Thanks Steve, that works nicely in the testing I've done so far.  

I'll keep in mind about the pgfoundry project.  I don't see this growing
overly large, but you never know.  I didn't realize the CIDR type
couldn't be indexed.  

Scot Kreienkamp
skre...@la-z-boy.com


-----Original Message-----
From: pgsql-general-ow...@postgresql.org
[mailto:pgsql-general-ow...@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of Steve Atkins
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 2:18 PM
To: pgsql-general General
Subject: Re: [GENERAL] CIDR data type query help


On May 19, 2010, at 10:32 AM, Scot Kreienkamp wrote:

> Hi everyone,
> 
> I have a column of type CIDR in a table that I am querying that
contains
> the values of 10/8, 10.1/16,10.1.28/24, and 10.1.28.95.  I am trying
to
> return only the one record that's most specific compared to the IP
> address I'm currently on as this is being done in a CGI script.  If
> there's no specific match for the IP of the originating workstation
then
> it should return the /24 if it's there, then the /16 if it's there,
etc.
> I have never worked with the CIDR type, and a novice when it comes to
> SQL query language, so I have no idea how to approach this.

Something like this (untested):

select foo from table where foo >>= '10.1.28.14' order by masklen(foo)
desc limit 1;

You likely want to look at http://pgfoundry.org/projects/ip4r/ as an
alternative,
if the table is likely to grow beyond a few dozen rows. It's usefully
indexable
for "contains" queries, unlike the native cidr type,

Cheers,
  Steve




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