This is the Java API for reading MaxMind DB files. MaxMind DB is a binary file format that stores data indexed by IP address subnets (IPv4 or IPv6).
We recommend installing this package with Maven. To do this, add the dependency to your pom.xml:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.maxmind.db</groupId>
<artifactId>maxmind-db</artifactId>
<version>3.1.1</version>
</dependency>
Add the following to your build.gradle
file:
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
compile 'com.maxmind.db:maxmind-db:3.1.1'
}
Note: For accessing MaxMind GeoIP2 databases, we generally recommend using the GeoIP2 Java API rather than using this package directly.
To use the API, you must first create a Reader
object. The constructor for
the reader object takes a File
representing your MaxMind DB. Optionally you
may pass a second parameter with a FileMode
with a value of MEMORY_MAP
or
MEMORY
. The default mode is MEMORY_MAP
, which maps the file to virtual
memory. This often provides performance comparable to loading the file into
real memory with MEMORY
.
To look up an IP address, pass the address as an InetAddress
to the get
method on Reader
, along with the class of the object you want to
deserialize into. This method will create an instance of the class and
populate it. See examples below.
We recommend reusing the Reader
object rather than creating a new one for
each lookup. The creation of this object is relatively expensive as it must
read in metadata for the file.
import com.maxmind.db.MaxMindDbConstructor;
import com.maxmind.db.MaxMindDbParameter;
import com.maxmind.db.Reader;
import com.maxmind.db.DatabaseRecord;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.InetAddress;
public class Lookup {
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
File database = new File("/path/to/database/GeoIP2-City.mmdb");
try (Reader reader = new Reader(database)) {
InetAddress address = InetAddress.getByName("24.24.24.24");
// get() returns just the data for the associated record
LookupResult result = reader.get(address, LookupResult.class);
System.out.println(result.getCountry().getIsoCode());
// getRecord() returns a DatabaseRecord class that contains both
// the data for the record and associated metadata.
DatabaseRecord<LookupResult> record
= reader.getRecord(address, LookupResult.class);
System.out.println(record.getData().getCountry().getIsoCode());
System.out.println(record.getNetwork());
}
}
public static class LookupResult {
private final Country country;
@MaxMindDbConstructor
public LookupResult (
@MaxMindDbParameter(name="country") Country country
) {
this.country = country;
}
public Country getCountry() {
return this.country;
}
}
public static class Country {
private final String isoCode;
@MaxMindDbConstructor
public Country (
@MaxMindDbParameter(name="iso_code") String isoCode
) {
this.isoCode = isoCode;
}
public String getIsoCode() {
return this.isoCode;
}
}
}
You can also use the reader object to iterate over the database.
The reader.networks()
and reader.networksWithin()
methods can
be used for this purpose.
Reader reader = new Reader(file);
Networks networks = reader.networks(Map.class);
while(networks.hasNext()) {
DatabaseRecord<Map<String, String>> iteration = networks.next();
// Get the data.
Map<String, String> data = iteration.getData();
// The IP Address
InetAddress ipAddress = InetAddress.getByName(data.get("ip"));
// ...
}
The database API supports pluggable caching (by default, no caching is
performed). A simple implementation is provided by com.maxmind.db.CHMCache
.
Using this cache, lookup performance is significantly improved at the cost of
a small (~2MB) memory overhead.
Usage:
Reader reader = new Reader(database, new CHMCache());
Please note that the cache will hold references to the objects created during the lookup. If you mutate the objects, the mutated objects will be returned from the cache on subsequent lookups.
This API fully supports use in multi-threaded applications. In such
applications, we suggest creating one Reader
object and sharing that among
threads.
By default, this API uses the MEMORY_MAP
mode, which memory maps the file.
On Windows, this may create an exclusive lock on the file that prevents it
from being renamed or deleted. Due to the implementation of memory mapping in
Java, this lock will not be released when the DatabaseReader
is closed; it
will only be released when the object and the MappedByteBuffer
it uses are
garbage collected. Older JVM versions may also not release the lock on exit.
To work around this problem, use the MEMORY
mode or try upgrading your JVM
version. You may also call System.gc()
after dereferencing the
DatabaseReader
object to encourage the JVM to garbage collect sooner.
If you are packaging the database file as a resource in a JAR file using
Maven, you must
disable binary file filtering.
Failure to do so will result in InvalidDatabaseException
exceptions being
thrown when querying the database.
The MaxMind DB format is an open format for quickly mapping IP addresses to records. The specification is available, as is our Perl writer for the format.
Please report all issues with this code using the GitHub issue tracker.
If you are having an issue with a MaxMind database or service that is not specific to this reader, please contact MaxMind support.
This API requires Java 11 or greater.
Patches and pull requests are encouraged. Please include unit tests whenever possible.
The MaxMind DB Reader API uses Semantic Versioning.
This software is Copyright (c) 2014-2022 by MaxMind, Inc.
This is free software, licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.