maxmind-geoip2 0.1.0
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- checksums.yaml +7 -0
- data/CHANGELOG.md +12 -0
- data/Gemfile +9 -0
- data/Gemfile.lock +38 -0
- data/LICENSE-APACHE +202 -0
- data/LICENSE-MIT +17 -0
- data/README.dev.md +4 -0
- data/README.md +274 -0
- data/Rakefile +14 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2.rb +3 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/errors.rb +7 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/model/abstract.rb +27 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/model/anonymous_ip.rb +63 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/model/asn.rb +39 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/model/city.rb +75 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/model/connection_type.rb +32 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/model/country.rb +63 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/model/domain.rb +32 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/model/enterprise.rb +15 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/model/isp.rb +53 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/reader.rb +277 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/abstract.rb +22 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/city.rb +38 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/continent.rb +37 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/country.rb +54 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/location.rb +73 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/place.rb +28 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/postal.rb +30 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/represented_country.rb +23 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/subdivision.rb +48 -0
- data/lib/maxmind/geoip2/record/traits.rb +200 -0
- data/maxmind-geoip2.gemspec +24 -0
- data/test/data/LICENSE +4 -0
- data/test/data/MaxMind-DB-spec.md +570 -0
- data/test/data/MaxMind-DB-test-metadata-pointers.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/README.md +4 -0
- data/test/data/bad-data/README.md +7 -0
- data/test/data/bad-data/libmaxminddb/libmaxminddb-offset-integer-overflow.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/bad-data/maxminddb-golang/cyclic-data-structure.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/bad-data/maxminddb-golang/invalid-bytes-length.mmdb +1 -0
- data/test/data/bad-data/maxminddb-golang/invalid-data-record-offset.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/bad-data/maxminddb-golang/invalid-map-key-length.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/bad-data/maxminddb-golang/invalid-string-length.mmdb +1 -0
- data/test/data/bad-data/maxminddb-golang/metadata-is-an-uint128.mmdb +1 -0
- data/test/data/bad-data/maxminddb-golang/unexpected-bytes.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/perltidyrc +12 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-Anonymous-IP-Test.json +48 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-City-Test.json +12852 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-Connection-Type-Test.json +102 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-Country-Test.json +15916 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-DensityIncome-Test.json +14 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-Domain-Test.json +452 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-Enterprise-Test.json +687 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-ISP-Test.json +12593 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-Precision-Enterprise-Test.json +2061 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-Static-IP-Score-Test.json +2132 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoIP2-User-Count-Test.json +2837 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/GeoLite2-ASN-Test.json +37 -0
- data/test/data/source-data/README +15 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-Anonymous-IP-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-City-Test-Broken-Double-Format.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-City-Test-Invalid-Node-Count.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-City-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-Connection-Type-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-Country-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-DensityIncome-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-Domain-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-Enterprise-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-ISP-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-Precision-Enterprise-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-Static-IP-Score-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoIP2-User-Count-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/GeoLite2-ASN-Test.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-no-ipv4-search-tree.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-string-value-entries.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-broken-pointers-24.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-broken-search-tree-24.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-decoder.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-ipv4-24.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-ipv4-28.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-ipv4-32.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-ipv6-24.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-ipv6-28.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-ipv6-32.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-metadata-pointers.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-mixed-24.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-mixed-28.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-mixed-32.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/MaxMind-DB-test-nested.mmdb +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/README.md +26 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/maps-with-pointers.raw +0 -0
- data/test/data/test-data/write-test-data.pl +641 -0
- data/test/data/tidyall.ini +5 -0
- data/test/test_model_country.rb +80 -0
- data/test/test_model_names.rb +47 -0
- data/test/test_reader.rb +459 -0
- metadata +159 -0
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# frozen_string_literal: true
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Gem::Specification.new do |s|
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s.authors = ['William Storey']
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s.files = Dir['**/*']
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s.name = 'maxmind-geoip2'
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s.summary = 'A gem for interacting with the GeoIP2 webservices and databases.'
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s.version = '0.1.0'
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s.description = 'A gem for interacting with the GeoIP2 webservices and databases. MaxMind provides geolocation data as downloadable databases as well as through a webservice.'
