irrc is a lightweight and flexible client of IRR / Whois Database to expand arbitrary as-set and route-set objects into a list of origin ASs and prefixes belonging to those ASs. It will concurrently queries multiple IRR / Whois Databases for performance.
- Fast. irrc runs multi-threaded micro clients to process simultaneous IRR / Whois queries for performance. It also uses object caches.
- Handy. irrc's CLI client provides an easy way to resolve prefixes from as-set and route-set objects. It works even when multiple objects given as arguments.
- Dual stack. irrc returns both IPv4 and IPv6 prefixes by default. There is no need to kick a command twice for dual stacked result.
- Flexible. irrc provides an extensible ruby library which allows to modify IRR / Whois queries more flexibly.
- Pretty print. irrc shows prefixes in YAML format like this.
- Pure ruby. irrc doesn't depend on any other ruby gem.
- Lightweight. irrc is designed to gather prefixes from arbitrary as-set and route-set. It's implemented as simple as possible to achieve that. In other words, domain name related features are not supported.
For bundler:
gem 'irrc'
And then:
$ bundle
Otherwise:
$ gem install irrc
irrc privides a peval-like CLI interface.
-
Query JPIRR about AS-JPNIC and AS-OCN
$ irrc -h jpirr AS-JPNIC AS-OCN
-
Query JPIRR about AS-JPNIC with authoritative IRR (SOURCE:) based filter
$ irrc -h jpirr -s radb -s apnic AS-JPNIC
-
Query JPIRR about AS-JPNIC for IPv4 only
$ irrc -h jpirr -4 AS-JPNIC
You can load irrc as a library and use it easily in your own code.
require 'irrc'
client = Irrc::Client.new
client.query :jpirr, 'AS-JPNIC', source: :jpirr # queries JPIRR about AS-JPNIC with a SOURCE: filter
client.query :ripe, 'AS-RIPENCC', protocol: :ipv4 # queries RIPE Whoisd about AS-RIPENCC for IPv4 only
client.perform # returns the results in a Hash
$ irrc -h jpirr AS-JPNIC
will result in a YAML:
---
AS-JPNIC: # queried object
:ipv4:
AS2515: # AS-JPNIC has AS2515 as a origin AS
- 202.12.30.0/24 # 4 IPv4 prefixes belonging to AS2515
- 192.41.192.0/24 #
- 211.120.240.0/21 #
- 211.120.248.0/24 #
:ipv6:
AS2515:
- 2001:0fa0::/32
- 2001:dc2::/32
- 2001:DC2::/32
- Ruby >= 2.0.0
Successfully tested with 2.1.9, 2.2.6, 2.3.3 and 2.4.0.
irrc will send queries to multiple IRR / Whois servers simultaneously in multi-threads. Single-thread processing for each server by default.
To configure the number of threads per server:
$ irrc -h jpirr -t 2 AS-JPNIC AS-OCN # 2 threads to query JPIRR
client = Irrc::Client.new(2) # 2 threads per IRR / Whois server
irrc uses STDERR
printer for a logger by default, which reports more severe messages than INFO.
To display debug information including raw messages of IRR / Whois protocol:
$ irrc -h jpirr -d AS-JPNIC
To use modified Logger:
client = Irrc::Client.new {|c| c.logger = Irrc::Logging::Logger.new(STDERR) }
# For Rails,
client = Irrc::Client.new {|c| c.logger = Rails.logger }
Here is a quick performance comparison with peval and irrpt.
CLI command | user | system | cpu | total |
---|---|---|---|---|
peval -h jpirr.nic.ad.jp 'afi ipv4, ipv6 AS-OCN' | 0.15s | 0.04s | 3% | 4.959 |
irrpt_list_prefixes AS-OCN | 0.21s | 0.09s | 3% | 9.693 |
irrc -h jpirr AS-OCN | 0.42s | 0.12s | 5% | 9.622 |
irrc -h jpirr -t 4 AS-OCN | 0.39s | 0.13s | 19% | 2.754 |
Please fork it, fix and then send a pull request. 🎉
To run tests just type:
$ rake
Please report issues or enhancement requests to GitHub issues. For questions or feedbacks write to my twitter @codeout.
Copyright (c) 2014-2021 Shintaro Kojima. Code released under the MIT license.