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This artifact provides a single jar that contains all classes required to use remote EJB and JMS, including all dependencies. It is intended for use by those not using maven, maven users should just import the EJB and JMS BOM's instead (shaded JAR's cause lots of problems with maven, as it is very easy to inadvertently end up with different versions on classes on the class path).

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/*
 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
 * contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
 * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
 * the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */
package org.apache.activemq.artemis.utils;

import java.net.Inet4Address;
import java.net.Inet6Address;
import java.net.InetAddress;
import java.net.UnknownHostException;
import java.nio.ByteBuffer;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Locale;

import static org.apache.activemq.artemis.utils.ByteUtil.intFromBytes;

/**
 * Static utility methods pertaining to {@link InetAddress} instances.
 *
 * 

Important note: Unlike {@code InetAddress.getByName()}, the * methods of this class never cause DNS services to be accessed. For * this reason, you should prefer these methods as much as possible over * their JDK equivalents whenever you are expecting to handle only * IP address string literals -- there is no blocking DNS penalty for a * malformed string. * *

When dealing with {@link Inet4Address} and {@link Inet6Address} * objects as byte arrays (vis. {@code InetAddress.getAddress()}) they * are 4 and 16 bytes in length, respectively, and represent the address * in network byte order. * *

Examples of IP addresses and their byte representations: *

    *
  • The IPv4 loopback address, {@code "127.0.0.1"}.
    * {@code 7f 00 00 01} * *
  • The IPv6 loopback address, {@code "::1"}.
    * {@code 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01} * *
  • From the IPv6 reserved documentation prefix ({@code 2001:db8::/32}), * {@code "2001:db8::1"}.
    * {@code 20 01 0d b8 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01} * *
  • An IPv6 "IPv4 compatible" (or "compat") address, * {@code "::192.168.0.1"}.
    * {@code 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 c0 a8 00 01} * *
  • An IPv6 "IPv4 mapped" address, {@code "::ffff:192.168.0.1"}.
    * {@code 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff c0 a8 00 01} *
* *

A few notes about IPv6 "IPv4 mapped" addresses and their observed * use in Java. *

* "IPv4 mapped" addresses were originally a representation of IPv4 * addresses for use on an IPv6 socket that could receive both IPv4 * and IPv6 connections (by disabling the {@code IPV6_V6ONLY} socket * option on an IPv6 socket). Yes, it's confusing. Nevertheless, * these "mapped" addresses were never supposed to be seen on the * wire. That assumption was dropped, some say mistakenly, in later * RFCs with the apparent aim of making IPv4-to-IPv6 transition simpler. * *

Technically one can create a 128bit IPv6 address with the wire * format of a "mapped" address, as shown above, and transmit it in an * IPv6 packet header. However, Java's InetAddress creation methods * appear to adhere doggedly to the original intent of the "mapped" * address: all "mapped" addresses return {@link Inet4Address} objects. * *

For added safety, it is common for IPv6 network operators to filter * all packets where either the source or destination address appears to * be a "compat" or "mapped" address. Filtering suggestions usually * recommend discarding any packets with source or destination addresses * in the invalid range {@code ::/3}, which includes both of these bizarre * address formats. For more information on "bogons", including lists * of IPv6 bogon space, see: * *

* */ public final class InetAddresses { private static final int IPV4_PART_COUNT = 4; private static final int IPV6_PART_COUNT = 8; private static final Inet4Address LOOPBACK4 = (Inet4Address) forString("127.0.0.1"); private static final Inet4Address ANY4 = (Inet4Address) forString("0.0.0.0"); private InetAddresses() { } /** * Returns an {@link Inet4Address}, given a byte array representation of the IPv4 address. * * @param bytes byte array representing an IPv4 address (should be of length 4) * @return {@link Inet4Address} corresponding to the supplied byte array * @throws IllegalArgumentException if a valid {@link Inet4Address} can not be created */ private static Inet4Address getInet4Address(byte[] bytes) { Preconditions.checkArgument(bytes.length == 4, "Byte array has invalid length for an IPv4 address: %s != 4.", bytes.length); // Given a 4-byte array, this cast should always succeed. return (Inet4Address) bytesToInetAddress(bytes); } /** * Returns the {@link InetAddress} having the given string representation. * *