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s.email = 'support@maxmind.com'
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s.homepage = 'https://github.com/maxmind/GeoIP2-ruby'
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s.licenses = ['Apache-2.0', 'MIT']
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s.metadata = {
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'bug_tracker_uri' => 'https://github.com/maxmind/GeoIP2-ruby/issues',
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'changelog_uri' => 'https://github.com/maxmind/GeoIP2-ruby/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md',
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'documentation_uri' => 'https://github.com/maxmind/GeoIP2-ruby',
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'homepage_uri' => 'https://github.com/maxmind/GeoIP2-ruby',
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'source_code_uri' => 'https://github.com/maxmind/GeoIP2-ruby',
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}
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s.required_ruby_version = '>= 2.4.0'
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s.add_runtime_dependency 'maxmind-db', ['~> 1.1']
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end
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data/test/data/LICENSE
ADDED
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This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0
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Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit
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http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative
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Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.
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---
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layout: default
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title: MaxMind DB File Format Specification
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version: v2.0
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---
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# MaxMind DB File Format Specification
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## Description
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The MaxMind DB file format is a database format that maps IPv4 and IPv6
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addresses to data records using an efficient binary search tree.
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## Version
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This spec documents **version 2.0** of the MaxMind DB binary format.
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The version number consists of separate major and minor version numbers. It
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should not be considered a decimal number. In other words, version 2.10 comes
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after version 2.9.
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Code which is capable of reading a given major version of the format should
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not be broken by minor version changes to the format.
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## Overview
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The binary database is split into three parts:
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1. The binary search tree. Each level of the tree corresponds to a single bit
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in the 128 bit representation of an IPv6 address.
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2. The data section. These are the values returned to the client for a
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specific IP address, e.g. "US", "New York", or a more complex map type made up
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of multiple fields.
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3. Database metadata. Information about the database itself.
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## Database Metadata
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This portion of the database is stored at the end of the file. It is
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documented first because understanding some of the metadata is key to
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understanding how the other sections work.
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This section can be found by looking for a binary sequence matching
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"\xab\xcd\xefMaxMind.com". The *last* occurrence of this string in the file
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marks the end of the data section and the beginning of the metadata. Since we
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allow for arbitrary binary data in the data section, some other piece of data
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could contain these values. This is why you need to find the last occurrence
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of this sequence.
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The maximum allowable size for the metadata section, including the marker that
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starts the metadata, is 128KiB.
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The metadata is stored as a map data structure. This structure is described
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later in the spec. Changing a key's data type or removing a key would
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constitute a major version change for this spec.
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Except where otherwise specified, each key listed is required for the database
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to be considered valid.
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Adding a key constitutes a minor version change. Removing a key or changing
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its type constitutes a major version change.
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The list of known keys for the current version of the format is as follows:
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### node\_count
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This is an unsigned 32-bit integer indicating the number of nodes in the
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search tree.
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### record\_size
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This is an unsigned 16-bit integer. It indicates the number of bits in a
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record in the search tree. Note that each node consists of *two* records.
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### ip\_version
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This is an unsigned 16-bit integer which is always 4 or 6. It indicates
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whether the database contains IPv4 or IPv6 address data.
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### database\_type
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This is a string that indicates the structure of each data record associated
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with an IP address. The actual definition of these structures is left up to
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the database creator.
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Names starting with "GeoIP" are reserved for use by MaxMind (and "GeoIP" is a
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trademark anyway).
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### languages
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An array of strings, each of which is a locale code. A given record may
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contain data items that have been localized to some or all of these
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locales. Records should not contain localized data for locales not included in
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this array.
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This is an optional key, as this may not be relevant for all types of data.
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### binary\_format\_major\_version
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This is an unsigned 16-bit integer indicating the major version number for the
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database's binary format.
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### binary\_format\_minor\_version
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This is an unsigned 16-bit integer indicating the minor version number for the
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database's binary format.
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### build\_epoch
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This is an unsigned 64-bit integer that contains the database build timestamp
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as a Unix epoch value.
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### description
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This key will always point to a map. The keys of that map will be language
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codes, and the values will be a description in that language as a UTF-8
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string.
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The codes may include additional information such as script or country
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identifiers, like "zh-TW" or "mn-Cyrl-MN". The additional identifiers will be
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separated by a dash character ("-").
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This key is optional. However, creators of databases are strongly
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encouraged to include a description in at least one language.
