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diff --git a/doc/README.inet b/doc/README.inet new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..69df7dfc2c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/README.inet @@ -0,0 +1,74 @@ +PostgreSQL type extensions for IP and MAC addresses. +--------------------------------------------------- + +$Id: README.inet,v 1.1 1998/10/08 00:19:32 momjian 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 I +submitted it to the PostgreSQL project for inclusion in the contrib +directory. Since then, that directory has been modified to contain +Aleksei Roudnev's implementation, which is based on mine. + +For those who have seen my previous contribution of these types, note +that much has changed: I've modified the IP address type to work the +way Paul Vixie did with his CIDR type. In fact, I've pretty much just +stolen his solution, modifying it into my framework in such a way as +to facilitate the addition of IPV6 handling code in the future. I've +pretty much ignored Aleksei's C code, but I've added his SQL code to +enter the necessary operators into the various system tables needed to +make the types indexable. + +IP addresses are implemented as a struct of fixed in-memory length, +but variable on-disk storage size. For IPV4, it contains the address +family (AF_INET), the CIDR prefix length and four byte address. For +IPV6, the address family will be different, and the address longer. + +The external representation of an IP address generally looks like +'158.37.96.15/32'. 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 '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 are operators to check for networks or addresses being +subnets of or addresses contained within other networks. << tests +whether the left operand is contained within the right, <<= includes +equality, >> and >>= do the same things the opposite way. + +The input and output functions use routines from Paul Vixie's BIND, +and I've snarfed the source files inet_net_ntop.c and inet_net_pton.c +directly from a recent distribution of that code. They are included +here to avoid the need to fetch and install the BIND libraries to be +able to use this code. IANAL, but it looks from the copyright +messages in the files as if this should be acceptable. Read the +documentation in inet_net_pton.c to see the legal input formats. + +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. + +Many thanks to Aleksei Roudnev and Paul Vixie for their fine work! + +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 Makefile if you need to, then make, +make install, slurp the SQL files into psql or whatever, and you're +off. Enjoy! + +Bergen, Norway, 1998-08-09, Tom Ivar Helbekkmo (tih@nhh.no). |
