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/****************************************************************************
**
** Copyright (C) 2016 The Qt Company Ltd.
** Copyright (C) 2017 Intel Corporation.
** Contact: https://www.qt.io/licensing/
**
** This file is part of the QtNetwork module of the Qt Toolkit.
**
** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$
** Commercial License Usage
** Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in
** accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the
** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in
** a written agreement between you and The Qt Company. For licensing terms
** and conditions see https://www.qt.io/terms-conditions. For further
** information use the contact form at https://www.qt.io/contact-us.
**
** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage
** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser
** General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software
** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL3 included in the
** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to
** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 requirements
** will be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl-3.0.html.
**
** GNU General Public License Usage
** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU
** General Public License version 2.0 or (at your option) the GNU General
** Public license version 3 or any later version approved by the KDE Free
** Qt Foundation. The licenses are as published by the Free Software
** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL2 and LICENSE.GPL3
** included in the packaging of this file. Please review the following
** information to ensure the GNU General Public License requirements will
** be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html and
** https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html.
**
** $QT_END_LICENSE$
**
****************************************************************************/
#include "qnetworkinterface.h"
#include "qnetworkinterface_p.h"
#include "qdebug.h"
#include "qendian.h"
#include "private/qtools_p.h"
#ifndef QT_NO_NETWORKINTERFACE
QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
static QList<QNetworkInterfacePrivate *> postProcess(QList<QNetworkInterfacePrivate *> list)
{
// Some platforms report a netmask but don't report a broadcast address
// Go through all available addresses and calculate the broadcast address
// from the IP and the netmask
//
// This is an IPv4-only thing -- IPv6 has no concept of broadcasts
// The math is:
// broadcast = IP | ~netmask
for (QNetworkInterfacePrivate *interface : list) {
for (QNetworkAddressEntry &address : interface->addressEntries) {
if (address.ip().protocol() != QAbstractSocket::IPv4Protocol)
continue;
if (!address.netmask().isNull() && address.broadcast().isNull()) {
QHostAddress bcast = address.ip();
bcast = QHostAddress(bcast.toIPv4Address() | ~address.netmask().toIPv4Address());
address.setBroadcast(bcast);
}
}
}
return list;
}
Q_GLOBAL_STATIC(QNetworkInterfaceManager, manager)
QNetworkInterfaceManager::QNetworkInterfaceManager()
{
}
QNetworkInterfaceManager::~QNetworkInterfaceManager()
{
}
QSharedDataPointer<QNetworkInterfacePrivate> QNetworkInterfaceManager::interfaceFromName(const QString &name)
{
const auto interfaceList = allInterfaces();
bool ok;
uint index = name.toUInt(&ok);
for (const auto &interface : interfaceList) {
if (ok && interface->index == int(index))
return interface;
else if (interface->name == name)
return interface;
}
return empty;
}
QSharedDataPointer<QNetworkInterfacePrivate> QNetworkInterfaceManager::interfaceFromIndex(int index)
{
const auto interfaceList = allInterfaces();
for (const auto &interface : interfaceList) {
if (interface->index == index)
return interface;
}
return empty;
}
QList<QSharedDataPointer<QNetworkInterfacePrivate> > QNetworkInterfaceManager::allInterfaces()
{
const QList<QNetworkInterfacePrivate *> list = postProcess(scan());
QList<QSharedDataPointer<QNetworkInterfacePrivate> > result;
result.reserve(list.size());
for (QNetworkInterfacePrivate *ptr : list) {
if ((ptr->flags & QNetworkInterface::IsUp) == 0) {
// if the network interface isn't UP, the addresses are ineligible for DNS
for (auto &addr : ptr->addressEntries)
addr.setDnsEligibility(QNetworkAddressEntry::DnsIneligible);
}
result << QSharedDataPointer<QNetworkInterfacePrivate>(ptr);
}
return result;
}
QString QNetworkInterfacePrivate::makeHwAddress(int len, uchar *data)
{
const int outLen = qMax(len * 2 + (len - 1) * 1, 0);
QString result(outLen, Qt::Uninitialized);
QChar *out = result.data();
for (int i = 0; i < len; ++i) {
if (i)
*out++ = QLatin1Char(':');
*out++ = QLatin1Char(QtMiscUtils::toHexUpper(data[i] / 16));
*out++ = QLatin1Char(QtMiscUtils::toHexUpper(data[i] % 16));
}
return result;
}
/*!
