Let's say I have a text file contains a bunch of ip ranges like this:
x.x.x.x-y.y.y.y
x.x.x.x-y.y.y.y
x.x.x.x-y.y.y.y
x.x.x.x-y.y.y.y
x.x.x.x-y.y.y.y
x.x.x.x is start value and y.y.y.y is end value of range.
How can I convert these ip ranges to all possible IPs in a new text file in python?
PS: This question is not same as any of my previous questions. I asked "how to generate all possible ips from cidr notations" in my previous question. But in here I ask "how to generate from ip range list". These are different things.
This function returns all ip addresses like from start to end:
def ips(start, end):
import socket, struct
start = struct.unpack('>I', socket.inet_aton(start))[0]
end = struct.unpack('>I', socket.inet_aton(end))[0]
return [socket.inet_ntoa(struct.pack('>I', i)) for i in range(start, end)]
These are the building blocks to build it on your own:
>>> import socket, struct
>>> ip = '0.0.0.5'
>>> i = struct.unpack('>I', socket.inet_aton(ip))[0]
>>> i
5
>>> i += 1
>>> socket.inet_ntoa(struct.pack('>I', i))
'0.0.0.6'
Example:
ips('1.2.3.4', '1.2.4.5')
['1.2.3.4', '1.2.3.5', '1.2.3.6', '1.2.3.7', ..., '1.2.3.253', '1.2.3.254', '1.2.3.255', '1.2.4.0', '1.2.4.1', '1.2.4.2', '1.2.4.3', '1.2.4.4']
Read from file
In your case you can read from a file like this:
with open('file') as f:
for line in f:
start, end = line.strip().split('-')
# ....