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5.8. Network Address Data Types

PostgreSQL offers data types to store IP and MAC addresses, shown in Table 5-18. It is preferable to use these types over plain text types, because these types offer input error checking and several specialized operators and functions.

Table 5-18. Network Address Data Types

Name Storage Description Range
cidr 12 bytes IP networks valid IPv4 networks
inet 12 bytes IP hosts and networks valid IPv4 hosts or networks
macaddr 6 bytes MAC addresses customary formats

IPv6 is not yet supported.

5.8.1. inet

The inet type holds an IP host address, and optionally the identity of the subnet it is in, all in one field. The subnet identity is represented by the number of bits in the network part of the address (the "netmask"). If the netmask is 32, then the value does not indicate a subnet, only a single host. Note that if you want to accept networks only, you should use the cidr type rather than inet.

The input format for this type is x.x.x.x/y where x.x.x.x is an IP address and y is the number of bits in the netmask. If the /y part is left off, then the netmask is 32, and the value represents just a single host. On display, the /y portion is suppressed if the netmask is 32.

5.8.2. cidr

The cidr type holds an IP network specification. Input and output formats follow Classless Internet Domain Routing conventions. The format for specifying classless networks is x.x.x.x/y where x.x.x.x is the network and y is the number of bits in the netmask. If y is omitted, it is calculated using assumptions from the older classful numbering system, except that it will be at least large enough to include all of the octets written in the input.

Table 5-19 shows some examples.

Table 5-19. cidr Type Input Examples

CIDR Input CIDR Displayed abbrev(CIDR)
192.168.100.128/25 192.168.100.128/25 192.168.100.128/25
192.168/24 192.168.0.0/24 192.168.0/24
192.168/25 192.168.0.0/25 192.168.0.0/25
192.168.1 192.168.1.0/24 192.168.1/24
192.168 192.168.0.0/24 192.168.0/24
128.1 128.1.0.0/16 128.1/16
128 128.0.0.0/16 128.0/16
128.1.2 128.1.2.0/24 128.1.2/24
10.1.2 10.1.2.0/24 10.1.2/24
10.1 10.1.0.0/16 10.1/16
10 10.0.0.0/8 10/8

5.8.3. inet vs cidr

The essential difference between inet and cidr data types is that inet accepts values with nonzero bits to the right of the netmask, whereas cidr does not.

Tip: If you do not like the output format for inet or cidr values, try the host(), text(), and abbrev() functions.

5.8.4. macaddr

The macaddr type stores MAC addresses, i.e., Ethernet card hardware addresses (although MAC addresses are used for other purposes as well). Input is accepted in various customary formats, including

'08002b:010203'
'08002b-010203'
'0800.2b01.0203'
'08-00-2b-01-02-03'
'08:00:2b:01:02:03'
which would all specify the same address. Upper and lower case is accepted for the digits a through f. Output is always in the last of the shown forms.

The directory contrib/mac in the PostgreSQL source distribution contains tools that can be used to map MAC addresses to hardware manufacturer names.