NAME
Geo::IPfree - Look up the country of an IPv4 address
SYNOPSIS
use Geo::IPfree;
my $geo = Geo::IPfree->new;
my( $code1, $name1 ) = $geo->LookUp( '200.176.3.142' );
# use memory to speed things up
$geo->Faster;
# lookup by hostname
my( $code2, $name2, $ip2 ) = $geo->LookUp( 'www.cnn.com' );
DESCRIPTION
Geo::IPfree is a Perl module that determines the originating country of
an arbitrary IPv4 address. It uses a local file-based database to
provide basic geolocation services.
An updated version of the database can be obtained by visiting the
Webnet77 website: .
METHODS
new( [$db] )
Creates a new Geo::IPfree instance. Optionally, a database filename may
be passed in to load a custom data set rather than the version shipped
with the module.
LoadDB( $filename )
Load a specific database to use to look up the IP addresses.
LookUp( $ip | $hostname )
Given an IP address or a hostname, this function returns three things:
* The ISO 3166 country code (2 chars)
* The country name
* The IP address resolved
NB: In order to use the location services on a hostname, you will need
to have an internet connection to resolve a host to an IP address.
If you pass a private IP address (for example 192.168.0.1), you'll get
back a country code of ZZ, and country name of "Reserved for private IP
addresses".
Clean_Cache( )
Clears any cached lookup data.
Faster( )
Make the LookUp() faster, which is good if you're going to be calling
Lookup() many times. This will load the entire DB into memory and read
from there, not from disk (good way for slow disk or network disks), but
use more memory. The module "Memoize" will be enabled for some internal
functions too.
Note that if you call Lookup() many times, you'll end up using a lot of
memory anyway, so you'll be better off using a lot of memory from the
start by calling Faster(), and getting an improvement for all calls.
nslookup( $host, [$last_lookup] )
Attempts to resolve a hostname to an IP address. If it fails on the
first pass it will attempt to resolve the same hostname with 'www.'
prepended. $last_lookup is used to suppress this behavior.
ip2nb( $ip )
Encodes $ip into a numerical representation.
nb2ip( $number )
Decodes $number back to an IP address.
dec2baseX( $number )
Converts a base 10 (decimal) number to base 86.
baseX2dec( $number )
Converts a base 86 number to base 10 (decimal).
VARS
$GeoIP->{db}
The database file in use.
$GeoIP->{handler}
The database file handler.
$GeoIP->{dbfile}
The database file path.
$GeoIP->{cache} BOOLEAN
Set/tell if the cache of LookUp() is on. If it's on it will cache
the last 1000 queries. Default: 1
The cache is good when you are parsing a list of IPs, generally a
web log. If in the log you have many lines with the same IP,
GEO::IPfree won't have to make a full search for each query, it will
cache the last 1000 different IPs. After each 1000 IPs the cache is
cleaned to restart it.
Note that the Lookup make the query without the last IP number
(xxx.xxx.xxx.0), then the cache for the IP 192.168.0.1 will be the
same for 192.168.0.2 (they are the same query, 192.168.0.0).
DB FORMAT
The data file has a list of IP ranges & countries, for example, from
200.128.0.0 to 200.103.255.255 the IPs are from BR. To make a fast
access to the DB the format tries to use less bytes per input (block).
The file was in ASCII and in blocks of 7 bytes: XXnnnnn
XX -> the country code (BR,US...)
nnnnn -> the IP range using a base of 85 digits
(not in dec or hex to get space).
See CPAN for updates of the DB...
NOTES
The file ipscountry.dat is a dedicated format for Geo::IPfree. To
convert it see the tool "ipct2txt.pl" in the "misc" directoy.
The module looks for "ipscountry.dat" in the following locations:
* /usr/local/share
* /usr/local/share/GeoIPfree
* through @INC (as well as all @INC directories plus "/Geo")
* from the same location that IPfree.pm was loaded
SEE ALSO
* http://software77.net/geo-ip/
AUTHOR
Graciliano M. P.
MAINTAINER
Brian Cassidy
THANK YOU
Thanks to Laurent Destailleur (author of AWStats) that tested it on many
OS and fixed bugs for them, like the not portable sysread, and asked for
some speed improvement.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.