Convert IP between IPv4 and numerical format in java

The can be done using InetAddress as follows.

   //Converts a String that represents an IP to an int.
   InetAddress i= InetAddress.getByName(IPString);
   int intRepresentation= ByteBuffer.wrap(i.getAddress()).getInt();

   //This convert an int representation of ip back to String
   i= InetAddress.getByName(String.valueOf(intRepresentation));
   String ip= i.getHostAddress();

Heres is a way to Convert IP to Number. I found it a valid way to accomplish the task in Java.

public long ipToLong(String ipAddress) {

    String[] ipAddressInArray = ipAddress.split("\\.");

    long result = 0;
    for (int i = 0; i < ipAddressInArray.length; i++) {

        int power = 3 - i;
        int ip = Integer.parseInt(ipAddressInArray[i]);
        result += ip * Math.pow(256, power);

    }

    return result;
  }

This is also how you would implement it in Scala.

  def convertIPToLong(ipAddress: String): Long = {

    val ipAddressInArray = ipAddress.split("\\.")
    var result = 0L

    for (i  <- 0  to ipAddressInArray.length-1) {
      val power = 3 - i
      val ip = ipAddressInArray(i).toInt
      val longIP = (ip * Math.pow(256, power)).toLong
      result = result +longIP
    }
    result
  }

Code snippet provided by QuakeCore will throw "java.net.UnknownHostException: Unable to resolve host" on the part where you want to convert it back to string

but the idea of utilizing InetAddress class is correct. Here is what you want to do:

            try {
                InetAddress inetAddressOrigin = InetAddress.getByName("78.83.228.120");
                int intRepresentation = ByteBuffer.wrap(inetAddressOrigin.getAddress()).getInt(); //1314120824

                ByteBuffer buffer = ByteBuffer.allocate(4);
                buffer.putInt(intRepresentation);
                byte[] b = buffer.array();

                InetAddress inetAddressRestored = InetAddress.getByAddress(b);
                String ip = inetAddressRestored.getHostAddress();//78.83.228.120

            } catch (UnknownHostException e) {
                e.printStackTrace(); //
            }

P.S.: If you will do this for some list of ips, validate them to be sure they don't have subnet masks, for example: 78.83.228.0/8 In this case you will need to flatten them: 78.83.228.0/8 => 78.83.228.0 78.83.228.1 78.83.228.2 78.83.228.3 78.83.228.4 78.83.228.5 78.83.228.6 78.83.228.7

Tags:

Java

Ip

Ipv4