.. rst-class:: opening The PySubnetTree package provides a Python data structure ``SubnetTree`` which maps subnets given in `CIDR <http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4632>`_ notation (incl. corresponding IPv6 versions) to Python objects. Lookups are performed by longest-prefix matching. PySubnetTree should generally work on Unix-like platforms such as Linux, macOS, and FreeBSD, but does not support Windows.
You can find the latest PySubnetTree release for download at https://www.zeek.org/download.
PySubnetTree's git repository is located at https://github.com/zeek/pysubnettree
This document describes PySubnetTree 0.37-5. See the CHANGES
file for version history.
A simple example which associates CIDR prefixes with strings:
>>> import SubnetTree >>> t = SubnetTree.SubnetTree() >>> t["10.1.0.0/16"] = "Network 1" >>> t["10.1.42.0/24"] = "Network 1, Subnet 42" >>> print("10.1.42.1" in t) True >>> print(t["10.1.42.1"]) Network 1, Subnet 42 >>> print(t["10.1.43.1"]) Network 1 >>> print("10.20.1.1" in t) False >>> t.search_all("10.1.42.1") ['Network 1, Subnet 42', 'Network 1'] >>> try: ... print(t["10.20.1.1"]) ... except KeyError as err: ... print("Error: %s not found" % err) Error: '10.20.1.1' not found
PySubnetTree also supports IPv6 addresses and prefixes:
>>> import SubnetTree >>> t = SubnetTree.SubnetTree() >>> t["2001:db8::/32"] = "Company 1" >>> t["2001:db8:4000::/48"] = "Company 1, Site 1" >>> t["2001:db8:4000:abcd::"] Company 1, Site 1 >>> t["2001:db8:fe:1234::"] Company 1 >>> t.search_all("2001:db8:4000:abcd::1") ['Company 1, Site 1', 'Company 1']
By default, CIDR prefixes and IP addresses are given as strings.
Alternatively, a SubnetTree
object can be switched into binary
mode, in which single addresses are passed in the form of packed
binary strings as, e.g., returned by socket.inet_aton:
>>> t.get_binary_lookup_mode() False >>> t.set_binary_lookup_mode(True) >>> t.get_binary_lookup_mode() True >>> import socket >>> print(t[socket.inet_aton("10.1.42.1")]) Network 1, Subnet 42
A SubnetTree also provides methods insert(prefix,object=None)
for insertion
of prefixes (object
can be skipped to use the tree like a set), and
remove(prefix)
for removing entries (remove
performs an _exact_ match
rather than longest-prefix).
Internally, the CIDR prefixes of a SubnetTree
are managed by a
Patricia tree data structure and lookups are therefore efficient
even with a large number of prefixes.
PySubnetTree comes with a BSD license.
This package requires Python 3.5 or newer.
Installation is pretty simple:
> python3 setup.py install