-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
TargetGroup.h
108 lines (97 loc) · 6.08 KB
/
TargetGroup.h
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
/***************************************************************************
* TargetGroup.h -- The "TargetGroup" class holds a group of IP addresses, *
* such as those from a '/16' or '10.*.*.*' specification. It also has a *
* trivial HostGroupState class which handles a bunch of expressions that *
* go into TargetGroup classes. *
* *
***********************IMPORTANT NMAP LICENSE TERMS************************
* *
* The Nmap Security Scanner is (C) 1996-2020 Insecure.Com LLC ("The Nmap *
* Project"). Nmap is also a registered trademark of the Nmap Project. *
* *
* This program is distributed under the terms of the Nmap Public Source *
* License (NPSL). The exact license text applying to a particular Nmap *
* release or source code control revision is contained in the LICENSE *
* file distributed with that version of Nmap or source code control *
* revision. More Nmap copyright/legal information is available from *
* https://nmap.org/book/man-legal.html, and further information on the *
* NPSL license itself can be found at https://nmap.org/npsl. This header *
* summarizes some key points from the Nmap license, but is no substitute *
* for the actual license text. *
* *
* Nmap is generally free for end users to download and use themselves, *
* including commercial use. It is available from https://nmap.org. *
* *
* The Nmap license generally prohibits companies from using and *
* redistributing Nmap in commercial products, but we sell a special Nmap *
* OEM Edition with a more permissive license and special features for *
* this purpose. See https://nmap.org/oem *
* *
* If you have received a written Nmap license agreement or contract *
* stating terms other than these (such as an Nmap OEM license), you may *
* choose to use and redistribute Nmap under those terms instead. *
* *
* The official Nmap Windows builds include the Npcap software *
* (https://npcap.org) for packet capture and transmission. It is under *
* separate license terms which forbid redistribution without special *
* permission. So the official Nmap Windows builds may not be *
* redistributed without special permission (such as an Nmap OEM *
* license). *
* *
* Source is provided to this software because we believe users have a *
* right to know exactly what a program is going to do before they run it. *
* This also allows you to audit the software for security holes. *
* *
* Source code also allows you to port Nmap to new platforms, fix bugs, *
* and add new features. You are highly encouraged to submit your *
* changes as a Github PR or by email to the [email protected] mailing list *
* for possible incorporation into the main distribution. Unless you *
* specify otherwise, it is understood that you are offering us very *
* broad rights to use your submissions as described in the Nmap Public *
* Source License Contributor Agreement. This is important because we *
* fund the project by selling licenses with various terms, and also *
* because the inability to relicense code has caused devastating *
* problems for other Free Software projects (such as KDE and NASM). *
* *
* The free version of Nmap is distributed in the hope that it will be *
* useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of *
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Warranties, *
* indemnification and commercial support are all available through the *
* Npcap OEM program--see https://nmap.org/oem. *
* *
***************************************************************************/
/* $Id$ */
#ifndef TARGETGROUP_H
#define TARGETGROUP_H
#include <list>
#include <cstddef>
class NetBlock;
class TargetGroup {
public:
NetBlock *netblock;
TargetGroup() {
this->netblock = NULL;
}
~TargetGroup();
/* Initializes (or reinitializes) the object with a new expression,
such as 192.168.0.0/16 , 10.1.0-5.1-254 , or
fe80::202:e3ff:fe14:1102 . The af parameter is AF_INET or
AF_INET6 Returns 0 for success */
int parse_expr(const char *target_expr, int af);
/* Grab the next host from this expression (if any). Returns 0 and
fills in ss if successful. ss must point to a pre-allocated
sockaddr_storage structure */
int get_next_host(struct sockaddr_storage *ss, std::size_t *sslen);
/* Returns true iff the given address is the one that was resolved to create
this target group; i.e., not one of the addresses derived from it with a
netmask. */
bool is_resolved_address(const struct sockaddr_storage *ss) const;
/* Return a string of the name or address that was resolved for this group. */
const char *get_resolved_name(void) const;
/* Return the list of addresses that the name for this group resolved to, but
which were not scanned, if it came from a name resolution. */
const std::list<struct sockaddr_storage> &get_unscanned_addrs(void) const;
/* is the current expression a named host */
int get_namedhost() const;
};
#endif /* TARGETGROUP_H */