GeoIP2::Database::Reader(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | GeoIP2::Database::Reader(3pm) |
GeoIP2::Database::Reader - Perl API for GeoIP2 databases
version 2.006002
use 5.008; use GeoIP2::Database::Reader; my $reader = GeoIP2::Database::Reader->new( file => '/path/to/database', # e.g. /home/maxmind/db/GeoIP2-Country.mmdb locales => [ 'en', 'de', ] ); my $city = $reader->city( ip => '24.24.24.24' ); my $country = $city->country(); print $country->iso_code(), "\n";
This class provides a reader API for all GeoIP2 databases. Each method returns a different model class.
If the database does not return a particular piece of data for an IP address, the associated attribute is not populated.
The basic API for this class is the same for all database types. First you create a database reader object with your "file" and "locale" params. Then you call the method corresponding to your database type, passing it the IP address you want to look up.
If the request succeeds, the method call will return a model class for the method point you called.
If the database cannot be read, the reader class throws an exception.
IP geolocation is inherently imprecise. Locations are often near the center of the population. Any location provided by a GeoIP2 database should not be used to identify a particular address or household.
This class has a single constructor method:
This method creates a new object. It accepts the following arguments:
This is the path to the GeoIP2 database which you'd like to query. The path should include the filename.
This is an array reference where each value is a string indicating a locale. This argument will be passed on to record classes to use when their "name()" methods are called.
The order of the locales is significant. When a record class has multiple names (country, city, etc.), its "name()" method will look at each element of this array ref and return the first locale for which it has a name.
Note that the only locale which is always present in the GeoIP2 data in "en". If you do not include this locale, the "name()" method may end up returning "undef" even when the record in question has an English name.
Currently, the valid list of locale codes is:
English names may still include accented characters if that is the accepted spelling in English. In other words, English does not mean ASCII.
Passing any other locale code will result in an error.
The default value for this argument is "['en']".
All of the request methods accept a single argument:
This must be a valid IPv4 or IPv6 address. This is the address that you want to look up using the GeoIP2 web service.
Unlike the web service client class, you cannot pass the string "me" as your ip address.
This method returns a GeoIP2::Model::ASN object.
This method returns a GeoIP2::Model::ConnectionType object.
This method returns a GeoIP2::Model::Country object.
This method returns a GeoIP2::Model::City object.
This method returns a GeoIP2::Model::Domain object.
This method returns a GeoIP2::Model::ISP object.
This method returns a GeoIP2::Model::Enterprise object.
This method returns a GeoIP2::Model::AnonymousIP object.
This method returns a MaxMind::DB::Metadata object containing information about the database.
In the case of a fatal error, the reader will throw a GeoIP2::Error::Generic or GeoIP2::Error::IPAddressNotFound exception object.
This error class has an "$error->message()" method and overload stringification to show that message. This means that if you don't explicitly catch errors they will ultimately be sent to "STDERR" with some sort of (hopefully) useful error message.
While many of the databases return the same basic records, the attributes which can be populated vary between model classes. In addition, while a database may offer a particular piece of data, MaxMind does not always have every piece of data for any given IP address.
Because of these factors, it is possible for any model class to return a record where some or all of the attributes are unpopulated.
See <http://dev.maxmind.com/geoip/geoip2/web-services> for details on what data each end point may return.
Every record class attribute has a corresponding predicate method so you can check to see if the attribute is set.
Bugs may be submitted through <https://github.com/maxmind/GeoIP2-perl/issues>.
This software is copyright (c) 2013 - 2019 by MaxMind, Inc.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
2022-11-21 | perl v5.36.0 |