Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I want to do two things: Convert IP Address inputs into CIDR Here are some example inputs:

1.1.1.1    
192.168.*.* #=> 192.168.0-255.0-255
192.168.1.2-20
1.1.1-10.1-100

Check if a given IP Address falls into any CIDR. This must be a very fast query, as it's a very common lookup in my web app. I'm thinking of doing something like this:

def matches?(request)
  valid = @ips.select {|cidr| cidr.contains?(request.remote_ip) }
  !valid.empty?
end

I think converting IP ranges into CIDR will let lookups be faster than what we're doing now, which is breaking the IP's into integer octets. We then index the first two sets of octets to partially match against IP's. Another option might be converting everything to ints and doing comparisons that way. I'd convert to ints with something like this IPAddr.new("1.1.1.1").to_i but then I'd need to store an upper and lower IP for each range instead of just a single CIDR.

Please let me know if I am overlooking any mainstream approaches, popular gems or repo's. Thanks!

share|improve this question

2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

Well, to get the CIDR notation of a range, you need an IP and the number of network bits (calculated from the netmask).

To enumerate the addresses of a given range, you can use the NetAddr gem.

p NetAddr::CIDR.create('192.168.1.0/24').enumerate
  => ['192.168.1.0', '192.168.1.1', '192.168.1.2'... '192.168.1.255']

You can also calculate the bits from the netmask on the fly:

mask_int = NetAddr.netmask_to_i('255.255.255.0')
p NetAddr.mask_to_bits(mask_int)
  => 24

And to create a range based on two IPs:

lower = NetAddr::CIDR.create('192.168.1.1')
upper = NetAddr::CIDR.create('192.168.1.10')
p NetAddr.range(lower, upper)
  => ['192.168.1.2', '192.168.1.3'... '192.168.1.9']

So now that you can create a CIDR range, you can check to see if an IP is a part of it:

cidr = NetAddr::CIDR.create('192.168.1.0/24')
p cidr.contains?('192.168.1.10')
  => true
share|improve this answer
+1 for NetAddr. Its very cool. – the Tin Man Nov 16 '12 at 0:46
Thanks for this. I ended up converting everything to int's, indexing the upper and lower ip ranges as ints to do really fast comparisons. Your tip to use the NetAddr helped get me to the right direction. The issue with our environment is that user inputs of specific ip ranges and wildcards would make CIDR lookup much more complicated than I initially thought. – John Nov 26 '12 at 14:56
converting a range to single ips is ofc "converting to CIDR (blocks)", but not very efficient. – Stefan Mar 8 at 7:50

I suspect everything you need is in IPAddr. I use this to see if the remote IP is coming from a private network:

['127.0.0.0/8', '10.0.0.0/8', '172.16.0.0/12', '192.168.0.0/16', '192.168.10.0/8'
].none?{|block| IPAddr.new(block) === request.remote_ip}
share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.