nixpkgs/lib/network/internal.nix
woojiq d559eed93a lib.network: ipv6 parser from string
Add a library function to parse and validate an IPv6 address from a
string. It can parse the first two versions of an IPv6 address according
to https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc4291#section-2.2. The third
form "xxx:x.d.d.d.d" is not yet implemented. Optionally parser can accept prefix length (128 is default).

Add shell script network.sh to test IPv6 parser functionality.
2024-06-29 10:02:00 +03:00

210 lines
5.9 KiB
Nix

{
lib ? import ../.,
}:
let
inherit (builtins)
map
match
genList
length
concatMap
head
toString
;
inherit (lib) lists strings trivial;
inherit (lib.lists) last;
/*
IPv6 addresses are 128-bit identifiers. The preferred form is 'x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x',
where the 'x's are one to four hexadecimal digits of the eight 16-bit pieces of
the address. See RFC 4291.
*/
ipv6Bits = 128;
ipv6Pieces = 8; # 'x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x'
ipv6PieceBits = 16; # One piece in range from 0 to 0xffff.
ipv6PieceMaxValue = 65535; # 2^16 - 1
in
let
/**
Expand an IPv6 address by removing the "::" compression and padding them
with the necessary number of zeros. Converts an address from the string to
the list of strings which then can be parsed using `_parseExpanded`.
Throws an error when the address is malformed.
# Type: String -> [ String ]
# Example:
```nix
expandIpv6 "2001:DB8::ffff"
=> ["2001" "DB8" "0" "0" "0" "0" "0" "ffff"]
```
*/
expandIpv6 =
addr:
if match "^[0-9A-Fa-f:]+$" addr == null then
throw "${addr} contains malformed characters for IPv6 address"
else
let
pieces = strings.splitString ":" addr;
piecesNoEmpty = lists.remove "" pieces;
piecesNoEmptyLen = length piecesNoEmpty;
zeros = genList (_: "0") (ipv6Pieces - piecesNoEmptyLen);
hasPrefix = strings.hasPrefix "::" addr;
hasSuffix = strings.hasSuffix "::" addr;
hasInfix = strings.hasInfix "::" addr;
in
if addr == "::" then
zeros
else if
let
emptyCount = length pieces - piecesNoEmptyLen;
emptyExpected =
# splitString produces two empty pieces when "::" in the beginning
# or in the end, and only one when in the middle of an address.
if hasPrefix || hasSuffix then
2
else if hasInfix then
1
else
0;
in
emptyCount != emptyExpected
|| (hasInfix && piecesNoEmptyLen >= ipv6Pieces) # "::" compresses at least one group of zeros.
|| (!hasInfix && piecesNoEmptyLen != ipv6Pieces)
then
throw "${addr} is not a valid IPv6 address"
# Create a list of 8 elements, filling some of them with zeros depending
# on where the "::" was found.
else if hasPrefix then
zeros ++ piecesNoEmpty
else if hasSuffix then
piecesNoEmpty ++ zeros
else if hasInfix then
concatMap (piece: if piece == "" then zeros else [ piece ]) pieces
else
pieces;
/**
Parses an expanded IPv6 address (see `expandIpv6`), converting each part
from a string to an u16 integer. Returns an internal representation of IPv6
address (list of integers) that can be easily processed by other helper
functions.
Throws an error some element is not an u16 integer.
# Type: [ String ] -> IPv6
# Example:
```nix
parseExpandedIpv6 ["2001" "DB8" "0" "0" "0" "0" "0" "ffff"]
=> [8193 3512 0 0 0 0 0 65535]
```
*/
parseExpandedIpv6 =
addr:
assert lib.assertMsg (
length addr == ipv6Pieces
) "parseExpandedIpv6: expected list of integers with ${ipv6Pieces} elements";
let
u16FromHexStr =
hex:
let
parsed = trivial.fromHexString hex;
in
if 0 <= parsed && parsed <= ipv6PieceMaxValue then
parsed
else
throw "0x${hex} is not a valid u16 integer";
in
map (piece: u16FromHexStr piece) addr;
in
let
/**
Parses an IPv6 address from a string to the internal representation (list
of integers).
# Type: String -> IPv6
# Example:
```nix
parseIpv6FromString "2001:DB8::ffff"
=> [8193 3512 0 0 0 0 0 65535]
```
*/
parseIpv6FromString = addr: parseExpandedIpv6 (expandIpv6 addr);
in
{
/*
Internally, an IPv6 address is stored as a list of 16-bit integers with 8
elements. Wherever you see `IPv6` in internal functions docs, it means that
it is a list of integers produced by one of the internal parsers, such as
`parseIpv6FromString`
*/
_ipv6 = {
/**
Converts an internal representation of an IPv6 address (i.e, a list
of integers) to a string. The returned string is not a canonical
representation as defined in RFC 5952, i.e zeros are not compressed.
# Type: IPv6 -> String
# Example:
```nix
parseIpv6FromString [8193 3512 0 0 0 0 0 65535]
=> "2001:db8:0:0:0:0:0:ffff"
```
*/
toStringFromExpandedIp =
pieces: strings.concatMapStringsSep ":" (piece: strings.toLower (trivial.toHexString piece)) pieces;
/**
Extract an address and subnet prefix length from a string. The subnet
prefix length is optional and defaults to 128. The resulting address and
prefix length are validated and converted to an internal representation
that can be used by other functions.
# Type: String -> [ {address :: IPv6, prefixLength :: Int} ]
# Example:
```nix
split "2001:DB8::ffff/32"
=> {
address = [8193 3512 0 0 0 0 0 65535];
prefixLength = 32;
}
```
*/
split =
addr:
let
splitted = strings.splitString "/" addr;
splittedLength = length splitted;
in
if splittedLength == 1 then # [ ip ]
{
address = parseIpv6FromString addr;
prefixLength = ipv6Bits;
}
else if splittedLength == 2 then # [ ip subnet ]
{
address = parseIpv6FromString (head splitted);
prefixLength =
let
n = strings.toInt (last splitted);
in
if 1 <= n && n <= ipv6Bits then
n
else
throw "${addr} IPv6 subnet should be in range [1;${toString ipv6Bits}], got ${toString n}";
}
else
throw "${addr} is not a valid IPv6 address in CIDR notation";
};
}