I'm working on a project that requires the ability to work with MAC and IP addresses. In this particular project, I have a measurement and an upper and lower limits to compare it to, i.e. the measurement must be within the range of the upper/lower limits. Both the measurement and the upper/lower limits can be MAC addresses, IP Addresses, hex, bin, etc. Is it possible to programmatically check if a MAC/IP address is within a particular range? At this point, I'm guessing I would have to convert the MAC or IP address to either hex or binary and to a comparison that way. Any other suggestions are welcome.
UPDATE: Using the info from the link alexn provided, I implemented Richard Szalay's class to check for IP Address ranges below for anyone else who needs it.
/// <summary>
/// Used for evaluating IPAddress ranges. Class courtesy of Richard Szalay's solution on http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2138706/c-how-to-check-a-input-ip-fall-in-a-specific-ip-range
/// </summary&g开发者_如何学Got;
class IPAddressRange
{
private Byte[] _upperBytes, _lowerBytes;
private AddressFamily _addressFamily;
public IPAddressRange(IPAddress upper, IPAddress lower)
{
this._addressFamily = lower.AddressFamily;
this._upperBytes = upper.GetAddressBytes();
this._lowerBytes = lower.GetAddressBytes();
}
public Byte[] upperBytes
{
get { return _upperBytes; }
set { this._upperBytes = value; }
}
public Byte[] lowerBytes
{
get { return _lowerBytes; }
set { this._lowerBytes = value; }
}
/// <summary>
/// Determines if the IPAddress is within the range of the upper and lower limits defined in this class instance
/// </summary>
/// <param name="address">An address to check against pre-defined upper and lower limits</param>
/// <returns>True, if it's within range, false otherwise.</returns>
public bool IsInRange(IPAddress address)
{
if (address.AddressFamily != _addressFamily)
{
return false;
}
byte[] addressBytes = address.GetAddressBytes();
bool lowerBoundary = true, upperBoundary = true;
for (int i = 0; i < this.lowerBytes.Length &&
(lowerBoundary || upperBoundary); i++)
{
if ((lowerBoundary && addressBytes[i] < lowerBytes[i]) ||
(upperBoundary && addressBytes[i] > upperBytes[i]))
{
return false;
}
lowerBoundary &= (addressBytes[i] == lowerBytes[i]);
upperBoundary &= (addressBytes[i] == upperBytes[i]);
}
return true;
}
}
@JYelton - Thank you for your help, I will work on a similar class for MAC Addresses implementing the methods you outlined. I may eliminate the classes, in favor of your minimalist approach, in later iterations.
I came up with the following example.
A method to convert IP Addresses to numbers for this purpose is easily found so I included the link inside the method I derived it from.
I am using Regular Expressions to test whether the input data matches a pattern, feel free to omit or alter as you need. (For example, Unix style MAC addresses use colons (:) instead of hyphens (-).)
To convert MAC addresses, I am just omitting the delimiter and parsing the entire string as a long int.
In my example, I am showing the numbers to which several example IP and MAC addresses convert, so you can define the upper and lower bounds and test various combinations.
using System.Globalization;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
string IP_UpperLimit = "192.168.1.255";
string IP_LowerLimit = "192.168.1.1";
string Mac_UpperLimit = "99-EE-EE-EE-EE-EE";
string Mac_LowerLimit = "00-00-00-00-00-00";
string IP_WithinLimit = "192.168.1.100";
string IP_OutOfBounds = "10.10.1.1";
string Mac_WithinLimit = "00-AA-11-BB-22-CC";
string Mac_OutOfBounds = "AA-11-22-33-44-55";
Console.WriteLine("IP Addresses:");
Console.WriteLine("Upper Limit: " + ConvertIP(IP_UpperLimit));
Console.WriteLine("Lower Limit: " + ConvertIP(IP_LowerLimit));
Console.WriteLine("IP_WithinLimit: " + ConvertIP(IP_WithinLimit));
Console.WriteLine("IP_OutOfBounds: " + ConvertIP(IP_OutOfBounds));
Console.WriteLine();
Console.WriteLine();
Console.WriteLine("Mac Addresses:");
Console.WriteLine("Upper Limit: " + ConvertMac(Mac_UpperLimit));
Console.WriteLine("Lower Limit: " + ConvertMac(Mac_LowerLimit));
Console.WriteLine("Mac_WithinLimit: " + ConvertMac(Mac_WithinLimit));
Console.WriteLine("Mac_OutOfBounds: " + ConvertMac(Mac_OutOfBounds));
long ConvertIP(string IP)
{
// http://www.justin-cook.com/wp/2006/11/28/convert-an-ip-address-to-ip-number-with-php-asp-c-and-vbnet/
Regex r = new Regex(@"\b(?:(?:25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.){3}(?:25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\b");
if (!r.Match(IP).Success) return 0L;
string[] IPSplit = IP.Split('.');
long IPNum = 0L;
for (int i = IPSplit.Length - 1; i >= 0; i--)
IPNum += ((Int64.Parse(IPSplit[i]) % 256) * (long)Math.Pow(256, (3 - i)));
return IPNum;
}
long ConvertMac(string Mac)
{
Regex r = new Regex(@"^[0-9A-F]{2}-[0-9A-F]{2}-[0-9A-F]{2}-[0-9A-F]{2}-[0-9A-F]{2}-[0-9A-F]{2}$");
if (!r.Match(Mac).Success) return 0L;
return Int64.Parse(Mac.Replace("-", String.Empty), NumberStyles.HexNumber);
}
So, to make use of these methods, you just perform some comparisons on the converted values:
bool IPIsGood = ConvertIP(IP_UpperLimit) >= ConvertIP(IP_Test) &&
ConvertIP(IP_LowerLimit) <= ConvertIP(IP_Test);
Here is a nice class developed by Richard Szalay here at StackOverflow in another question.
How to check a input IP fall in a specific IP range
This is a nice class and allows you to check wheter an IP is in a specified range.
Do you need to check both MAC and IP?
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