\class QNetworkAddressEntry
\brief The QNetworkAddressEntry class stores one IP address
supported by a network interface, along with its associated
netmask and broadcast address.
\since 4.2
\reentrant
\ingroup network
\ingroup shared
\inmodule QtNetwork
Each network interface can contain zero or more IP addresses, which
in turn can be associated with a netmask and/or a broadcast
address (depending on support from the operating system).
This class represents one such group.
*/
/*!
\enum QNetworkAddressEntry::DnsEligibilityStatus
\since 5.11
This enum indicates whether a given host address is eligible to be
published in the Domain Name System (DNS) or other similar name resolution
mechanisms. In general, an address is suitable for publication if it is an
address this machine will be reached at for an indeterminate amount of
time, though it need not be permanent. For example, addresses obtained via
DHCP are often eligible, but cryptographically-generated temporary IPv6
addresses are not.
\value DnsEligibilityUnknown Qt and the operating system could not determine
whether this address should be published or not.
The application may need to apply further
heuristics if it cannot find any eligible
addresses.
\value DnsEligible This address is eligible for publication in DNS.
\value DnsIneligible This address should not be published in DNS and
should not be transmitted to other parties,
except maybe as the source address of an outgoing
packet.
\sa dnsEligibility(), setDnsEligibility()
*/
/*!
Constructs an empty QNetworkAddressEntry object.
*/
QNetworkAddressEntry::QNetworkAddressEntry()
: d(new QNetworkAddressEntryPrivate)
{
}
/*!
Constructs a QNetworkAddressEntry object that is a copy of the
object \a other.
*/
QNetworkAddressEntry::QNetworkAddressEntry(const QNetworkAddressEntry &other)
: d(new QNetworkAddressEntryPrivate(*other.d.data()))
{
}
/*!
Makes a copy of the QNetworkAddressEntry object \a other.
*/
QNetworkAddressEntry &QNetworkAddressEntry::operator=(const QNetworkAddressEntry &other)
{
*d.data() = *other.d.data();
return *this;
}
/*!
\fn void QNetworkAddressEntry::swap(QNetworkAddressEntry &other)
\since 5.0
Swaps this network address entry instance with \a other. This
function is very fast and never fails.
*/
/*!
Destroys this QNetworkAddressEntry object.
*/
QNetworkAddressEntry::~QNetworkAddressEntry()
{
}
/*!
Returns \c true if this network address entry is the same as \a
other.
*/
bool QNetworkAddressEntry::operator==(const QNetworkAddressEntry &other) const
{
if (d == other.d) return true;
if (!d || !other.d) return false;
return d->address == other.d->address &&
d->netmask == other.d->netmask &&
d->broadcast == other.d->broadcast;
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Returns whether this address is eligible for publication in the Domain Name
System (DNS) or similar name resolution mechanisms.
In general, an address is suitable for publication if it is an address this
machine will be reached at for an indeterminate amount of time, though it
need not be permanent. For example, addresses obtained via DHCP are often
eligible, but cryptographically-generated temporary IPv6 addresses are not.
On some systems, QNetworkInterface will need to heuristically determine
which addresses are eligible.
\sa isLifetimeKnown(), isPermanent(), setDnsEligibility()
*/
QNetworkAddressEntry::DnsEligibilityStatus QNetworkAddressEntry::dnsEligibility() const
{
return d->dnsEligibility;
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Sets the DNS eligibility flag for this address to \a status.
\sa dnsEligibility()
*/
void QNetworkAddressEntry::setDnsEligibility(DnsEligibilityStatus status)
{
d->dnsEligibility = status;
}
/*!