This deliberately avoids all nameservice lookups (e.g. no DNS). * * @param ipString {@code String} containing an IPv4 or IPv6 string literal, e.g. * {@code "192.168.0.1"} or {@code "2001:db8::1"} * @return {@link InetAddress} representing the argument * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the argument is not a valid IP string literal */ public static InetAddress forString(String ipString) { byte[] addr = ipStringToBytes(ipString); // The argument was malformed, i.e. not an IP string literal. if (addr == null) { throw formatIllegalArgumentException("'%s' is not an IP string literal.", ipString); } return bytesToInetAddress(addr); } /** * Returns {@code true} if the supplied string is a valid IP string * literal, {@code false} otherwise. * * @param ipString {@code String} to evaluated as an IP string literal * @return {@code true} if the argument is a valid IP string literal */ public static boolean isInetAddress(String ipString) { return ipStringToBytes(ipString) != null; } private static byte[] ipStringToBytes(String ipString) { // Make a first pass to categorize the characters in this string. boolean hasColon = false; boolean hasDot = false; for (int i = 0; i < ipString.length(); i++) { char c = ipString.charAt(i); if (c == '.') { hasDot = true; } else if (c == ':') { if (hasDot) { return null; // Colons must not appear after dots. } hasColon = true; } else if (Character.digit(c, 16) == -1) { return null; // Everything else must be a decimal or hex digit. } } // Now decide which address family to parse. if (hasColon) { if (hasDot) { ipString = convertDottedQuadToHex(ipString); if (ipString == null) { return null; } } return textToNumericFormatV6(ipString); } else if (hasDot) { return textToNumericFormatV4(ipString); } return null; } private static byte[] textToNumericFormatV4(String ipString) { String[] address = ipString.split("\\.", IPV4_PART_COUNT + 1); if (address.length != IPV4_PART_COUNT) { return null; } byte[] bytes = new byte[IPV4_PART_COUNT]; try { for (int i = 0; i < bytes.length; i++) { bytes[i] = parseOctet(address[i]); } } catch (NumberFormatException ex) { return null; } return bytes; } private static byte[] textToNumericFormatV6(String ipString) { // An address can have [2..8] colons, and N colons make N+1 parts. String[] parts = ipString.split(":", IPV6_PART_COUNT + 2); if (parts.length < 3 || parts.length > IPV6_PART_COUNT + 1) { return null; } // Disregarding the endpoints, find "::" with nothing in between. // This indicates that a run of zeroes has been skipped. int skipIndex = -1; for (int i = 1; i < parts.length - 1; i++) { if (parts[i].length() == 0) { if (skipIndex >= 0) { return null; // Can't have more than one :: } skipIndex = i; } } int partsHi; // Number of parts to copy from above/before the "::" int partsLo; // Number of parts to copy from below/after the "::" if (skipIndex >= 0) { // If we found a "::", then check if it also covers the endpoints. partsHi = skipIndex; partsLo = parts.length - skipIndex - 1; if (parts[0].length() == 0 && --partsHi != 0) { return null; // ^: requires ^:: } if (parts[parts.length - 1].length() == 0 && --partsLo != 0) { return null; // :$ requires ::$ } } else { // Otherwise, allocate the entire address to partsHi. The endpoints // could still be empty, but parseHextet() will check for that. partsHi = parts.length; partsLo = 0; } // If we found a ::, then we must have skipped at least one part. // Otherwise, we must have exactly the right number of parts. int partsSkipped = IPV6_PART_COUNT - (partsHi + partsLo); if (!(skipIndex >= 0 ? partsSkipped >= 1 : partsSkipped == 0)) { return null; } // Now parse the hextets into a byte array. ByteBuffer rawBytes = ByteBuffer.allocate(2 * IPV6_PART_COUNT); try { for (int i = 0; i < partsHi; i++) { rawBytes.putShort(parseHextet(parts[i])); } for (int i = 0; i < partsSkipped; i++) { rawBytes.putShort((short) 0); } for (int i = partsLo; i > 0; i--) { rawBytes.putShort(parseHextet(parts[parts.length - i])); } } catch (NumberFormatException ex) { return null; } return rawBytes.array(); } private static String convertDottedQuadToHex(String ipString) { int lastColon = ipString.lastIndexOf(':'); String initialPart = ipString.substring(0, lastColon + 1); String dottedQuad = ipString.substring(lastColon + 1); byte[] quad = textToNumericFormatV4(dottedQuad); if (quad == null) { return null; } String penultimate = Integer.toHexString(((quad[0] & 0xff) << 8) | (quad[1] & 0xff)); String ultimate = Integer.toHexString(((quad[2] & 0xff) << 8) | (quad[3] & 0xff)); return initialPart + penultimate + ":" + ultimate; } private static byte parseOctet(String ipPart) { // Note: we already verified that this string contains only hex digits. int octet = Integer.parseInt(ipPart); // Disallow leading zeroes, because no clear standard exists on // whether these should be interpreted as decimal or octal. if (octet > 255 || (ipPart.startsWith("0") && ipPart.length() > 1)) { throw new NumberFormatException(); } return (byte) octet; } private static short parseHextet(String ipPart) { // Note: we already verified that this string contains only hex digits. int hextet = Integer.parseInt(ipPart, 16); if (hextet > 0xffff) { throw new NumberFormatException(); } return (short) hextet; } /** * Convert a byte array into an InetAddress. * * {@link InetAddress#getByAddress} is documented as throwing a checked * exception "if IP address is of illegal length." We replace it with * an unchecked exception, for use by callers who already know that addr * is an array of length 4 or 16. * * @param addr the raw 4-byte or 16-byte IP address in big-endian order * @return an InetAddress object created from the raw IP address */ private static InetAddress bytesToInetAddress(byte[] addr) { try { return InetAddress.getByAddress(addr); } catch (UnknownHostException e) { throw new AssertionError(e); } } /** * Returns the string representation of an {@link InetAddress}. * *

