inet_pton

(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0)

inet_ptonConverts a human readable IP address to its packed in_addr representation

Description

string inet_pton ( string $address )

This function converts a human readable IPv4 or IPv6 address (if PHP was built with IPv6 support enabled) into an address family appropriate 32bit or 128bit binary structure.

Parameters

address

A human readable IPv4 or IPv6 address.

Return Values

Returns the in_addr representation of the given address, or FALSE if a syntactically invalid address is given (for example, an IPv4 address without dots or an IPv6 address without colons).

Examples

Example #1 inet_pton() Example

<?php
$in_addr 
inet_pton('127.0.0.1');
 
$in6_addr inet_pton('::1');
?>

Changelog

Version Description
5.3.0 This function is now available on Windows platforms.

See Also

  • ip2long() - Converts a string containing an (IPv4) Internet Protocol dotted address into a proper address
  • long2ip() - Converts an (IPv4) Internet network address into a string in Internet standard dotted format
  • inet_ntop() - Converts a packed internet address to a human readable representation

Коментарии

If you want to use the above function you should test for ':' character before '.'. Meaning, you should check if it's an ipv6 address before checking for ipv4.
Why? IPv6 allows this type of notation:

::127.0.0.1

If you check for '.' character you will think this is an ipv4 address and it will fail.
2006-05-16 17:34:28
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/function.inet-pton.html
If the input string is not a readable IP address, inet_pton() generates an E_WARNING and returns FALSE.  The same is true for inet_ntop().

Also, inet_pton() does not recognize netmask notation (e.g: "1.2.3.4/24" or "1:2::3:4/64") in the input string.  This differs from how some database systems (like postgreSQL) support IP address types, so if you need that sort of functionality when processing IP addresses in PHP you'll have to write it in yourself.

A rough example:

<?php

// Sample IP addresses
$ipaddr '1.2.3.4/24'// IPv4 with /24 netmask
$ipaddr '1:2::3:4/64'// IPv6 with /64 netmask

// Strip out the netmask, if there is one.
$cx strpos($ipaddr'/');
if (
$cx)
{
 
$subnet = (int)(substr($ipaddr$cx+1));
 
$ipaddr substr($ipaddr0$cx);
}
else 
$subnet null// No netmask present

// Convert address to packed format
$addr inet_pton($ipaddr);

// Let's display it as hexadecimal format
foreach(str_split($addr) as $char) echo str_pad(dechex(ord($char)), 2'0'STR_PAD_LEFT);
echo 
"<br />\n";

// Convert the netmask
if (is_integer($subnet))
{
 
// Maximum netmask length = same as packed address
 
$len 8*strlen($addr);
  if (
$subnet $len$subnet $len;
 
 
// Create a hex expression of the subnet mask
 
$mask  str_repeat('f'$subnet>>2);
  switch(
$subnet 3)
  {
  case 
3$mask .= 'e'; break;
  case 
2$mask .= 'c'; break;
  case 
1$mask .= '8'; break;
  }
 
$mask str_pad($mask$len>>2'0');

 
// Packed representation of netmask
 
$mask pack('H*'$mask);
}

// Display the netmask as hexadecimal
foreach(str_split($mask) as $char) echo str_pad(dechex(ord($char)), 2'0'STR_PAD_LEFT);

?>
2009-09-13 13:51:37
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/function.inet-pton.html
It is possible to verify if PHP was compiled with --disable-ipv6 option by AF_INET6 constant.

<?php

if (defined('AF_INET6')) {
  echo 
"PHP was compiled without --disable-ipv6 option";
} else {
  echo 
"PHP was compiled with --disable-ipv6 option";
}

?>
2011-07-15 04:45:54
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/function.inet-pton.html
Автор:
Be careful, address with leading 0 return false.

Example : 
<?php
inet_pton
('172.27.1.04'); // return false
inet_pton('172.27.1.4') ;// return the good result
?>
2014-06-02 18:26:27
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/function.inet-pton.html
If you are receiving an "Unrecognized address" error for an IPv6 address, it's possible your version of PHP has not been compiled with IPv6 support.

To check, load up phpinfo(); and look to see if "IPv6 Support" is set to "disabled".
2015-03-06 06:07:16
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/function.inet-pton.html
Regarding the ::127.0.0.1 notation

It is a very special case that needs not to be handled. This kind of notation is reserved for ipv4-compatible ipv6 address. 
For example the notation ::ffff:192.0.2.128 can be easily read as "ipv6 address that maps to ipv4 address 192.0.2.128"

However as RFC says:
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5156#page-2

2.2.  IPv4-Mapped Addresses

   ::FFFF:0:0/96 are the IPv4-mapped addresses [RFC4291].  Addresses
   within this block should not appear on the public Internet.

2.3.  IPv4-Compatible Addresses

   ::<ipv4-address>/96 are the IPv4-compatible addresses [RFC4291].
   These addresses are deprecated and should not appear on the public
   Internet.

This means that you only need to handle this kind of notation if you need to be compatible with private IP's
2021-01-22 14:33:54
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/function.inet-pton.html

    Поддержать сайт на родительском проекте КГБ