\fn bool QNetworkAddressEntry::operator!=(const QNetworkAddressEntry &other) const
Returns \c true if this network address entry is different from \a
other.
*/
/*!
This function returns one IPv4 or IPv6 address found, that was
found in a network interface.
*/
QHostAddress QNetworkAddressEntry::ip() const
{
return d->address;
}
/*!
Sets the IP address the QNetworkAddressEntry object contains to \a
newIp.
*/
void QNetworkAddressEntry::setIp(const QHostAddress &newIp)
{
d->address = newIp;
}
/*!
Returns the netmask associated with the IP address. The
netmask is expressed in the form of an IP address, such as
255.255.0.0.
For IPv6 addresses, the prefix length is converted to an address
where the number of bits set to 1 is equal to the prefix
length. For a prefix length of 64 bits (the most common value),
the netmask will be expressed as a QHostAddress holding the
address FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF::
\sa prefixLength()
*/
QHostAddress QNetworkAddressEntry::netmask() const
{
return d->netmask.address(d->address.protocol());
}
/*!
Sets the netmask that this QNetworkAddressEntry object contains to
\a newNetmask. Setting the netmask also sets the prefix length to
match the new netmask.
\sa setPrefixLength()
*/
void QNetworkAddressEntry::setNetmask(const QHostAddress &newNetmask)
{
if (newNetmask.protocol() != ip().protocol()) {
d->netmask = QNetmask();
return;
}
d->netmask.setAddress(newNetmask);
}
/*!
\since 4.5
Returns the prefix length of this IP address. The prefix length
matches the number of bits set to 1 in the netmask (see
netmask()). For IPv4 addresses, the value is between 0 and 32. For
IPv6 addresses, it's contained between 0 and 128 and is the
preferred form of representing addresses.
This function returns -1 if the prefix length could not be
determined (i.e., netmask() returns a null QHostAddress()).
\sa netmask()
*/
int QNetworkAddressEntry::prefixLength() const
{
return d->netmask.prefixLength();
}
/*!
\since 4.5
Sets the prefix length of this IP address to \a length. The value
of \a length must be valid for this type of IP address: between 0
and 32 for IPv4 addresses, between 0 and 128 for IPv6
addresses. Setting to any invalid value is equivalent to setting
to -1, which means "no prefix length".
Setting the prefix length also sets the netmask (see netmask()).
\sa setNetmask()
*/
void QNetworkAddressEntry::setPrefixLength(int length)
{
d->netmask.setPrefixLength(d->address.protocol(), length);
}
/*!
Returns the broadcast address associated with the IPv4
address and netmask. It can usually be derived from those two by
setting to 1 the bits of the IP address where the netmask contains
a 0. (In other words, by bitwise-OR'ing the IP address with the
inverse of the netmask)
This member is always empty for IPv6 addresses, since the concept
of broadcast has been abandoned in that system in favor of
multicast. In particular, the group of hosts corresponding to all
the nodes in the local network can be reached by the "all-nodes"
special multicast group (address FF02::1).
*/
QHostAddress QNetworkAddressEntry::broadcast() const
{
return d->broadcast;
}
/*!
Sets the broadcast IP address of this QNetworkAddressEntry object
to \a newBroadcast.
*/
void QNetworkAddressEntry::setBroadcast(const QHostAddress &newBroadcast)
{
d->broadcast = newBroadcast;
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Returns \c true if the address lifetime is known, \c false if not. If the
lifetime is not known, both preferredLifetime() and validityLifetime() will
return QDeadlineTimer::Forever.
\sa preferredLifetime(), validityLifetime(), setAddressLifetime(), clearAddressLifetime()
*/
bool QNetworkAddressEntry::isLifetimeKnown() const
{
return d->lifetimeKnown;
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Returns the deadline when this address becomes deprecated (no longer
preferred), if known. If the address lifetime is not known (see
isLifetimeKnown()), this function always returns QDeadlineTimer::Forever.