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### Calculating the Search Tree Section Size
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The formula for calculating the search tree section size *in bytes* is as
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follows:
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( ( $record_size * 2 ) / 8 ) * $number_of_nodes
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The end of the search tree marks the beginning of the data section.
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## Binary Search Tree Section
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The database file starts with a binary search tree. The number of nodes in the
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tree is dependent on how many unique netblocks are needed for the particular
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database. For example, the city database needs many more small netblocks than
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the country database.
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The top most node is always located at the beginning of the search tree
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section's address space. The top node is node 0.
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Each node consists of two records, each of which is a pointer to an address in
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the file.
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The pointers can point to one of three things. First, it may point to another
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node in the search tree address space. These pointers are followed as part of
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the IP address search algorithm, described below.
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The pointer can point to a value equal to `$number_of_nodes`. If this is the
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case, it means that the IP address we are searching for is not in the
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database.
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Finally, it may point to an address in the data section. This is the data
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relevant to the given netblock.
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### Node Layout
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Each node in the search tree consists of two records, each of which is a
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pointer. The record size varies by database, but inside a single database node
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records are always the same size. A record may be anywhere from 24 to 128 bits
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long, depending on the number of nodes in the tree. These pointers are
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stored in big-endian format (most significant byte first).
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Here are some examples of how the records are laid out in a node for 24, 28,
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and 32 bit records. Larger record sizes follow this same pattern.
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#### 24 bits (small database), one node is 6 bytes
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| <------------- node --------------->|
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| 23 .. 0 | 23 .. 0 |
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#### 28 bits (medium database), one node is 7 bytes
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| <------------- node --------------->|
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| 23 .. 0 | 27..24 | 27..24 | 23 .. 0 |
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Note 4 bits of each pointer are combined into the middle byte. For both
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records, they are prepended and end up in the most significant position.
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#### 32 bits (large database), one node is 8 bytes
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| <------------- node --------------->|
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| 31 .. 0 | 31 .. 0 |
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### Search Lookup Algorithm
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The first step is to convert the IP address to its big-endian binary
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representation. For an IPv4 address, this becomes 32 bits. For IPv6 you get
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128 bits.
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The leftmost bit corresponds to the first node in the search tree. For each
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bit, a value of 0 means we choose the left record in a node, and a value of 1
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means we choose the right record.
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The record value is always interpreted as an unsigned integer. The maximum
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size of the integer is dependent on the number of bits in a record (24, 28, or
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32).
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If the record value is a number that is less than the *number of nodes* (not
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in bytes, but the actual node count) in the search tree (this is stored in the
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database metadata), then the value is a node number. In this case, we find
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that node in the search tree and repeat the lookup algorithm from there.
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If the record value is equal to the number of nodes, that means that we do not
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have any data for the IP address, and the search ends here.
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If the record value is *greater* than the number of nodes in the search tree,
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then it is an actual pointer value pointing into the data section. The value
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of the pointer is relative to the start of the data section, *not* the
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start of the file.
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In order to determine where in the data section we should start looking, we use
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the following formula:
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$data_section_offset = ( $record_value - $node_count ) - 16
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The 16 is the size of the data section separator. We subtract it because we
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want to permit pointing to the first byte of the data section. Recall that
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the record value cannot equal the node count as that means there is no
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data. Instead, we choose to start values that go to the data section at
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`$node_count + 16`. (This has the side effect that record values
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`$node_count + 1` through `$node_count + 15` inclusive are not valid).
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This is best demonstrated by an example:
|
226
|
+
|
227
|
+
Let's assume we have a 24-bit tree with 1,000 nodes. Each node contains 48
|
228
|
+
bits, or 6 bytes. The size of the tree is 6,000 bytes.
|
229
|
+
|
230
|
+
When a record in the tree contains a number that is less than 1,000, this
|
231
|
+
is a *node number*, and we look up that node. If a record contains a value
|
232
|
+
greater than or equal to 1,016, we know that it is a data section value. We
|
233
|
+
subtract the node count (1,000) and then subtract 16 for the data section
|
234
|
+
separator, giving us the number 0, the first byte of the data section.
|
235
|
+
|
236
|
+
If a record contained the value 6,000, this formula would give us an offset of
|
237
|
+
4,984 into the data section.