For IPv4 addresses, this is identical to * {@link InetAddress#getHostAddress()}, but for IPv6 addresses, the output * follows RFC 5952 * section 4. The main difference is that this method uses "::" for zero * compression, while Java's version uses the uncompressed form. * *

This method uses hexadecimal for all IPv6 addresses, including * IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses such as "::c000:201". The output does not * include a Scope ID. * * @param ip {@link InetAddress} to be converted to an address string * @return {@code String} containing the text-formatted IP address * @since 10.0 */ public static String toAddrString(InetAddress ip) { Preconditions.checkNotNull(ip); if (ip instanceof Inet4Address) { // For IPv4, Java's formatting is good enough. return ip.getHostAddress(); } Preconditions.checkArgument(ip instanceof Inet6Address); byte[] bytes = ip.getAddress(); int[] hextets = new int[IPV6_PART_COUNT]; for (int i = 0; i < hextets.length; i++) { hextets[i] = intFromBytes((byte) 0, (byte) 0, bytes[2 * i], bytes[2 * i + 1]); } compressLongestRunOfZeroes(hextets); return hextetsToIPv6String(hextets); } /** * Identify and mark the longest run of zeroes in an IPv6 address. * *

Only runs of two or more hextets are considered. In case of a tie, the * leftmost run wins. If a qualifying run is found, its hextets are replaced * by the sentinel value -1. * * @param hextets {@code int[]} mutable array of eight 16-bit hextets */ private static void compressLongestRunOfZeroes(int[] hextets) { int bestRunStart = -1; int bestRunLength = -1; int runStart = -1; for (int i = 0; i < hextets.length + 1; i++) { if (i < hextets.length && hextets[i] == 0) { if (runStart < 0) { runStart = i; } } else if (runStart >= 0) { int runLength = i - runStart; if (runLength > bestRunLength) { bestRunStart = runStart; bestRunLength = runLength; } runStart = -1; } } if (bestRunLength >= 2) { Arrays.fill(hextets, bestRunStart, bestRunStart + bestRunLength, -1); } } /** * Convert a list of hextets into a human-readable IPv6 address. * *

In order for "::" compression to work, the input should contain negative * sentinel values in place of the elided zeroes. * * @param hextets {@code int[]} array of eight 16-bit hextets, or -1s */ private static String hextetsToIPv6String(int[] hextets) { /* * While scanning the array, handle these state transitions: * start->num => "num" start->gap => "::" * num->num => ":num" num->gap => "::" * gap->num => "num" gap->gap => "" */ StringBuilder buf = new StringBuilder(39); boolean lastWasNumber = false; for (int i = 0; i < hextets.length; i++) { boolean thisIsNumber = hextets[i] >= 0; if (thisIsNumber) { if (lastWasNumber) { buf.append(':'); } buf.append(Integer.toHexString(hextets[i])); } else { if (i == 0 || lastWasNumber) { buf.append("::"); } } lastWasNumber = thisIsNumber; } return buf.toString(); } /** * Returns the string representation of an {@link InetAddress} suitable * for inclusion in a URI. * *

For IPv4 addresses, this is identical to * {@link InetAddress#getHostAddress()}, but for IPv6 addresses it * compresses zeroes and surrounds the text with square brackets; for example * {@code "[2001:db8::1]"}. * *

