSQL. I then thought that this might be useful to others, both directly and as a very simple example of how to do this sort of thing, so here it is, in the hope that it will be useful. IP addresses are implemented as a 6 byte struct (this may be 1 byte more than is useful, but I figured that since it has to be at least 5, it might as well be an even number of bytes) that contains the four byte address and a mask width. The external representation of an IP address looks like '158.37.96.15/32' (or just '158.37.96.15', which is understood to mean the same thing). This address happens to be part of a subnet where I work; '158.37.96.0/24', which itself is a part of the larger subnet allocated to our site, which is '158.37.96.0/21', which again, if you go by the old book, is part of the class "B" net called '158.37.0.0/16'. Input and output functions are supplied, along with the "normal" <, <=, =, >=, > and <> operators, which all do what you expect. In addition, there is a function to check whether a given address is a member of a given subnet: ipaddr_in_net(addr, net), and functions to return the netmask and the broadcast address of a given network: ipaddr_mask(net) and ipaddr_bcast(net). MAC level ethernet addresses are implemented as a 6 byte struct that contains the address as unsigned chars. Several input forms are accepted; the following are all the same address: '08002b:010203', '08002b-010203', '0800.2b01.0203', '08-00-2b-01-02-03' and '08:00:2b:01:02:03'. Upper and lower case is accepted for the digits 'a' through 'f'. Output is always in the latter of the given forms. As with IP addresses, input and output functions are supplied as well as the "normal" operators, which do what you expect. As an extra feature, a function macaddr_manuf() is defined, which returns the name of the manufacturer as a string. This is currently held in a hard-coded struct internal to the C module -- it might be smarter to put this information into an actual data base table, and look up the manufacturer there. (Another TODO, for both new data types, is to interface them to indices. If anyone can explain this to me in a way that is easier to understand than the current documentation, I would be most grateful!) I don't know what changes are needed to the Makefile for other systems than the one I'm running (NetBSD 1.3), but anyway: to install on a BSD system: fix the path names in the SQL files and the Makefile if you need to, then make, make install, slurp the SQL files into psql or whatever, and you're off. Enjoy! Bergen, Norway, 1998-01-31, Tom Ivar Helbekkmo (tih@Hamartun.Priv.NO).