|
238
|
+
|
239
|
+
In order to determine where in the file this offset really points to, we also
|
240
|
+
need to know where the data section starts. This can be calculated by
|
241
|
+
determining the size of the search tree in bytes and then adding an additional
|
242
|
+
16 bytes for the data section separator:
|
243
|
+
|
244
|
+
$offset_in_file = $data_section_offset
|
245
|
+
+ $search_tree_size_in_bytes
|
246
|
+
+ 16
|
247
|
+
|
248
|
+
Since we subtract and then add 16, the final formula to determine the
|
249
|
+
offset in the file can be simplified to:
|
250
|
+
|
251
|
+
$offset_in_file = ( $record_value - $node_count )
|
252
|
+
+ $search_tree_size_in_bytes
|
253
|
+
|
254
|
+
### IPv4 addresses in an IPv6 tree
|
255
|
+
|
256
|
+
When storing IPv4 addresses in an IPv6 tree, they are stored as-is, so they
|
257
|
+
occupy the first 32-bits of the address space (from 0 to 2**32 - 1).
|
258
|
+
|
259
|
+
Creators of databases should decide on a strategy for handling the various
|
260
|
+
mappings between IPv4 and IPv6.
|
261
|
+
|
262
|
+
The strategy that MaxMind uses for its GeoIP databases is to include a pointer
|
263
|
+
from the `::ffff:0:0/96` subnet to the root node of the IPv4 address space in
|
264
|
+
the tree. This accounts for the
|
265
|
+
[IPv4-mapped IPv6 address](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPv6#IPv4-mapped_IPv6_addresses).
|
266
|
+
|
267
|
+
MaxMind also includes a pointer from the `2002::/16` subnet to the root node
|
268
|
+
of the IPv4 address space in the tree. This accounts for the
|
269
|
+
[6to4 mapping](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/6to4) subnet.
|
270
|
+
|
271
|
+
Database creators are encouraged to document whether they are doing something
|
272
|
+
similar for their databases.
|
273
|
+
|
274
|
+
The Teredo subnet cannot be accounted for in the tree. Instead, code that
|
275
|
+
searches the tree can offer to decode the IPv4 portion of a Teredo address and
|
276
|
+
look that up.
|
277
|
+
|
278
|
+
## Data Section Separator
|
279
|
+
|
280
|
+
There are 16 bytes of NULLs in between the search tree and the data
|
281
|
+
section. This separator exists in order to make it possible for a verification
|
282
|
+
tool to distinguish between the two sections.
|
283
|
+
|
284
|
+
This separator is not considered part of the data section itself. In other
|
285
|
+
words, the data section starts at `$size_of_search_tree + 16` bytes in the
|
286
|
+
file.
|
287
|
+
|
288
|
+
## Output Data Section
|
289
|
+
|
290
|
+
Each output data field has an associated type, and that type is encoded as a
|
291
|
+
number that begins the data field. Some types are variable length. In those
|
292
|
+
cases, the type indicator is also followed by a length. The data payload
|
293
|
+
always comes at the end of the field.
|
294
|
+
|
295
|
+
All binary data is stored in big-endian format.
|
296
|
+
|
297
|
+
Note that the *interpretation* of a given data type's meaning is decided by
|
298
|
+
higher-level APIs, not by the binary format itself.
|
299
|
+
|
300
|
+
### pointer - 1
|
301
|
+
|
302
|
+
A pointer to another part of the data section's address space. The pointer
|
303
|
+
will point to the beginning of a field. It is illegal for a pointer to point
|
304
|
+
to another pointer.
|
305
|
+
|
306
|
+
Pointer values start from the beginning of the data section, *not* the
|
307
|
+
beginning of the file.
|
308
|
+
|
309
|
+
### UTF-8 string - 2
|
310
|
+
|
311
|
+
A variable length byte sequence that contains valid utf8. If the length is
|
312
|
+
zero then this is an empty string.
|
313
|
+
|
314
|
+
### double - 3
|
315
|
+
|
316
|
+
This is stored as an IEEE-754 double (binary64) in big-endian format. The
|
317
|
+
length of a double is always 8 bytes.
|
318
|
+
|
319
|
+
### bytes - 4
|
320
|
+
|
321
|
+
A variable length byte sequence containing any sort of binary data. If the
|
322
|
+
length is zero then this a zero-length byte sequence.
