NAME
IO::Interface - Perl extension for access to network card configuration information
SYNOPSIS
# ======================
# the new, preferred API
# ======================
use IO::Interface::Simple;
my $if1 = IO::Interface::Simple->new('eth0');
my $if2 = IO::Interface::Simple->new_from_address('127.0.0.1');
my $if3 = IO::Interface::Simple->new_from_index(1);
my @interfaces = IO::Interface::Simple->interfaces;
for my $if (@interfaces) {
print "interface = $if\n";
print "addr = ",$if->address,"\n",
"broadcast = ",$if->broadcast,"\n",
"netmask = ",$if->netmask,"\n",
"dstaddr = ",$if->dstaddr,"\n",
"hwaddr = ",$if->hwaddr,"\n",
"mtu = ",$if->mtu,"\n",
"metric = ",$if->metric,"\n",
"index = ",$if->index,"\n";
print "is running\n" if $if->is_running;
print "is broadcast\n" if $if->is_broadcast;
print "is p-to-p\n" if $if->is_pt2pt;
print "is loopback\n" if $if->is_loopback;
print "is promiscuous\n" if $if->is_promiscuous;
print "is multicast\n" if $if->is_multicast;
print "is notrailers\n" if $if->is_notrailers;
print "is noarp\n" if $if->is_noarp;
}
# ===========
# the old API
# ===========
use IO::Socket;
use IO::Interface qw(:flags);
my $s = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto => 'udp');
my @interfaces = $s->if_list;
for my $if (@interfaces) {
print "interface = $if\n";
my $flags = $s->if_flags($if);
print "addr = ",$s->if_addr($if),"\n",
"broadcast = ",$s->if_broadcast($if),"\n",
"netmask = ",$s->if_netmask($if),"\n",
"dstaddr = ",$s->if_dstaddr($if),"\n",
"hwaddr = ",$s->if_hwaddr($if),"\n";
print "is running\n" if $flags & IFF_RUNNING;
print "is broadcast\n" if $flags & IFF_BROADCAST;
print "is p-to-p\n" if $flags & IFF_POINTOPOINT;
print "is loopback\n" if $flags & IFF_LOOPBACK;
print "is promiscuous\n" if $flags & IFF_PROMISC;
print "is multicast\n" if $flags & IFF_MULTICAST;
print "is notrailers\n" if $flags & IFF_NOTRAILERS;
print "is noarp\n" if $flags & IFF_NOARP;
}
my $interface = $s->addr_to_interface('127.0.0.1');
DESCRIPTION
IO::Interface adds methods to IO::Socket objects that allows them to be used to retrieve and change information about the network interfaces on your system. In addition to the object-oriented access methods, you can use a function-oriented style.
THIS API IS DEPRECATED. Please see IO::Interface::Simple for the preferred way to get and set interface configuration information.
Creating a Socket to Access Interface Information
You must create a socket before you can access interface information. The socket does not have to be connected to a remote site, or even used for communication. The simplest procedure is to create a UDP protocol socket:
my $s = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto => 'udp');
The various IO::Interface functions will now be available as methods on this socket.
Methods
- @iflist = $s->if_list
-
The if_list() method will return a list of active interface names, for example "eth0" or "tu0". If no interfaces are configured and running, returns an empty list.
- $addr = $s->if_addr($ifname [,$newaddr])
-
if_addr() gets or sets the interface address. Call with the interface name to retrieve the address (in dotted decimal format). Call with a new address to set the interface. In the latter case, the routine will return a true value if the operation was successful.
my $oldaddr = $s->if_addr('eth0'); $s->if_addr('eth0','192.168.8.10') || die "couldn't set address: $!";
Special case: the address of the pseudo-device "any" will return the IP address "0.0.0.0", which corresponds to the INADDR_ANY constant.
- $broadcast = $s->if_broadcast($ifname [,$newbroadcast]
-
Get or set the interface broadcast address. If the interface does not have a broadcast address, returns undef.
- $mask = $s->if_netmask($ifname [,$newmask])
-
Get or set the interface netmask.
- $dstaddr = $s->if_dstaddr($ifname [,$newdest])
-
Get or set the destination address for point-to-point interfaces.
- $hwaddr = $s->if_hwaddr($ifname [,$newhwaddr])
-
Get or set the hardware address for the interface. Currently only ethernet addresses in the form "00:60:2D:2D:51:70" are accepted.
- $flags = $s->if_flags($ifname [,$newflags])
-
Get or set the flags for the interface. The flags are a bitmask formed from a series of constants. See "Exportable constants" below.
- $ifname = $s->addr_to_interface($ifaddr)
-
Given an interface address in dotted form, returns the name of the interface associated with it. Special case: the INADDR_ANY address, 0.0.0.0 will return a pseudo-interface name of "any".
EXPORT
IO::Interface exports nothing by default. However, you can import the following symbol groups into your namespace:
:functions Function-oriented interface (see below)
:flags Flag constants (see below)
:all All of the above
Function-Oriented Interface
By importing the ":functions" set, you can access IO::Interface in a function-oriented manner. This imports all the methods described above into your namespace. Example:
use IO::Socket;
use IO::Interface ':functions';
my $sock = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto=>'udp');
my @interfaces = if_list($sock);
print "address = ",if_addr($sock,$interfaces[0]);
Exportable constants
The ":flags" constant imports the following constants for use with the flags returned by if_flags():
IFF_ALLMULTI
IFF_AUTOMEDIA
IFF_BROADCAST
IFF_DEBUG
IFF_LOOPBACK
IFF_MASTER
IFF_MULTICAST
IFF_NOARP
IFF_NOTRAILERS
IFF_POINTOPOINT
IFF_PORTSEL
IFF_PROMISC
IFF_RUNNING
IFF_SLAVE
IFF_UP
This example determines whether interface 'tu0' supports multicasting:
use IO::Socket;
use IO::Interface ':flags';
my $sock = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto=>'udp');
print "can multicast!\n" if $sock->if_flags & IFF_MULTICAST.
AUTHOR
Lincoln D. Stein <lincoln.stein@gmail.com> Copyright 2001-2014, Lincoln D. Stein.
This library is distributed under the Perl Artistic License 2.0. Please see LICENSE for more information.
SUPPORT
For feature requests, bug reports and code contributions, please use the GitHub repository at https://github.com/lstein/LibIO-Interface-Perl
SEE ALSO
perl(1), IO::Socket(3), IO::Multicast(3), IO::Interface::Simple