While an address is preferred, it may be used by the operating system as
the source address for new, outgoing packets. After it becomes deprecated,
it will remain valid for incoming packets for a while longer until finally
removed (see validityLifetime()).
\sa validityLifetime(), isLifetimeKnown(), setAddressLifetime(), clearAddressLifetime()
*/
QDeadlineTimer QNetworkAddressEntry::preferredLifetime() const
{
return d->preferredLifetime;
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Returns the deadline when this address becomes invalid and will be removed
from the networking stack, if known. If the address lifetime is not known
(see isLifetimeKnown()), this function always returns
QDeadlineTimer::Forever.
While an address is valid, it will be accepted by the operating system as a
valid destination address for this machine. Whether it is used as a source
address for new, outgoing packets is controlled by, among other rules, the
preferred lifetime (see preferredLifetime()).
\sa preferredLifetime(), isLifetimeKnown(), setAddressLifetime(), clearAddressLifetime()
*/
QDeadlineTimer QNetworkAddressEntry::validityLifetime() const
{
return d->validityLifetime;
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Sets both the preferred and valid lifetimes for this address to the \a
preferred and \a validity deadlines, respectively. After this call,
isLifetimeKnown() will return \c true, even if both parameters are
QDeadlineTimer::Forever.
\sa preferredLifetime(), validityLifetime(), isLifetimeKnown(), clearAddressLifetime()
*/
void QNetworkAddressEntry::setAddressLifetime(QDeadlineTimer preferred, QDeadlineTimer validity)
{
d->preferredLifetime = preferred;
d->validityLifetime = validity;
d->lifetimeKnown = true;
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Resets both the preferred and valid lifetimes for this address. After this
call, isLifetimeKnown() will return \c false.
\sa preferredLifetime(), validityLifetime(), isLifetimeKnown(), setAddressLifetime()
*/
void QNetworkAddressEntry::clearAddressLifetime()
{
d->preferredLifetime = QDeadlineTimer::Forever;
d->validityLifetime = QDeadlineTimer::Forever;
d->lifetimeKnown = false;
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Returns \c true if this address is permanent on this interface, \c false if
it's temporary. A permenant address is one which has no expiration time and
is often static (manually configured).
If this information could not be determined, this function returns \c true.
\note Depending on the operating system and the networking configuration
tool, it is possible for a temporary address to be interpreted as
permanent, if the tool did not inform the details correctly to the
operating system.
\sa isLifetimeKnown(), validityLifetime(), isTemporary()
*/
bool QNetworkAddressEntry::isPermanent() const
{
return d->validityLifetime.isForever();
}
/*!
\fn bool QNetworkAddressEntry::isTemporary() const
\since 5.11
Returns \c true if this address is temporary on this interface, \c false if
it's permanent.
\sa isLifetimeKnown(), validityLifetime(), isPermanent()
*/
/*!
\class QNetworkInterface
\brief The QNetworkInterface class provides a listing of the host's IP
addresses and network interfaces.
\since 4.2
\reentrant
\ingroup network
\ingroup shared
\inmodule QtNetwork
QNetworkInterface represents one network interface attached to the
host where the program is being run. Each network interface may
contain zero or more IP addresses, each of which is optionally
associated with a netmask and/or a broadcast address. The list of
such trios can be obtained with addressEntries(). Alternatively,
when the netmask or the broadcast addresses or other information aren't
necessary, use the allAddresses() convenience function to obtain just the
IP addresses of the active interfaces.
QNetworkInterface also reports the interface's hardware address with
hardwareAddress().
Not all operating systems support reporting all features. Only the
IPv4 addresses are guaranteed to be listed by this class in all
platforms. In particular, IPv6 address listing is only supported
on Windows, Linux, \macos and the BSDs.
\sa QNetworkAddressEntry
*/
/*!