|
323
|
+
|
324
|
+
This is not currently used but may be used in the future to embed non-text
|
325
|
+
data (images, etc.).
|
326
|
+
|
327
|
+
### integer formats
|
328
|
+
|
329
|
+
Integers are stored in variable length binary fields.
|
330
|
+
|
331
|
+
We support 16-bit, 32-bit, 64-bit, and 128-bit unsigned integers. We also
|
332
|
+
support 32-bit signed integers.
|
333
|
+
|
334
|
+
A 128-bit integer can use up to 16 bytes, but may use fewer. Similarly, a
|
335
|
+
32-bit integer may use from 0-4 bytes. The number of bytes used is determined
|
336
|
+
by the length specifier in the control byte. See below for details.
|
337
|
+
|
338
|
+
A length of zero always indicates the number 0.
|
339
|
+
|
340
|
+
When storing a signed integer, the left-most bit is the sign. A 1 is negative
|
341
|
+
and a 0 is positive.
|
342
|
+
|
343
|
+
The type numbers for our integer types are:
|
344
|
+
|
345
|
+
* unsigned 16-bit int - 5
|
346
|
+
* unsigned 32-bit int - 6
|
347
|
+
* signed 32-bit int - 8
|
348
|
+
* unsigned 64-bit int - 9
|
349
|
+
* unsigned 128-bit int - 10
|
350
|
+
|
351
|
+
The unsigned 32-bit and 128-bit types may be used to store IPv4 and IPv6
|
352
|
+
addresses, respectively.
|
353
|
+
|
354
|
+
The signed 32-bit integers are stored using the 2's complement representation.
|
355
|
+
|
356
|
+
### map - 7
|
357
|
+
|
358
|
+
A map data type contains a set of key/value pairs. Unlike other data types,
|
359
|
+
the length information for maps indicates how many key/value pairs it
|
360
|
+
contains, not its length in bytes. This size can be zero.
|
361
|
+
|
362
|
+
See below for the algorithm used to determine the number of pairs in the
|
363
|
+
hash. This algorithm is also used to determine the length of a field's
|
364
|
+
payload.
|
365
|
+
|
366
|
+
### array - 11
|
367
|
+
|
368
|
+
An array type contains a set of ordered values. The length information for
|
369
|
+
arrays indicates how many values it contains, not its length in bytes. This
|
370
|
+
size can be zero.
|
371
|
+
|
372
|
+
This type uses the same algorithm as maps for determining the length of a
|
373
|
+
field's payload.
|
374
|
+
|
375
|
+
### data cache container - 12
|
376
|
+
|
377
|
+
This is a special data type that marks a container used to cache repeated
|
378
|
+
data. For example, instead of repeating the string "United States" over and
|
379
|
+
over in the database, we store it in the cache container and use pointers
|
380
|
+
*into* this container instead.
|
381
|
+
|
382
|
+
Nothing in the database will ever contain a pointer to this field
|
383
|
+
itself. Instead, various fields will point into the container.
|
384
|
+
|
385
|
+
The primary reason for making this a separate data type versus simply inlining
|
386
|
+
the cached data is so that a database dumper tool can skip this cache when
|
387
|
+
dumping the data section. The cache contents will end up being dumped as
|
388
|
+
pointers into it are followed.
|
389
|
+
|
390
|
+
### end marker - 13
|
391
|
+
|
392
|
+
The end marker marks the end of the data section. It is not strictly
|
393
|
+
necessary, but including this marker allows a data section deserializer to
|
394
|
+
process a stream of input, rather than having to find the end of the section
|
395
|
+
before beginning the deserialization.
|
396
|
+
|
397
|
+
This data type is not followed by a payload, and its size is always zero.
|
398
|
+
|
399
|
+
### boolean - 14
|
400
|
+
|
401
|
+
A true or false value. The length information for a boolean type will always
|
402
|
+
be 0 or 1, indicating the value. There is no payload for this field.
|
403
|
+
|
404
|
+
### float - 15
|
405
|
+
|
406
|
+
This is stored as an IEEE-754 float (binary32) in big-endian format. The
|
407
|
+
length of a float is always 4 bytes.
