ipv46 is a small JavaScript library for parsing, formatting and sorting IPv4/6 addresses. It works on both Node.js and browser environments.
$ npm install @hownetworks/ipv46
const { IP } = require("@hownetworks/ipv46");
Returns the given string parsed into an IPv4 or IPv6 address object. If the string is not a valid address then the result is null.
IP.parse("192.0.2.1"); // IPv4 { ... }
IP.parse("2001:db8::1"); // IPv6 { ... }
IP.parse("non-address"); // null
IP.parse supports IPv6 addresses with embedded IPv4 addresses.
IP.parse("2001:db8::192.0.2.1"); // IPv6 { ... }
Valid IPv4/6 address objects have their version as an attribute.
IP.parse("192.0.2.1").version; // 4
IP.parse("2001:db8::1").version; // 6
Address objects implement the toString method for turning the addresses back into strings. The strings are printed lower-cased sans any extra leading zeroes. IPv6 formatting follows the RFC 5952 recommendations, except that formatting doesn't output IPv6 addresses with embedded IPv4 addresses.
IP.parse("192.0.2.1").toString(); // '192.0.2.1'
IP.parse("2001:db8::1").toString(); // '2001:db8::1'
IP.parse("2001:db8::192.0.2.1").toString(); // '2001:db8::c000:201'
Compare and sort addresses. IP.cmp(a, b) returns:
- -1 if a is sorted before b
- 0 if a equals b
- 1 otherwise
const a = IP.parse("192.0.2.1");
const b = IP.parse("203.0.113.0");
IP.cmp(a, a); // 0
IP.cmp(a, b); // -1
IP.cmp(b, a); // 1
IPv4 addresses are always sorted before IPv6 addresses.
const ipv4 = IP.parse("192.0.2.1");
const ipv6 = IP.parse("2001:db8::1");
IP.cmp(ipv4, ipv6); // -1
Parsed addresses get normalized. For example extra leading zeroes don't matter in comparisons.
const a = IP.parse("2001:0db8::1");
const b = IP.parse("2001:0db8:0000::0001")
IP.cmp(a, b); // 0
IP.cmp is directly compatible with Array#sort.
const a = IP.parse("2001:0db8::2");
const b = IP.parse("2001:0db8::1")
const c = IP.parse("2001:0db8::")
[a, b, c].sort(IP.cmp); // [c, b, a]