0.0.12 • Published 7 years ago

@nodeos/node-ife v0.0.12

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License
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Repository
github
Last release
7 years ago

IFE

Network interface management for NodeOS. Adapted and newly wrapped with napi from postwait/node-ife

Notice: This module won't work with Node.js < 9.x.x due to the new NAPI Layer for native modules in Node.js

$ npm install @nodeos/node-ife

Quickstart

    let { ife }   = require('ife')
    let interface = new ife()

API


.up(options)

Brings up the specified address on the interface.

For IPV4:

ParameterPropertyTypeDescription
optionsnamestringThe name of the interface
ipstringThe ip (v4) of the interface
broadcaststringThe broadcast address of the interface
netmaskstringThe netmask of the interface
networkstringThe network address of the interface
Example
    let options = {
        name:      "eth0",
        ip:        "10.10.10.11",
        broadcast: "10.10.10.255",
        netmask:   "255.255.255.0",
        network:   "10.10.10.0"
    }

    let success = ife.up(options)

For IPV6:

PropertyTypeDescription
namestringThe name of the interface
ipstringThe ip (v6) of the interface
prefixlennumberThe prefix length for the ip
Example
    let options = {
        name: "e1000g0",
        ip: "2607:f8b0:4002:c09::64",
        prefixlen: 64
    }

    let success = ife.up(options)

Notice: IPv4 addresses have a subnet mask but instead of typing something like 255.255.255.0 we use a prefix length for IPv6.

Here is an example of an IPv6 prefix: 2001:1111:2222:3333::/64. This is pretty much the same as using 192.168.1.1 /24.

The number behind the / are the number of bits that we use for the prefix.

In the example above it means that 2001:1111:2222:3333 is the prefix (64 bits) and everything behind it can be used for hosts.


.down(ip)

Brings down a logical interface with a IP address. The interface name will be resolved through the ip address

Example
    // brings down the logical ip 10.10.10.11
    let success = ife.down('10.10.10.11')

.list()

Lists all the broadcast-capable interfaces on the server.

Example
    let ifaces = ife.list()

    console.log(ifaces)
    // [
    //   {
    //      name: 'enp10s0',
    //      ip: '192.168.178.39',
    //      broadcast: '192.168.178.255',
    //      netmask: '255.255.255.0',
    //      mac: '00:00:00:00:00:00'
    //   },
    //   {
    //      name: 'docker0',
    //      ip: '172.17.0.1',
    //      broadcast: '172.17.255.255',
    //      netmask: '255.255.0.0',
    //      mac: '00:00:00:00:00:00'
    //   },
    //   {
    //      name: 'enp10s0',
    //      ip: 'fe80::7160:dd80:88af:cee5',
    //      prefixlen: 64,
    //      mac: '00:00:00:00:00:00'
    //   }
    // ]

.arpcache()

Returns an hash of IPs and their corresponding MAC addresses in the local server's ARP table.

Example
    let arpcache = ife.arpcache();

    console.log(arpcache)
    // { '192.168.178.22': '00:00:00' }

.gratarp(options, count, ping)

ParameterPropertyTypeDescriptionOptional
optionsnamestringThe interface nameNo
local_ipstringYour ip addressNo
remote_ipstringThe remote ip addressNo
remote_macstringThe remote mac addressYes
countnumberHow many gratitoucios ARP Requests to sendNo
pingbooleanPing the destination addressYes
Example

Send 2 (two) gratuitous ARP responses to 10.10.10.1 advertising our 10.10.10.11. Second, send the same, but explicitly to the target MAC address. By specifying a MAC address, we may also ping, which we elect to do.

    let count = 2
    let ping = true

    let sent = ife.gratarp({
        name: "eth0",
        local_ip: "10.10.10.11",
        remote_ip: "10.10.10.1"
    }, count)

    // Send the same gratitoucios ARP Request to a specific mac address
    // and ping the address
    let sent = ife.gratarp({
        name: "eth0",
        local_ip: "10.10.10.11",
        remote_ip: "10.10.10.1",
        remote_mac: "7c:d1:c3:dc:dd:f7"
        }, count, ping)