NAME
Net::MAC - Perl extension for representing and manipulating MAC addresses
VERSION
version 2.103622
SYNOPSIS
use Net::MAC;
my $mac = Net::MAC->new('mac' => '08:20:00:AB:CD:EF');
# Example: convert to a different MAC address format (dotted-decimal)
my $dec_mac = $mac->convert(
'base' => 10, # convert from base 16 to base 10
'bit_group' => 8, # octet grouping
'delimiter' => '.' # dot-delimited
);
print "$dec_mac\n"; # Should print 8.32.0.171.205.239
# Example: find out whether a MAC is base 16 or base 10
my $base = $mac->get_base();
if ($base == 16) {
print "$mac is in hexadecimal format\n";
}
elsif ($base == 10) {
print "$mac is in decimal format\n";
}
else { die "This MAC is neither base 10 nor base 16"; }
DESCRIPTION
This is a module that allows you to
- store a MAC address in a Perl object
- find out information about a stored MAC address
- convert a MAC address into a specified format
- easily compare two MAC addresses for string or numeric equality
There are quite a few different ways that MAC addresses may be represented in textual form. The most common is arguably colon-delimited octets in hexadecimal form. When working with Cisco devices, however, you are more likely to encounter addresses that are dot-delimited 16-bit groups in hexadecimal form. In the Windows world, addresses are usually dash-delimited octets in hexadecimal form. MAC addresses in a Sun ethers file are usually non-zero-padded, colon-delimited hexadecimal octets. And sometimes, you come across dot-delimited octets in decimal form (certain Cisco SNMP MIBS actually use this). Hence the need for a common way to represent and manipulate MAC addresses in Perl.
There is a surprising amount of complexity involved in converting MAC addresses between types. This module does not attempt to understand all possible ways of representing a MAC address in a string, though most of the common ways of representing MAC addresses are supported.
METHODS
new() method (constructor)
The new() method creates a new Net::MAC object. Possible arguments are
mac a string representing a MAC address
base a number corresponding to the numeric base of the MAC
possible values: 10 16
delimiter the delimiter in the MAC address string from above
possible values: : - . space
bit_group the number of bits between each delimiter
possible values: 8 16 48
zero_padded whether bit groups have leading zero characters
(Net::MAC only allows zero-padding for bit groups of 8 bits)
possible values: 0 1
format the name of a MAC address format specification which takes
the place of the base,delimiter,bit_group and zero_padded
options above
verbose write informational messages (useful for debugging)
possible values: 0 1
die die() on invalid MAC address (default is to die on invalid MAC)
possible values: 0 1 (default is 1)
When the new() method is called with a 'mac' argument and nothing else, the object will attempt to auto-discover metadata like bit grouping, number base, delimiter, etc. If the MAC is in an invalid or unknown format, the object will call the croak() function. If you don't want the object to croak(), you can give the new() method a die argument, such as:
my $m_obj = Net::MAC->new('mac' => '000adf012345', 'die' => 0);
There are cases where the auto-discovery will not be able to guess the numeric base of a MAC. If this happens, try giving the new() method a hint, like so:
# Example: this MAC is actually in decimal-dotted notation, not hex
my $mac = Net::MAC->new('mac' => '10.0.0.12.14.8', 'base' => 10);
This is necessary for cases like the one above, where the class has no way of knowing that an address is decimal instead of hexadecimal.
If you have installed a custom MAC address format into the class (see below) then you can also pass the format
option as a hint:
my $mac = Net::MAC->new('mac' => 'ab01~ab01~ab01', 'format' => 'My_Format');
class methods
set_format_for()
When discovering MAC address formats, and converting between different formats (using convert
or as_*
) the module can use predefined common formats or you can install your own for local circumstances.
For example consider a fictional device which uses MAC addresses formatted like ab01~ab01~ab01
, which would otherwise not be understood. You can install a new Format for this address style:
Net::MAC->set_format_for( 'My_Format_Name' => {
base => 16,
bit_group => 16,
delimiter => '~',
});
Now when using either the format
option to new()
, or the convert()
or as_*
methods, the module will recognise this new format My_Format_Name
. The Hashref supplied can include any of the standard options for formats as listed elsewhere in this documentation.
my $mac = Net::MAC->new('mac' => 'ab01~ab01~ab01', 'format' => 'My_Format_Name');
Custom formats sharing the same name as one shipping with the module (such as Cisco
) will override that built-in format.
accessor methods
get_mac() method
Returns the MAC address stored in the object.
get_base() method
Returns the numeric base of the MAC address. There are two possible return values:
16 hexadecimal (common)
10 decimal (uncommon)
get_delimiter() method
Returns the delimiter, if any, in the specified MAC address. A valid delimiter matches the following regular expression:
/\:|\-|\.|\s/
In other words, either a colon, a dash, a dot, or a space. If there is no delimiter, this method will return the undefined value (undef). If an invalid delimiter is found (like an asterisk or something), the object will call the croak() function.
get_bit_group() method
Returns the number of bits between the delimiters. A MAC address is a 48 bit address, usually delimited into 8 bit groupings (called octets), i.e.