Per section 3.2.2 of * http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986, * a URI containing an IPv6 string literal is of the form * {@code "http://[2001:db8::1]:8888/index.html"}. * *

Use of either {@link InetAddresses#toAddrString}, * {@link InetAddress#getHostAddress()}, or this method is recommended over * {@link InetAddress#toString()} when an IP address string literal is * desired. This is because {@link InetAddress#toString()} prints the * hostname and the IP address string joined by a "/". * * @param ip {@link InetAddress} to be converted to URI string literal * @return {@code String} containing URI-safe string literal */ public static String toUriString(InetAddress ip) { if (ip instanceof Inet6Address) { return "[" + toAddrString(ip) + "]"; } return toAddrString(ip); } /** * Returns an InetAddress representing the literal IPv4 or IPv6 host * portion of a URL, encoded in the format specified by RFC 3986 section 3.2.2. * *

This function is similar to {@link InetAddresses#forString(String)}, * however, it requires that IPv6 addresses are surrounded by square brackets. * *

This function is the inverse of * {@link InetAddresses#toUriString(java.net.InetAddress)}. * * @param hostAddr A RFC 3986 section 3.2.2 encoded IPv4 or IPv6 address * @return an InetAddress representing the address in {@code hostAddr} * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code hostAddr} is not a valid * IPv4 address, or IPv6 address surrounded by square brackets */ public static InetAddress forUriString(String hostAddr) { Preconditions.checkNotNull(hostAddr); // Decide if this should be an IPv6 or IPv4 address. String ipString; int expectBytes; if (hostAddr.startsWith("[") && hostAddr.endsWith("]")) { ipString = hostAddr.substring(1, hostAddr.length() - 1); expectBytes = 16; } else { ipString = hostAddr; expectBytes = 4; } // Parse the address, and make sure the length/version is correct. byte[] addr = ipStringToBytes(ipString); if (addr == null || addr.length != expectBytes) { throw formatIllegalArgumentException("Not a valid URI IP literal: '%s'", hostAddr); } return bytesToInetAddress(addr); } /** * Returns {@code true} if the supplied string is a valid URI IP string * literal, {@code false} otherwise. * * @param ipString {@code String} to evaluated as an IP URI host string literal * @return {@code true} if the argument is a valid IP URI host */ public static boolean isUriInetAddress(String ipString) { try { forUriString(ipString); return true; } catch (IllegalArgumentException e) { return false; } } /** * Evaluates whether the argument is an IPv6 "compat" address. * *

An "IPv4 compatible", or "compat", address is one with 96 leading * bits of zero, with the remaining 32 bits interpreted as an * IPv4 address. These are conventionally represented in string * literals as {@code "::192.168.0.1"}, though {@code "::c0a8:1"} is * also considered an IPv4 compatible address (and equivalent to * {@code "::192.168.0.1"}). * *

For more on IPv4 compatible addresses see section 2.5.5.1 of * http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4291 * *

NOTE: This method is different from * {@link Inet6Address#isIPv4CompatibleAddress} in that it more * correctly classifies {@code "::"} and {@code "::1"} as * proper IPv6 addresses (which they are), NOT IPv4 compatible * addresses (which they are generally NOT considered to be). * * @param ip {@link Inet6Address} to be examined for embedded IPv4 compatible address format * @return {@code true} if the argument is a valid "compat" address */ public static boolean isCompatIPv4Address(Inet6Address ip) { if (!ip.isIPv4CompatibleAddress()) { return false; } byte[] bytes = ip.getAddress(); if ((bytes[12] == 0) && (bytes[13] == 0) && (bytes[14] == 0) && ((bytes[15] == 0) || (bytes[15] == 1))) { return false; } return true; } /** * Returns the IPv4 address embedded in an IPv4 compatible address. * * @param ip {@link Inet6Address} to be examined for an embedded IPv4 address * @return {@link Inet4Address} of the embedded IPv4 address * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the argument is not a valid IPv4 compatible address */ public static Inet4Address getCompatIPv4Address(Inet6Address ip) { Preconditions.checkArgument(isCompatIPv4Address(ip), "Address '%s' is not IPv4-compatible.", toAddrString(ip)); return getInet4Address(Arrays.copyOfRange(ip.getAddress(), 12, 16)); } private static IllegalArgumentException formatIllegalArgumentException( String format, Object... args) { return new IllegalArgumentException(String.format(Locale.ROOT, format, args)); } }





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