| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190 | <?php/** * Class to validate and to work with IPv6 addresses * * @package Requests * @subpackage Utilities *//** * Class to validate and to work with IPv6 addresses * * This was originally based on the PEAR class of the same name, but has been * entirely rewritten. * * @package Requests * @subpackage Utilities */class Requests_IPv6 {	/**	 * Uncompresses an IPv6 address	 *	 * RFC 4291 allows you to compress consecutive zero pieces in an address to	 * '::'. This method expects a valid IPv6 address and expands the '::' to	 * the required number of zero pieces.	 *	 * Example:  FF01::101   ->  FF01:0:0:0:0:0:0:101	 *           ::1         ->  0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1	 *	 * @author Alexander Merz <alexander.merz@web.de>	 * @author elfrink at introweb dot nl	 * @author Josh Peck <jmp at joshpeck dot org>	 * @copyright 2003-2005 The PHP Group	 * @license http://www.opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php	 * @param string $ip An IPv6 address	 * @return string The uncompressed IPv6 address	 */	public static function uncompress($ip) {		if (substr_count($ip, '::') !== 1) {			return $ip;		}		list($ip1, $ip2) = explode('::', $ip);		$c1 = ($ip1 === '') ? -1 : substr_count($ip1, ':');		$c2 = ($ip2 === '') ? -1 : substr_count($ip2, ':');		if (strpos($ip2, '.') !== false) {			$c2++;		}		// ::		if ($c1 === -1 && $c2 === -1) {			$ip = '0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0';		}		// ::xxx		else if ($c1 === -1) {			$fill = str_repeat('0:', 7 - $c2);			$ip = str_replace('::', $fill, $ip);		}		// xxx::		else if ($c2 === -1) {			$fill = str_repeat(':0', 7 - $c1);			$ip = str_replace('::', $fill, $ip);		}		// xxx::xxx		else {			$fill = ':' . str_repeat('0:', 6 - $c2 - $c1);			$ip = str_replace('::', $fill, $ip);		}		return $ip;	}	/**	 * Compresses an IPv6 address	 *	 * RFC 4291 allows you to compress consecutive zero pieces in an address to	 * '::'. This method expects a valid IPv6 address and compresses consecutive	 * zero pieces to '::'.	 *	 * Example:  FF01:0:0:0:0:0:0:101   ->  FF01::101	 *           0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1        ->  ::1	 *	 * @see uncompress()	 * @param string $ip An IPv6 address	 * @return string The compressed IPv6 address	 */	public static function compress($ip) {		// Prepare the IP to be compressed		$ip = self::uncompress($ip);		$ip_parts = self::split_v6_v4($ip);		// Replace all leading zeros		$ip_parts[0] = preg_replace('/(^|:)0+([0-9])/', '\1\2', $ip_parts[0]);		// Find bunches of zeros		if (preg_match_all('/(?:^|:)(?:0(?::|$))+/', $ip_parts[0], $matches, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE)) {			$max = 0;			$pos = null;			foreach ($matches[0] as $match) {				if (strlen($match[0]) > $max) {					$max = strlen($match[0]);					$pos = $match[1];				}			}			$ip_parts[0] = substr_replace($ip_parts[0], '::', $pos, $max);		}		if ($ip_parts[1] !== '') {			return implode(':', $ip_parts);		}		else {			return $ip_parts[0];		}	}	/**	 * Splits an IPv6 address into the IPv6 and IPv4 representation parts	 *	 * RFC 4291 allows you to represent the last two parts of an IPv6 address	 * using the standard IPv4 representation	 *	 * Example:  0:0:0:0:0:0:13.1.68.3	 *           0:0:0:0:0:FFFF:129.144.52.38	 *	 * @param string $ip An IPv6 address	 * @return string[] [0] contains the IPv6 represented part, and [1] the IPv4 represented part	 */	protected static function split_v6_v4($ip) {		if (strpos($ip, '.') !== false) {			$pos = strrpos($ip, ':');			$ipv6_part = substr($ip, 0, $pos);			$ipv4_part = substr($ip, $pos + 1);			return array($ipv6_part, $ipv4_part);		}		else {			return array($ip, '');		}	}	/**	 * Checks an IPv6 address	 *	 * Checks if the given IP is a valid IPv6 address	 *	 * @param string $ip An IPv6 address	 * @return bool true if $ip is a valid IPv6 address	 */	public static function check_ipv6($ip) {		$ip = self::uncompress($ip);		list($ipv6, $ipv4) = self::split_v6_v4($ip);		$ipv6 = explode(':', $ipv6);		$ipv4 = explode('.', $ipv4);		if (count($ipv6) === 8 && count($ipv4) === 1 || count($ipv6) === 6 && count($ipv4) === 4) {			foreach ($ipv6 as $ipv6_part) {				// The section can't be empty				if ($ipv6_part === '') {					return false;				}				// Nor can it be over four characters				if (strlen($ipv6_part) > 4) {					return false;				}				// Remove leading zeros (this is safe because of the above)				$ipv6_part = ltrim($ipv6_part, '0');				if ($ipv6_part === '') {					$ipv6_part = '0';				}				// Check the value is valid				$value = hexdec($ipv6_part);				if (dechex($value) !== strtolower($ipv6_part) || $value < 0 || $value > 0xFFFF) {					return false;				}			}			if (count($ipv4) === 4) {				foreach ($ipv4 as $ipv4_part) {					$value = (int) $ipv4_part;					if ((string) $value !== $ipv4_part || $value < 0 || $value > 0xFF) {						return false;					}				}			}			return true;		}		else {			return false;		}	}}
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