Twenty is a small package to help you get location (city/region and lat/lon coordinates) and ISP data from an IP address or URL. Other utilities are provided, like a method that provides the approximate distance between two IP addresses. All of this can also be done by specifying the FQDN, like "stackabuse.com" or "google.com".
For location data, the ipinfo.io REST service is used.
Twenty was created in conjunction with this article.
Twenty can be installed as a project dependency or global CLI tool:
$ [sudo] npm install twenty [-g]
There are two ways to use this package: through the command line or by within your code.
$ twenty [command] [ip | url] [-j]
Twenty takes an optional IP (or URL) address as an argument. If one isn't given, then your own IP address is used. If you're using the distance
command, then you must provide at least one IP/URL, and optionally two.
The -j
flag will print out all of the IP location info JSON format.
$ twenty stackabuse.com -j
{
"ip": "54.173.122.231",
"hostname": "ec2-54-173-122-231.compute-1.amazonaws.com",
"city": "Ashburn",
"region": "Virginia",
"country": "US",
"loc": "39.0437,-77.4875",
"org": "AS14618 Amazon.com, Inc.",
"postal": "20147"
}
Twenty can also be used programmatically. Currently, the functions provided are info()
and distance()
.
info()
: Provides you with all the IP info as a JavaScript objectdistance()
: Calculates the distance between two IPs/URLs in kilometers
var twenty = require('twenty');
twenty.info('8.8.8.8', function(err, data) {
console.log('Google\'s DNS server is located at:', data.loc);
});
twenty.distance('8.8.8.8', '54.173.122.231', function(err, distance) {
console.log('Distance between Google\'s DNS and stackabuse.com server (km):', distance);
});
Since Twenty uses the ipinfo.io REST service for getting location information, you'll need to be aware of your usage. The daily limit for free usage is 1,000 requests per day. Check the ipinfo.io About page for more information.
The name 'Twenty' came from the phrase "What's your 20?", which came from the police 10-code "10-20", which means "identify your position" or "where are you?".
Copyright (c) 2016 Scott Robinson
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