08:20:00:AB:CD:EF
Sometimes, MAC addresses are specified with fewer than 5 delimiters, or even no delimiters at all:
0820.00ab.cdef # get_bit_group() returns 16
082000abcdef # get_bit_group() returns 48, no delimiters at all
get_zero_padded() method
Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the bit groups are zero-padded. A return value of 0 (false) means that the bit groups are not zero-padded, and a return value of 1 (true) means that they are zero-padded:
00.80.02.ac.4f.ff # get_zero_padded() returns 1
0:80:2:ac:4f:ff # get zero_padded() returns 0
0.125.85.122.155.64 # get_zero_padded() returns 0
Net::MAC only allows bit groups of 8 bits to be zero-padded.
convert() method
Convert an already-defined Net::MAC object into a different MAC address format. With this function you can change the delimiter, the bit grouping, or the numeric base.
# Example: convert to a different MAC address format (dotted-decimal)
my $new_mac_obj = $existing_mac_obj->convert(
'base' => 16, # convert to base 16, if necessary
'bit_group' => 16, # 16 bit grouping
'delimiter' => '.' # dot-delimited
);
Note that if any of the above arguments are not provided, they will be set to the following default values:
base 16
bit_group 8 (i.e. a delimiter will be used)
delimiter :
Conversion to common formats
The most common formats have shortcut conversion methods that can be used instead of the convert() method with its many options.
as_Cisco() method
Cisco routers seem to usually represent MAC addresses in hexadecimal, dot-delimited, 16 bit groups.
my $mac = Net::MAC->new(mac => '00-02-03-AA-AB-FF');
my $cisco_mac = $mac->as_Cisco();
print "$cisco_mac";
# should print 0002.03aa.abff
as_IEEE() method
The IEEE 802 2001 specification represents MAC addresses in hexadecimal, colon-delimited, upper case, 8 bit groups.
my $mac = Net::MAC->new(mac => '00-02-03-AA-AB-FF');
my $IEEE_mac = Net::MAC->as_IEEE();
print "$IEEE_mac";
# should print 00:02:03:AA:AB:FF
as_Microsoft() method
Microsoft usually represents MAC addresses in hexadecimal, dash delimited, upper case, 8 bit groups.
my $mac = Net::MAC->new(mac => '00:02:03:AA:AB:FF');
my $microsoft_mac = $mac->as_Microsoft();
print "$microsoft_mac";
# should print 00-02-03-AA-AB-FF
as_Sun() method
Sun represents MAC addresses in hexadecimal, colon-delimited, non-zero-padded, lower case, 8 bit groups.
my $mac = Net::MAC->new(mac => '00-02-03-AA-AB-FF');
my $sun_mac = $mac->as_Sun();
print "$sun_mac";
# should print 0:2:3:aa:ab:ff
Stringification
The stringification operator "" has been overloaded to allow for the meaningful use of the instance variable in a string.
my $mac = Net::MAC->new(mac => '00:0a:23:4f:ff:ef');
print "object created for MAC address $mac";
# Should print:
# object created for MAC address 00:0a:23:4f:ff:ef
MAC address comparison
The Perl operators 'eq' and 'ne' (string comparison) and '==' '!=' (numeric comparison) have been overloaded to allow simple, meaningful comparisons of two MAC addresses.
Example (two MAC addresses numerically identical but in different formats):
my $d = Net::MAC->new(mac => '0.8.1.9.16.16', base => 10);
my $h = Net::MAC->new(mac => '00:08:01:0A:10:10', base => 16);
if ($d == $h) { print "$d and $h are numerically equal"; }
if ($d ne $h) { print " but $d and $h are not the same string"; }
BUGS
Malformed MAC addresses
Net::MAC can't handle MAC addresses where whole leading zero octets are omitted. Example:
7.122.32.41.5 (should be 0.7.122.32.41.5)
Arguably, that's their problem and not mine, but maybe someday I'll get around to supporting that case as well.
Case is not preserved
Net::MAC doesn't reliably preserve case in a MAC address. I might add a flag to the new() and convert() methods to do this. I might not.
Case is however altered when using the as_foo() formatted output methods.
SEE ALSO
Net::MacMap Net::MAC::Vendor
MAINTAINER
Oliver Gorwits <oliver@cpan.org>
CONTRIBUTORS
Oliver Gorwits, Robin Crook, Kevin Brintnall
AUTHOR
Karl Ward <karlward@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is Copyright (c) 2010 by Karl Ward <karlward@cpan.org>.
This is free software, licensed under:
The GNU General Public License, Version 2, June 1991