(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
ip2long — Converts a string containing an (IPv4) Internet Protocol dotted address into a long integer
$ip
): int|falseThe function ip2long() generates a long integer representation of IPv4 Internet network address from its Internet standard format (dotted string) representation.
ip2long() will also work with non-complete IP addresses. Read » http://publibn.boulder.ibm.com/doc_link/en_US/a_doc_lib/libs/commtrf2/inet_addr.htm for more info.
ip
A standard format address.
Returns the long integer or false
if ip
is invalid.
Example #1 ip2long() Example
<?php
$ip = gethostbyname('www.example.com');
$out = "The following URLs are equivalent:<br />\n";
$out .= 'http://www.example.com/, http://' . $ip . '/, and http://' . sprintf("%u", ip2long($ip)) . "/<br />\n";
echo $out;
?>
Example #2 Displaying an IP address
This second example shows how to print a converted address with the printf() function:
<?php
$ip = gethostbyname('www.example.com');
$long = ip2long($ip);
if ($long == -1 || $long === FALSE) {
echo 'Invalid IP, please try again';
} else {
echo $ip . "\n"; // 192.0.34.166
echo $long . "\n"; // 3221234342 (-1073732954 on 32-bit systems, due to integer overflow)
printf("%u\n", ip2long($ip)); // 3221234342
}
?>
Note:
Because PHP's int type is signed, and many IP addresses will result in negative integers on 32-bit architectures, you need to use the "%u" formatter of sprintf() or printf() to get the string representation of the unsigned IP address.
Note:
ip2long() will return
-1
for the IP255.255.255.255
on 32-bit systems due to the integer value overflowing.