\enum QNetworkInterface::InterfaceFlag
Specifies the flags associated with this network interface. The
possible values are:
\value IsUp the network interface is "up" -
enabled by administrative action
\value IsRunning the network interface is operational:
configured "up" and (typically)
physically connected to a network
\value CanBroadcast the network interface works in
broadcast mode
\value IsLoopBack the network interface is a loopback
interface: that is, it's a virtual
interface whose destination is the
host computer itself
\value IsPointToPoint the network interface is a
point-to-point interface: that is,
there is one, single other address
that can be directly reached by it.
\value CanMulticast the network interface supports
multicasting
Note that one network interface cannot be both broadcast-based and
point-to-point.
*/
/*!
\enum QNetworkInterface::InterfaceType
Specifies the type of hardware (PHY layer, OSI level 1) this interface is,
if it could be determined. Interface types that are not among those listed
below will generally be listed as Unknown, though future versions of Qt may
add new enumeration values.
The possible values are:
\value Unknown The interface type could not be determined or is not
one of the other listed types.
\value Loopback The virtual loopback interface, which is assigned
the loopback IP addresses (127.0.0.1, ::1).
\value Virtual A type of interface determined to be virtual, but
not any of the other possible types. For example,
tunnel interfaces are (currently) detected as
virtual ones.
\value Ethernet IEEE 802.3 Ethernet interfaces, though on many
systems other types of IEEE 802 interfaces may also
be detected as Ethernet (especially Wi-Fi).
\value Wifi IEEE 802.11 Wi-Fi interfaces. Note that on some
systems, QNetworkInterface may be unable to
distinguish regular Ethernet from Wi-Fi and will
not return this enum value.
\value Ieee80211 An alias for WiFi.
\value CanBus ISO 11898 Controller Area Network bus interfaces,
usually found on automotive systems.
\value Fddi ANSI X3T12 Fiber Distributed Data Interface, a local area
network over optical fibers.
\value Ppp Point-to-Point Protocol interfaces, establishing a
direct connection between two nodes over a lower
transport layer (often serial over radio or physical
line).
\value Slip Serial Line Internet Protocol interfaces.
\value Phonet Interfaces using the Linux Phonet socket family, for
communication with cellular modems. See the
\l {https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/networking/phonet.txt}{Linux kernel documentation}
for more information.
\value Ieee802154 IEEE 802.15.4 Personal Area Network interfaces, other
than 6LoWPAN (see below).
\value SixLoWPAN 6LoWPAN (IPv6 over Low-power Wireless Personal Area
Networks) interfaces, which operate on IEEE 802.15.4
PHY, but have specific header compression schemes
for IPv6 and UDP. This type of interface is often
used for mesh networking.
\value Ieee80216 IEEE 802.16 Wireless Metropolitan Area Network, also
known under the commercial name "WiMAX".
\value Ieee1394 IEEE 1394 interfaces (a.k.a. "FireWire").
*/
/*!
Constructs an empty network interface object.
*/
QNetworkInterface::QNetworkInterface()
: d(nullptr)
{
}
/*!
Frees the resources associated with the QNetworkInterface object.
*/
QNetworkInterface::~QNetworkInterface()
{
}
/*!
Creates a copy of the QNetworkInterface object contained in \a
other.
*/
QNetworkInterface::QNetworkInterface(const QNetworkInterface &other)
: d(other.d)
{
}
/*!
Copies the contents of the QNetworkInterface object contained in \a
other into this one.
*/
QNetworkInterface &QNetworkInterface::operator=(const QNetworkInterface &other)
{
d = other.d;
return *this;
}
/*!
\fn void QNetworkInterface::swap(QNetworkInterface &other)
\since 5.0
Swaps this network interface instance with \a other. This function
is very fast and never fails.
*/
/*!
Returns \c true if this QNetworkInterface object contains valid
information about a network interface.
*/
bool QNetworkInterface::isValid() const
{
return !name().isEmpty();
}
/*!
\since 4.5
Returns the interface system index, if known. This is an integer
assigned by the operating system to identify this interface and it
generally doesn't change. It matches the scope ID field in IPv6
addresses.
If the index isn't known, this function returns 0.
