Skip to content

Ip

Edit this page

Validates that a value is a valid IP address. By default, this will validate the value as IPv4, but a number of different options exist to validate as IPv6 and many other combinations.

Applies to property or method
Class Ip
Validator IpValidator

Basic Usage

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
// src/Entity/Author.php
namespace App\Entity;

use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints as Assert;

class Author
{
    #[Assert\Ip]
    protected string $ipAddress;
}

Note

As with most of the other constraints, null and empty strings are considered valid values. This is to allow them to be optional values. If the value is mandatory, a common solution is to combine this constraint with NotBlank.

Options

groups

type: array | string default: null

It defines the validation group or groups of this constraint. Read more about validation groups.

message

type: string default: This is not a valid IP address.

This message is shown if the string is not a valid IP address.

You can use the following parameters in this message:

Parameter Description
{{ value }} The current (invalid) value
{{ label }} Corresponding form field label

normalizer

type: a PHP callable default: null

This option allows to define the PHP callable applied to the given value before checking if it is valid.

For example, you may want to pass the 'trim' string to apply the trim PHP function in order to ignore leading and trailing whitespace during validation.

payload

type: mixed default: null

This option can be used to attach arbitrary domain-specific data to a constraint. The configured payload is not used by the Validator component, but its processing is completely up to you.

For example, you may want to use several error levels to present failed constraints differently in the front-end depending on the severity of the error.

version

type: string default: 4

This determines exactly how the IP address is validated. This option defines a lot of different possible values based on the ranges and the type of IP address that you want to allow/deny:

Ranges Allowed IPv4 addresses only IPv6 addresses only Both IPv4 and IPv6
All 4 6 all
All except private 4_no_priv 6_no_priv all_no_priv
All except reserved 4_no_res 6_no_res all_no_res
All except public 4_no_public 6_no_public all_no_public
Only private 4_private 6_private all_private
Only reserved 4_reserved 6_reserved all_reserved
Only public 4_public 6_public all_public

7.1

The *_no_public, *_reserved and *_public ranges were introduced in Symfony 7.1.

This work, including the code samples, is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 license.
TOC
    Version