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The QHostAddress class provides an IP address. More...
The QHostAddress class provides an IP address.
This class holds an IPv4 or IPv6 address in a platform- and protocol-independent manner.
QHostAddress is normally used with the QTcpSocket, QTcpServer, and QUdpSocket to connect to a host or to set up a server.
A host address is set with setAddress(), and retrieved with toIPv4Address(), toIPv6Address(), or toString(). You can check the type with protocol().
Note: Please note that QHostAddress does not do DNS lookups. QHostInfo is needed for that.
The class also supports common predefined addresses: Null, LocalHost, LocalHostIPv6, Broadcast, and Any.
Constant | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
QHostAddress.Null | 0 | The null address object. Equivalent to QHostAddress(). |
QHostAddress.LocalHost | 2 | The IPv4 localhost address. Equivalent to QHostAddress("127.0.0.1"). |
QHostAddress.LocalHostIPv6 | 3 | The IPv6 localhost address. Equivalent to QHostAddress(".1"). |
QHostAddress.Broadcast | 1 | The IPv4 broadcast address. Equivalent to QHostAddress("255.255.255.255"). |
QHostAddress.Any | 4 | The IPv4 any-address. Equivalent to QHostAddress("0.0.0.0"). |
QHostAddress.AnyIPv6 | 5 | The IPv6 any-address. Equivalent to QHostAddress("."). |
Constructs a host address object with the IP address 0.0.0.0.
See also clear().
Constructs a host address object with the IPv4 address ip4Addr.
Constructs a host address object with the IPv6 address ip6Addr.
ip6Addr must be a 16-byte array in network byte order (big endian).
Constructs a host address object with the IPv6 address ip6Addr.
Constructs an IPv4 or IPv6 address using the address specified by the native structure sockaddr.
See also setAddress().
Constructs an IPv4 or IPv6 address based on the string address (e.g., "127.0.0.1").
See also setAddress().
Sets the host address to 0.0.0.0.
Returns true if this IP is in the subnet described by the network prefix subnet and netmask netmask.
An IP is considered to belong to a subnet if it is contained between the lowest and the highest address in that subnet. In the case of IP version 4, the lowest address is the network address, while the highest address is the broadcast address.
The subnet argument does not have to be the actual network address (the lowest address in the subnet). It can be any valid IP belonging to that subnet. In particular, if it is equal to the IP address held by this object, this function will always return true (provided the netmask is a valid value).
This function was introduced in Qt 4.5.
See also parseSubnet().
This is an overloaded function.
Returns true if this IP is in the subnet described by subnet. The QHostAddress member of subnet contains the network prefix and the int (second) member contains the netmask (prefix length).
This function was introduced in Qt 4.5.
Returns true if this host address is null (INADDR_ANY or in6addr_any). The default constructor creates a null address, and that address is not valid for any host or interface.
Parses the IP and subnet information contained in subnet and returns the network prefix for that network and its prefix length.
The IP address and the netmask must be separated by a slash (/).
This function supports arguments in the form:
For IP version 4, this function accepts as well missing trailing components (i.e., less than 4 octets, like "192.168.1"), followed or not by a dot. If the netmask is also missing in that case, it is set to the number of octets actually passed (in the example above, it would be 24, for 3 octets).
This function was introduced in Qt 4.5.
See also isInSubnet().
Returns the network layer protocol of the host address.
Returns the scope ID of an IPv6 address. For IPv4 addresses, or if the address does not contain a scope ID, an empty QString is returned.
The IPv6 scope ID specifies the scope of reachability for non-global IPv6 addresses, limiting the area in which the address can be used. All IPv6 addresses are associated with such a reachability scope. The scope ID is used to disambiguate addresses that are not guaranteed to be globally unique.
IPv6 specifies the following four levels of reachability:
When using a link-local or site-local address for IPv6 connections, you must specify the scope ID. The scope ID for a link-local address is usually the same as the interface name (e.g., "eth0", "en1") or number (e.g., "1", "2").
This function was introduced in Qt 4.1.
See also setScopeId().
Set the IPv4 address specified by ip4Addr.
This is an overloaded function.
Set the IPv6 address specified by ip6Addr.
ip6Addr must be an array of 16 bytes in network byte order (high-order byte first).
This is an overloaded function.
Set the IPv6 address specified by ip6Addr.
Sets the IPv6 scope ID of the address to id. If the address protocol is not IPv6, this function does nothing.
This function was introduced in Qt 4.1.
See also scopeId().
Returns the IPv4 address as a number.
For example, if the address is 127.0.0.1, the returned value is 2130706433 (i.e. 0x7f000001).
This value is only valid if the Protocol() is IPv4Protocol.
See also toString().
Returns the IPv6 address as a Q_IPV6ADDR structure. The structure consists of 16 unsigned characters.
Q_IPV6ADDR addr = hostAddr.toIPv6Address(); // addr contains 16 unsigned characters for (int i = 0; i < 16; ++i) { // process addr[i] }
This value is only valid if the protocol() is IPv6Protocol.
See also toString().
Returns the address as a string.
For example, if the address is the IPv4 address 127.0.0.1, the returned string is "127.0.0.1". For IPv6 the string format will follow the RFC5952 recommendation.
See also toIPv4Address().
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