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This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual. The Linux implementation of this interface

Application Usage

       None.

Description

       The  inet_ntop()  function  shall convert a numeric address into a text string suitable for presentation.
       The af argument shall specify the family of the address. This  can  be  AF_INET  or  AF_INET6.   The  src
       argument  points to a buffer holding an IPv4 address if the af argument is AF_INET, or an IPv6 address if
       the af argument is AF_INET6; the address must be in network byte order. The  dst  argument  points  to  a
       buffer  where  the  function  stores  the  resulting text string; it shall not be NULL. The size argument
       specifies the size of this buffer, which shall be large enough to hold the text  string  (INET_ADDRSTRLEN
       characters for IPv4, INET6_ADDRSTRLEN characters for IPv6).

       The inet_pton() function shall convert an address in its standard text presentation form into its numeric
       binary  form.  The  af argument shall specify the family of the address. The AF_INET and AF_INET6 address
       families shall be supported. The src argument points to the string being  passed  in.  The  dst  argument
       points to a buffer into which the function stores the numeric address; this shall be large enough to hold
       the numeric address (32 bits for AF_INET, 128 bits for AF_INET6).

       If the af argument of inet_pton() is AF_INET, the src string shall be in the standard IPv4 dotted-decimal
       form:

           ddd.ddd.ddd.ddd

       where  "ddd" is a one to three digit decimal number between 0 and 255 (see inet_addr()).  The inet_pton()
       function does not accept other formats (such as the octal numbers, hexadecimal numbers,  and  fewer  than
       four numbers that inet_addr() accepts).

       If  the  af argument of inet_pton() is AF_INET6, the src string shall be in one of the following standard
       IPv6 text forms:

        1. The preferred form is "x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x", where the 'x's are  the  hexadecimal  values  of  the  eight
           16-bit  pieces of the address.  Leading zeros in individual fields can be omitted, but there shall be
           one to four hexadecimal digits in every field.

        2. A string of contiguous zero fields in the preferred form can be shown as "::".   The  "::"  can  only
           appear  once  in  an  address. Unspecified addresses ("0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0") may be represented simply as
           "::".

        3. A third form that is sometimes more convenient when dealing with a mixed environment of IPv4 and IPv6
           nodes is "x:x:x:x:x:x:d.d.d.d", where the 'x's are the  hexadecimal  values  of  the  six  high-order
           16-bit  pieces of the address, and the 'd's are the decimal values of the four low-order 8-bit pieces
           of the address (standard IPv4 representation).

       Note:     A more extensive description of the standard representations of IPv6 addresses can be found  in
                 RFC 2373.

Errors

       The inet_ntop() and inet_pton() functions shall fail if:

       EAFNOSUPPORT
              The af argument is invalid.

       ENOSPC The size of the inet_ntop() result buffer is inadequate.

       Thefollowingsectionsareinformative.

Examples

       None.

Future Directions

       None.

Name

       inet_ntop, inet_pton — convert IPv4 and IPv6 addresses between binary and text form

Prolog

       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of this interface
       may differ (consult the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the  interface
       may not be implemented on Linux.

Rationale

       None.

Return Value

       The  inet_ntop()  function  shall  return  a  pointer  to  the  buffer  containing the text string if the
       conversion succeeds, and NULL otherwise, and set errno to indicate the error.

       The inet_pton() function shall return 1 if the conversion succeeds, with the address pointed to by dst in
       network byte order. It shall return 0 if the input is not a valid IPv4 dotted-decimal string or  a  valid
       IPv6 address string, or -1 with errno set to [EAFNOSUPPORT] if the af argument is unknown.

See Also

       The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, <arpa_inet.h>

Synopsis

       #include <arpa/inet.h>

       const char *inet_ntop(int af, const void *restrict src,
           char *restrict dst, socklen_t size);
       int inet_pton(int af, const char *restrict src, void *restrict dst);

See Also