0

I am trying to do this:

use std::net::{IpAddr, Ipv4Addr, Ipv6Addr};

// A network
pub enum IpNetwork {
    V4(Ipv4Network),
    V6(Ipv6Network),
}

pub struct Ipv4Network {
    addr: Ipv4Addr,
    prefix: u8,
}

pub struct Ipv6Network {
    addr: Ipv6Addr,
    prefix: u8,
}

impl Ipv4Network {
    fn new(addr: Ipv4Addr, prefix: u8) -> Ipv4Network {
        Ipv4Network { addr:addr, prefix:prefix }
    }
}

impl Ipv6Network {
    fn new(addr: Ipv6Addr, prefix: u8) -> Ipv6Network {
        Ipv6Network { addr:addr, prefix:prefix }
    }
}

impl IpNetwork {
    pub fn new(ip: IpAddr, prefix: u8) -> IpNetwork {
        match ip {
            IpAddr::V4(a) => IpNetwork::V4(a, prefix),
            IpAddr::V6(a) => IpNetwork::V6(a, prefix),
        }
    }
}

fn main() {
    let ip = Ipv4Addr::new(77, 88, 21, 11);
    let cidr = IpNetwork::new(ip, 24);
}

And this gives me:

src/lib.rs:34:30: 34:54 error: this function takes 1 parameter but 2 parameters were supplied [E0061]
src/lib.rs:34             IpAddr::V4(a) => IpNetwork::V4(a, prefix),
                                           ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
src/lib.rs:35:30: 35:54 error: this function takes 1 parameter but 2 parameters were supplied [E0061]
src/lib.rs:35             IpAddr::V6(a) => IpNetwork::V6(a, prefix),
                                           ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
src/lib.rs:42:31: 42:33 error: mismatched types:
 expected `std::net::ip::IpAddr`,
    found `std::net::ip::Ipv4Addr`
(expected enum `std::net::ip::IpAddr`,
    found struct `std::net::ip::Ipv4Addr`) [E0308]
src/lib.rs:42     let cidr = IpNetwork::new(ip, 24);
                                            ^~
error: aborting due to 3 previous errors

Why does rust think the constructor takes one argument?

2
  • 1
    It does only take one argument, it looks like you meant IpAddr::V4(a) => IpNetwork::V4(Ipv4Network::new(a, prefix))
    – Lee
    Apr 17, 2015 at 23:33
  • Thanks, my bad. Please make this an answer, I can accept that.
    – ACC
    Apr 17, 2015 at 23:51

2 Answers 2

2

The variants are of the form V4(Ipv4Network), so you should be passing an Ipv4Network such as Ipv4Network::new(a, prefix):

IpAddr::V4(a) => IpNetwork::V4(Ipv4Network::new(a, prefix)),
1

There are two errors in your code:

First error is that you e.g. construct IpNetwork::V4 by passing a tuple of address and a prefix. If you look at how you defined IpNetwork:

// A network
pub enum IpNetwork {
   V4(Ipv4Network),
   V6(Ipv6Network),
}

You need to supply IpNetwork::V4 with struct Ipv4Network and not just the tuple of (a, prefix). Same goes for IpNetwork::V6. With these adjustment your match brace becomes:

pub fn new(ip: IpAddr, prefix: u8) -> IpNetwork {
    match ip {
        IpAddr::V4(a) => IpNetwork::V4(Ipv4Network::new(a, prefix)),
        IpAddr::V6(a) => IpNetwork::V6(Ipv6Network::new(a, prefix)),
    }
}

Second error is in main method. You are constructing Ipv4Addr and trying to pass it to IpNetwork as a parameter. While IpNetwork only accepts IpAddr. So you'll missing this part:

let addr = IpAddr::V4(ip);
let cidr = IpNetwork::new(addr, 24);

Here is playpen link to solution that fails on unstable parameters.

For this snippet to work you'll need to make a crate and add #![feature(ip_addr)] for it to pass compiler checks. IpAddr and variants are apparently being reworked.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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