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grepcidr can be used to filter a list of IP addresses against one or more Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) specifications, or arbitrary networks

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grepcidr 2.991 - Filter IP addresses matching IPv4 and IPv6 CIDR specification
Parts Copyright (C) 2004-2005  Jem E. Berkes <[email protected]>
	http://www.pc-tools.net/unix/grepcidr/

Revised by John Levine <[email protected]> Dec 2013-Oct 2015, who makes
no copyright claims to the modifications.

PURPOSE
-------
grepcidr can be used to filter a list of IP addresses against one or more
Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) specifications, or arbitrary networks
specified by an address range. As with grep, there are options to invert
matching and load patterns from a file. grepcidr is capable of comparing
thousands or even millions of IPs to networks with little memory usage and
in reasonable computation time.

grepcidr has endless uses in network software, including: mail filtering and
processing, network security, log analysis, and many custom applications.

COMPILING & INSTALLING
----------------------
Edit Makefile to customize the build. Then,
make
make install


COMMAND USAGE
-------------
Usage:
        grepcidr [-V] [-cCDvhais] PATTERN [FILE ...]
        grepcidr [-V]  [-V] [-cCDvhais] [-e PATTERN | -f FILE] [FILE ...]

-V	Show software version
-a	Anchor matches to beginning of line, otherwise match anywhere
-c	Display count of the lines that would have been shown, instead of showing them
-C	Parse CIDR ranges in input and only match if a search term encompasses the entire range.
-D	Parse CIDR ranges in input and match if a search term matches any part of the range.
-v	Invert the sense of matching, to select non-matching IP addresses
-e	Specify pattern(s) on command-line
-f	Obtain CIDR and range pattern(s) from file
-i	Ignore patterns that are not valid CIDRs or ranges
-h	Do not print filenames when matching multiple files

PATTERN specified on the command line may contain multiple patterns
separated by whitespace or commas. For long lists of network patterns,
specify a -f FILE to load where each line contains one pattern. Comment
lines starting with # are ignored, as are comments following white space
after a pattern.  Use -i to ignore invalid pattern lines.

Each pattern, whether on the command line or inside a file, may be:
CIDR format	a.b.c.d/xx or aa:bb::cc::dd/xx
IP range	a.b.c.d-e.f.g.h
Single IP	a.b.c.d or aa:bb:cc::dd

IPv6 addresses can be written in any format including embedded IPv4.
The zero address :: is accepted as a pattern but does not match in
files.  (Use regular grep if that's what you're looking for,)  It does
not accept IPv6 ranges, since few people use them.

Grepcidr uses a state machine to look for IP addresses in the input,
and a binary search to match addresses against patterns.  Its speed is
roughly O(N) in the size of the input, and O(log N) in the number of
patterns.  A prepass over the patterns merges adjacent and overlapping
patterns so there is negligle speed penalty for matching, e.g.
1.2.2.0/24 and 1.2.3.0/24 rather than 1.2.2.0/23.

Input files are mapped into memory if possible, so the state machine
can make one pass over the whole file.  If mapping fails, it reads the
input a line at a time.

EXAMPLES
--------

grepcidr -f ournetworks blocklist > abuse.log
	Find our customers that show up in blocklists

grepcidr 127.0.0.0/8,::1 iplog
	Searches for any localnet IP addresses inside the iplog file

grepcidr "192.168.0.1-192.168.10.13" iplog
	Searches for IPs matching indicated range in the iplog file

script | grepcidr -ivf whitelist > blacklist
	Create a blacklist, with whitelisted networks removed (inverse)

grepcidr -if list1 list2
	Cross-reference two lists, outputs IPs common to both lists

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