File Coverage

blib/lib/Net/CIDR/Lookup/Tie.pm
Criterion Covered Total %
statement 20 42 47.6
branch 1 4 25.0
condition n/a
subroutine 7 14 50.0
pod n/a
total 28 60 46.6


line stmt bran cond sub pod time code
1             =head1 NAME
2              
3             Net::CIDR::Lookup::Tie
4              
5             =head1 DESCRIPTION
6              
7             This is a L interface to L, see there for
8             details.
9              
10             The tied hash accepts net blocks as keys in the same syntax as
11             C's C or C and stores arbitrary (with the
12             exception of C) scalar values under these. The same coalescing as in
13             C takes place, so if you add any number of different keys
14             you may end up with a hash containing I keys if any mergers took place.
15              
16             Of course you can retrieve the corresponding net block's value for any key that
17             is I within that block, so the number of possible lookup keys is
18             usually far greater than that of explicitly stored key/value pairs.
19              
20             =head1 SYNOPSIS
21              
22             use Net::CIDR::Lookup::Tie;
23              
24             tie my %t, 'Net::CIDR::Lookup::Tie';
25             $t{'192.168.42.0/24'} = 1; # Add first network
26             $t{'192.168.43.0/24'} = 1; # Automatic coalescing to a /23
27             $t{'192.168.41.0/24'} = 2; # Stays separate due to different value
28              
29             print $t{'192.168.42.100'}; # prints "1"
30              
31             foreach(keys %h) { ... } # Do anything you'd do with a regular hash
32              
33             =head1 VERSION HISTORY
34              
35             See L
36              
37             =head1 METHODS
38              
39             =cut
40              
41             package Net::CIDR::Lookup::Tie;
42              
43 2     2   56670 use strict;
  2         3  
  2         47  
44 2     2   7 use warnings;
  2         1  
  2         36  
45 2     2   6 use Carp;
  2         2  
  2         84  
46 2     2   395 use Net::CIDR::Lookup;
  2         2  
  2         656  
47              
48             our $VERSION = '0.51';
49              
50             sub TIEHASH { ## no critic (Subroutines::RequireArgUnpacking)
51 3     3   3518 my $class = shift;
52 3         12 bless { tree => Net::CIDR::Lookup->new(@_) }, $class;
53             }
54              
55             =head2 STORE
56              
57             Stores a value under a given key
58              
59             =cut
60              
61             sub STORE { ## no critic (Subroutines::RequireArgUnpacking)
62 4     4   216 my $self = shift;
63 4         6 undef $self->{keys};
64 4 50       9 if($_[0] =~ /-/) {
65 0         0 $self->{tree}->add_range(@_);
66             } else {
67 4         10 $self->{tree}->add(@_);
68             }
69             }
70              
71             =head2 FETCH
72              
73             Fetches the value stored under a given key
74              
75             =cut
76              
77             sub FETCH {
78 3     3   383 my ($self, $key) = @_;
79 3         9 $self->{tree}->lookup($key);
80             }
81            
82             =head2 FIRSTKEY
83              
84             Gets the first key in the hash. Used for iteration with each()
85              
86             =cut
87              
88             sub FIRSTKEY {
89 0     0     my $self = shift;
90 0           $self->_updkeys;
91 0           each %{$self->{keys}};
  0            
92             }
93              
94             =head2 NEXTKEY
95              
96             Gets the next key from the hash. Used for iteration with each()
97              
98             =cut
99              
100             sub NEXTKEY {
101 0     0     each %{shift->{keys}};
  0            
102             }
103              
104             =head2 EXISTS
105              
106             Tests if a key is in the hash. Also returns true for blocks or addresses
107             contained within a block that was actually stored.
108              
109             =cut
110              
111             sub EXISTS {
112 0     0     my ($self, $key) = @_;
113 0           $self->_updkeys;
114 0           exists $self->{keys}{$key};
115             }
116              
117             =head2 DELETE
118              
119             Delete a key from the hash. Note that the same restrictions as for Net::CIDR::Lookup
120             regarding netblock splitting apply!
121              
122             =cut
123              
124             sub DELETE {
125 0     0     carp('Deletions are not supported by tied ' . __PACKAGE__ . ' objects yet!');
126             }
127              
128             =head2 CLEAR
129              
130             Deletes all keys and their values.
131              
132             =cut
133              
134             sub CLEAR {
135 0     0     my $self = shift;
136 0           $self->{tree}->clear;
137             }
138              
139             =head2 SCALAR
140              
141             Returns the number of keys in the hash
142              
143             =cut
144              
145             sub SCALAR {
146 0     0     my $self = shift;
147 0           $self->_updkeys;
148 0           scalar keys %{$self->{keys}};
  0            
149             }
150              
151             =head2 _updkeys
152              
153             Private method to update the internal key cache used for iteration
154              
155             =cut
156              
157             sub _updkeys {
158 0     0     my $self = shift;
159              
160 0 0         if(defined $self->{keys}) {
161 0           keys %{$self->{keys}}; # Call in void context to reset
  0            
162             } else {
163 0           $self->{keys} = $self->{tree}->to_hash; # Recreate hash
164             }
165             }
166             1;