|
408
|
+
|
409
|
+
This type is provided primarily for completeness. Because of the way floating
|
410
|
+
point numbers are stored, this type can easily lose precision when serialized
|
411
|
+
and then deserialized. If this is an issue for you, consider using a double
|
412
|
+
instead.
|
413
|
+
|
414
|
+
### Data Field Format
|
415
|
+
|
416
|
+
Each field starts with a control byte. This control byte provides information
|
417
|
+
about the field's data type and payload size.
|
418
|
+
|
419
|
+
The first three bits of the control byte tell you what type the field is. If
|
420
|
+
these bits are all 0, then this is an "extended" type, which means that the
|
421
|
+
*next* byte contains the actual type. Otherwise, the first three bits will
|
422
|
+
contain a number from 1 to 7, the actual type for the field.
|
423
|
+
|
424
|
+
We've tried to assign the most commonly used types as numbers 1-7 as an
|
425
|
+
optimization.
|
426
|
+
|
427
|
+
With an extended type, the type number in the second byte is the number
|
428
|
+
minus 7. In other words, an array (type 11) will be stored with a 0 for the
|
429
|
+
type in the first byte and a 4 in the second.
|
430
|
+
|
431
|
+
Here is an example of how the control byte may combine with the next byte to
|
432
|
+
tell us the type:
|
433
|
+
|
434
|
+
001XXXXX pointer
|
435
|
+
010XXXXX UTF-8 string
|
436
|
+
110XXXXX unsigned 32-bit int (ASCII)
|
437
|
+
000XXXXX 00000011 unsigned 128-bit int (binary)
|
438
|
+
000XXXXX 00000100 array
|
439
|
+
000XXXXX 00000110 end marker
|
440
|
+
|
441
|
+
#### Payload Size
|
442
|
+
|
443
|
+
The next five bits in the control byte tell you how long the data field's
|
444
|
+
payload is, except for maps and pointers. Maps and pointers use this size
|
445
|
+
information a bit differently. See below.
|
446
|
+
|
447
|
+
If the five bits are smaller than 29, then those bits are the payload size in
|
448
|
+
bytes. For example:
|
449
|
+
|
450
|
+
01000010 UTF-8 string - 2 bytes long
|
451
|
+
01011100 UTF-8 string - 28 bytes long
|
452
|
+
11000001 unsigned 32-bit int - 1 byte long
|
453
|
+
00000011 00000011 unsigned 128-bit int - 3 bytes long
|
454
|
+
|
455
|
+
If the five bits are equal to 29, 30, or 31, then use the following algorithm
|
456
|
+
to calculate the payload size.
|
457
|
+
|
458
|
+
If the value is 29, then the size is 29 + *the next byte after the type
|
459
|
+
specifying bytes as an unsigned integer*.
|
460
|
+
|
461
|
+
If the value is 30, then the size is 285 + *the next two bytes after the type
|
462
|
+
specifying bytes as a single unsigned integer*.
|
463
|
+
|
464
|
+
If the value is 31, then the size is 65,821 + *the next three bytes after the
|
465
|
+
type specifying bytes as a single unsigned integer*.
|
466
|
+
|
467
|
+
Some examples:
|
468
|
+
|
469
|
+
01011101 00110011 UTF-8 string - 80 bytes long
|
470
|
+
|
471
|
+
In this case, the last five bits of the control byte equal 29. We treat the
|
472
|
+
next byte as an unsigned integer. The next byte is 51, so the total size is
|
473
|
+
(29 + 51) = 80.
|
474
|
+
|
475
|
+
01011110 00110011 00110011 UTF-8 string - 13,392 bytes long
|
476
|
+
|
477
|
+
The last five bits of the control byte equal 30. We treat the next two bytes
|
478
|
+
as a single unsigned integer. The next two bytes equal 13,107, so the total
|
479
|
+
size is (285 + 13,107) = 13,392.
|
480
|
+
|
481
|
+
01011111 00110011 00110011 00110011 UTF-8 string - 3,421,264 bytes long
|
482
|
+
|
483
|
+
The last five bits of the control byte equal 31. We treat the next three bytes
|
484
|
+
as a single unsigned integer. The next three bytes equal 3,355,443, so the
|
485
|
+
total size is (65,821 + 3,355,443) = 3,421,264.
