Endpoints

Note

This section document what you can call directly when you use PyFunceble as an imported module.

Warning

Some of those methods may be deprecated and removed in the future (open for discussion).

The tool to check the availability or syntax of domain, IP or URL.

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Author:
Nissar Chababy, @funilrys, contactTATAfunilrysTODTODcom
Special thanks:
https://pyfunceble.github.io/#/special-thanks
Contributors:
https://pyfunceble.github.io/#/contributors
Project link:
https://github.com/funilrys/PyFunceble
Project documentation:
https://pyfunceble.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
Project homepage:
https://pyfunceble.github.io/

License:

Copyright 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021 Nissar Chababy

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

    http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
PyFunceble.get_complements(subject: str, include_given: bool = False) → List[str][source]

Provides the complements of a given subject.

A complement is a for example example.org if www.example.org is given and vice-versa.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import Subject2Complements

my_subject = "example.org"
complements = Subject2Complements(
    my_subject
).get_converted(include_given=True)
Parameters:
  • subject – The subject to work with.
  • include_given – Include the given subject in the result.
PyFunceble.is_domain(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is a syntactically valid second level domain or subdomain.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import DomainSyntaxChecker

my_subject = "example.org"
the_status = DomainSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is a domain (2nd level or subdomain).
print(f"{my_subject} is domain ? {the_status.is_valid()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_domain_malicious(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given domain is malicious.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import DomainReputationChecker

my_subject = "example.org"
the_status = DomainReputationChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is malicious.
print(f"{my_subject} is Malicious ? {the_status.is_malicious()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_ip(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is a syntactically valid IP range.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import IPSyntaxChecker

my_subject = "192.168.0.0"
the_status = IPSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is an IP (v4 or v6).
print(f"{my_subject} is IP ? {the_status.is_valid()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_ip_range(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is a syntactically valid IP range.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import IPSyntaxChecker

my_subject = "192.168.0.0"
the_status = IPSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is an IP range (v4 or v6).
print(f"{my_subject} is IP range ? {the_status.is_valid_range()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_ipv4(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is a syntactically valid IPv4.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import IPSyntaxChecker

my_subject = "192.168.0.0"
the_status = IPSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is an IPv4.
print(f"{my_subject} is IPv4 ? {the_status.is_valid_v4()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_ipv4_malicious(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given IPv4 is malicious.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import IPReputationChecker

my_subject = "192.168.0.1"
the_status = IPReputationChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is malicious.
print(f"{my_subject} is Malicious ? {the_status.is_malicious()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_ipv4_range(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is a syntactically valid IPv4 range.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import IPSyntaxChecker

my_subject = "192.168.0.0"
the_status = IPSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is IPv4 range.
print(f"{my_subject} is IPv4 range ? {the_status.is_valid_v4_range()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_ipv6(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is a syntactically valid IPv6.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import IPSyntaxChecker

my_subject = "192.168.0.0"
the_status = IPSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is an IPv6.
print(f"{my_subject} is IPv6 ? {the_status.is_valid_v6()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_ipv6_range(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is a syntactically valid IPv6 range.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import IPSyntaxChecker

my_subject = "::1"
the_status = IPSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is IPv6 range.
print(f"{my_subject} is IPv6 range ? {the_status.is_valid_v6_range()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_second_level_domain(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is a syntactically valid second level domain.

Warning

This method was added for retrocompatibility. It may be removed in the future and is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import SecondLvlDomainSyntaxChecker

my_subject = "example.org"
the_status = SecondLvlDomainSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is a second level domain.
print(f"{my_subject} is 2nd level domain ? {the_status.is_valid()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_subdomain(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is a syntactically valid subdomain.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import SubDomainSyntaxChecker

my_subject = "hello.example.org"
the_status = SubDomainSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is a subdomain.
print(f"{my_subject} is subdomain ? {the_status.is_valid()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.is_url(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given subject is syntactically a valid URL.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import DomainReputationChecker

my_subject = "https://example.org"
the_status = URLSyntaxChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is a URL.
print(f"{my_subject} is URL ? {the_status.is_valid()}")
Parma subject:The subject to check.
PyFunceble.is_url_malicious(subject: str, **kwargs) → bool[source]

Checks if the given URL is malicious.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import URLReputationChecker

my_subject = "https://example.org"
the_status = URLReputationChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is malicious.
print(f"{my_subject} is Malicious ? {the_status.is_malicious()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.load_config(*args, **kwargs) → None[source]

Placeholder before deletion.

Since 4.0.0, you are not required to load the configuration before hand. If you still want too because you may want to use a special CLI related method, you can doing it so:

import PyFunceble.facility

PyFunceble.facility.ConfigLoader.start()
PyFunceble.test(subject: str, **kwargs) → PyFunceble.checker.availability.status.AvailabilityCheckerStatus[source]

Checks the avaialbility of the given subject assuming that it is a domain or an IP.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import DomainAndIPAvailabilityChecker

my_subject = "example.org"
the_status = DomainAndIPAvailabilityChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is available.
print(f"{my_subject} is available ? {the_status.is_available()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.
PyFunceble.url_test(subject: str, **kwargs) → PyFunceble.checker.availability.status.AvailabilityCheckerStatus[source]

Checks the availability of the given subject assuming that it is a URL.

Warning

This method may be removed in the future. It is still available for convenience.

Please consider the following alternative example:

from PyFunceble import URLAvailabilityChecker

my_subject = "http://example.org"
the_status = URLAvailabilityChecker(
    my_subject
).get_status()

# Get the status in dict format.
print(the_status.to_dict())

# Get the status in json format.
print(the_status.to_json())

# Check if it is available.
print(f"{my_subject} is available ? {the_status.is_available()}")
Parameters:subject – The subject to work with.