*/
int QNetworkInterface::index() const
{
return d ? d->index : 0;
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Returns the maximum transmission unit on this interface, if known, or 0
otherwise.
The maximum transmission unit is the largest packet that may be sent on
this interface without incurring link-level fragmentation. Applications may
use this value to calculate the size of the payload that will fit an
unfragmented UDP datagram. Remember to subtract the sizes of headers used
in your communication over the interface, e.g. TCP (20 bytes) or UDP (12),
IPv4 (20) or IPv6 (40, absent some form of header compression), when
computing how big a payload you can transmit. Also note that the MTU along
the full path (the Path MTU) to the destination may be smaller than the
interface's MTU.
\sa QUdpSocket
*/
int QNetworkInterface::maximumTransmissionUnit() const
{
return d ? d->mtu : 0;
}
/*!
Returns the name of this network interface. On Unix systems, this
is a string containing the type of the interface and optionally a
sequence number, such as "eth0", "lo" or "pcn0". On Windows, it's
an internal ID that cannot be changed by the user.
*/
QString QNetworkInterface::name() const
{
return d ? d->name : QString();
}
/*!
\since 4.5
Returns the human-readable name of this network interface on
Windows, such as "Local Area Connection", if the name could be
determined. If it couldn't, this function returns the same as
name(). The human-readable name is a name that the user can modify
in the Windows Control Panel, so it may change during the
execution of the program.
On Unix, this function currently always returns the same as
name(), since Unix systems don't store a configuration for
human-readable names.
*/
QString QNetworkInterface::humanReadableName() const
{
return d ? !d->friendlyName.isEmpty() ? d->friendlyName : name() : QString();
}
/*!
Returns the flags associated with this network interface.
*/
QNetworkInterface::InterfaceFlags QNetworkInterface::flags() const
{
return d ? d->flags : InterfaceFlags{};
}
/*!
\since 5.11
Returns the type of this interface, if it could be determined. If it could
not be determined, this function returns QNetworkInterface::Unknown.
\sa hardwareAddress()
*/
QNetworkInterface::InterfaceType QNetworkInterface::type() const
{
return d ? d->type : Unknown;
}
/*!
Returns the low-level hardware address for this interface. On
Ethernet interfaces, this will be a MAC address in string
representation, separated by colons.
Other interface types may have other types of hardware
addresses. Implementations should not depend on this function
returning a valid MAC address.
\sa type()
*/
QString QNetworkInterface::hardwareAddress() const
{
return d ? d->hardwareAddress : QString();
}
/*!
Returns the list of IP addresses that this interface possesses
along with their associated netmasks and broadcast addresses.
If the netmask or broadcast address or other information is not necessary,
you can call the allAddresses() function to obtain just the IP addresses of
the active interfaces.
*/
QList<QNetworkAddressEntry> QNetworkInterface::addressEntries() const
{
return d ? d->addressEntries : QList<QNetworkAddressEntry>();
}
/*!
\since 5.7
Returns the index of the interface whose name is \a name or 0 if there is
no interface with that name. This function should produce the same result
as the following code, but will probably execute faster.
\snippet code/src_network_kernel_qnetworkinterface.cpp 0
\sa interfaceFromName(), interfaceNameFromIndex(), QNetworkDatagram::interfaceIndex()
*/
int QNetworkInterface::interfaceIndexFromName(const QString &name)
{
if (name.isEmpty())
return 0;
bool ok;
uint id = name.toUInt(&ok);
if (!ok)
id = QNetworkInterfaceManager::interfaceIndexFromName(name);
return int(id);
}
/*!
Returns a QNetworkInterface object for the interface named \a
name. If no such interface exists, this function returns an
invalid QNetworkInterface object.
The string \a name may be either an actual interface name (such as "eth0"
or "en1") or an interface index in string form ("1", "2", etc.).
\sa name(), isValid()
*/
QNetworkInterface QNetworkInterface::interfaceFromName(const QString &name)
{
QNetworkInterface result;
result.d = manager()->interfaceFromName(name);
return result;
}
/*!