|
486
|
+
|
487
|
+
This means that the maximum payload size for a single field is 16,843,036
|
488
|
+
bytes.
|
489
|
+
|
490
|
+
The binary number types always have a known size, but for consistency's sake,
|
491
|
+
the control byte will always specify the correct size for these types.
|
492
|
+
|
493
|
+
#### Maps
|
494
|
+
|
495
|
+
Maps use the size in the control byte (and any following bytes) to indicate
|
496
|
+
the number of key/value pairs in the map, not the size of the payload in
|
497
|
+
bytes.
|
498
|
+
|
499
|
+
This means that the maximum number of pairs for a single map is 16,843,036.
|
500
|
+
|
501
|
+
Maps are laid out with each key followed by its value, followed by the next
|
502
|
+
pair, etc.
|
503
|
+
|
504
|
+
The keys are **always** UTF-8 strings. The values may be any data type,
|
505
|
+
including maps or pointers.
|
506
|
+
|
507
|
+
Once we know the number of pairs, we can look at each pair in turn to
|
508
|
+
determine the size of the key and the key name, as well as the value's type
|
509
|
+
and payload.
|
510
|
+
|
511
|
+
#### Pointers
|
512
|
+
|
513
|
+
Pointers use the last five bits in the control byte to calculate the pointer
|
514
|
+
value.
|
515
|
+
|
516
|
+
To calculate the pointer value, we start by subdividing the five bits into two
|
517
|
+
groups. The first two bits indicate the size, and the next three bits are part
|
518
|
+
of the value, so we end up with a control byte breaking down like this:
|
519
|
+
001SSVVV.
|
520
|
+
|
521
|
+
The size can be 0, 1, 2, or 3.
|
522
|
+
|
523
|
+
If the size is 0, the pointer is built by appending the next byte to the last
|
524
|
+
three bits to produce an 11-bit value.
|
525
|
+
|
526
|
+
If the size is 1, the pointer is built by appending the next two bytes to the
|
527
|
+
last three bits to produce a 19-bit value + 2048.
|
528
|
+
|
529
|
+
If the size is 2, the pointer is built by appending the next three bytes to the
|
530
|
+
last three bits to produce a 27-bit value + 526336.
|
531
|
+
|
532
|
+
Finally, if the size is 3, the pointer's value is contained in the next four
|
533
|
+
bytes as a 32-bit value. In this case, the last three bits of the control byte
|
534
|
+
are ignored.
|
535
|
+
|
536
|
+
This means that we are limited to 4GB of address space for pointers, so the
|
537
|
+
data section size for the database is limited to 4GB.
|
538
|
+
|
539
|
+
## Reference Implementations
|
540
|
+
|
541
|
+
### Writer
|
542
|
+
|
543
|
+
* [Perl](https://github.com/maxmind/MaxMind-DB-Writer-perl)
|
544
|
+
|
545
|
+
### Reader
|
546
|
+
|
547
|
+
* [C](https://github.com/maxmind/libmaxminddb)
|
548
|
+
* [C#](https://github.com/maxmind/MaxMind-DB-Reader-dotnet)
|
549
|
+
* [Java](https://github.com/maxmind/MaxMind-DB-Reader-java)
|
550
|
+
* [Perl](https://github.com/maxmind/MaxMind-DB-Reader-perl)
|
551
|
+
* [PHP](https://github.com/maxmind/MaxMind-DB-Reader-php)
|
552
|
+
* [Python](https://github.com/maxmind/MaxMind-DB-Reader-python)
|
553
|
+
* [Ruby](https://github.com/maxmind/MaxMind-DB-Reader-ruby)
|
554
|
+
|
555
|
+
## Authors
|
556
|
+
|
557
|
+
This specification was created by the following authors:
|
558
|
+
|
559
|
+
* Greg Oschwald \<goschwald@maxmind.com\>
|
560
|
+
* Dave Rolsky \<drolsky@maxmind.com\>
|
561
|
+
* Boris Zentner \<bzentner@maxmind.com\>
|
562
|
+
|
563
|
+
## License
|
564
|
+
|
565
|
+
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0
|
566
|
+
Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit
|
567
|
+
[http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/)
|
568
|
+
or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain
|
569
|
+
View, California, 94041, USA
|
570
|
+
|