Returns a QNetworkInterface object for the interface whose internal
ID is \a index. Network interfaces have a unique identifier called
the "interface index" to distinguish it from other interfaces on
the system. Often, this value is assigned progressively and
interfaces being removed and then added again get a different
value every time.
This index is also found in the IPv6 address' scope ID field.
*/
QNetworkInterface QNetworkInterface::interfaceFromIndex(int index)
{
QNetworkInterface result;
result.d = manager()->interfaceFromIndex(index);
return result;
}
/*!
\since 5.7
Returns the name of the interface whose index is \a index or an empty
string if there is no interface with that index. This function should
produce the same result as the following code, but will probably execute
faster.
\snippet code/src_network_kernel_qnetworkinterface.cpp 1
\sa interfaceFromIndex(), interfaceIndexFromName(), QNetworkDatagram::interfaceIndex()
*/
QString QNetworkInterface::interfaceNameFromIndex(int index)
{
if (!index)
return QString();
return QNetworkInterfaceManager::interfaceNameFromIndex(index);
}
/*!
Returns a listing of all the network interfaces found on the host
machine. In case of failure it returns a list with zero elements.
*/
QList<QNetworkInterface> QNetworkInterface::allInterfaces()
{
const QList<QSharedDataPointer<QNetworkInterfacePrivate> > privs = manager()->allInterfaces();
QList<QNetworkInterface> result;
result.reserve(privs.size());
for (const auto &p : privs) {
QNetworkInterface item;
item.d = p;
result << item;
}
return result;
}
/*!
This convenience function returns all IP addresses found on the host
machine. It is equivalent to calling addressEntries() on all the objects
returned by allInterfaces() that are in the QNetworkInterface::IsUp state
to obtain lists of QNetworkAddressEntry objects then calling
QNetworkAddressEntry::ip() on each of these.
*/
QList<QHostAddress> QNetworkInterface::allAddresses()
{
const QList<QSharedDataPointer<QNetworkInterfacePrivate> > privs = manager()->allInterfaces();
QList<QHostAddress> result;
for (const auto &p : privs) {
// skip addresses if the interface isn't up
if ((p->flags & QNetworkInterface::IsUp) == 0)
continue;
for (const QNetworkAddressEntry &entry : qAsConst(p->addressEntries))
result += entry.ip();
}
return result;
}
#ifndef QT_NO_DEBUG_STREAM
static inline QDebug flagsDebug(QDebug debug, QNetworkInterface::InterfaceFlags flags)
{
if (flags & QNetworkInterface::IsUp)
debug << "IsUp ";
if (flags & QNetworkInterface::IsRunning)
debug << "IsRunning ";
if (flags & QNetworkInterface::CanBroadcast)
debug << "CanBroadcast ";
if (flags & QNetworkInterface::IsLoopBack)
debug << "IsLoopBack ";
if (flags & QNetworkInterface::IsPointToPoint)
debug << "IsPointToPoint ";
if (flags & QNetworkInterface::CanMulticast)
debug << "CanMulticast ";
return debug;
}
static inline QDebug operator<<(QDebug debug, const QNetworkAddressEntry &entry)
{
debug << "(address = " << entry.ip();
if (!entry.netmask().isNull())
debug << ", netmask = " << entry.netmask();
if (!entry.broadcast().isNull())
debug << ", broadcast = " << entry.broadcast();
debug << ')';
return debug;
}
QDebug operator<<(QDebug debug, const QNetworkInterface &networkInterface)
{
QDebugStateSaver saver(debug);
debug.resetFormat().nospace();
debug << "QNetworkInterface(name = " << networkInterface.name()
<< ", hardware address = " << networkInterface.hardwareAddress()
<< ", flags = ";
flagsDebug(debug, networkInterface.flags());
debug << ", entries = " << networkInterface.addressEntries()
<< ")\n";
return debug;
}
#endif
QT_END_NAMESPACE
#include "moc_qnetworkinterface.cpp"
#endif // QT_NO_NETWORKINTERFACE
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