5

I am trying to get the IP Address using NSHost. With the NSHost object I can use the addresses method to access an array of objects one of which is the IP Address. I fear though that the IP Address may change position in the array from one machine to the other. Is there a way to access this information in a universal way?

There was an attempt to answer this question in a previous post, but as you can see it falls short.

IP Address? - Cocoa

Here is my code:

+(NSString *) ipAddress {
    NSHost * h = [[[NSHost currentHost] addresses] objectAtIndex:1];
    return h ;  
}
1
  • 1
    Your code is wrong anyway, because you're returning an NSHost object instead of an NSString object.
    – Abizern
    Jul 16, 2010 at 16:16

7 Answers 7

12

The only thing I can think of is to use something like "http://www.dyndns.org/cgi-bin/check_ip.cgi" others may have a better way.

This is an example,(i.e a quick cobbled together code)

NSUInteger  an_Integer;
NSArray * ipItemsArray;
NSString *externalIP;

NSURL *iPURL = [NSURL URLWithString:@"http://www.dyndns.org/cgi-bin/check_ip.cgi"];

if (iPURL) {
    NSError *error = nil;
    NSString *theIpHtml = [NSString stringWithContentsOfURL:iPURL 
                                                  encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding 
                                                     error:&error];
    if (!error) {
                NSScanner *theScanner;
        NSString *text = nil;

        theScanner = [NSScanner scannerWithString:theIpHtml];

        while ([theScanner isAtEnd] == NO) {

                // find start of tag
            [theScanner scanUpToString:@"<" intoString:NULL] ; 

                // find end of tag
            [theScanner scanUpToString:@">" intoString:&text] ;

                // replace the found tag with a space
                //(you can filter multi-spaces out later if you wish)
            theIpHtml = [theIpHtml stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:
                    [ NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@>", text]
                                                   withString:@" "] ;
            ipItemsArray =[theIpHtml  componentsSeparatedByString:@" "];
            an_Integer=[ipItemsArray indexOfObject:@"Address:"];

                externalIP =[ipItemsArray objectAtIndex:  ++an_Integer];



        } 


            NSLog(@"%@",externalIP);
    } else {
        NSLog(@"Oops... g %d, %@", 
              [error code], 
              [error localizedDescription]);
    }
}




[pool drain];
return 0;}
4
  • 1
    Wow! Thanks so much. I just cut and past the code and worked fine. Well done! Jul 21, 2010 at 21:56
  • This is the best solution I have found yet. It works with ARC and seems great in xcode 4.6. It can be slow sometimes however, so if you plan on using it in production, I recommend you GCD it or something. THANK YOU!
    – Siriss
    Mar 21, 2013 at 3:48
  • @markhunte when i change proxy to uk This method show the ip 127.0.0.1 but i found in google 146.185.18.230 Your public IP address so please give me solution .Thanks in advandce
    – Ilesh P
    Sep 15, 2014 at 7:15
  • @Ilesh That really is not a lot of information to go on. Please post this as a question explaining exactly what you are doing including the steps you have take to make your changes and also refer to this post.
    – markhunte
    Sep 15, 2014 at 7:38
9

I have used this on many machines without problems.

 -(void) getIPWithNSHost{
    NSArray *addresses = [[NSHost currentHost] addresses];

for (NSString *anAddress in addresses) {
    if (![anAddress hasPrefix:@"127"] && [[anAddress componentsSeparatedByString:@"."] count] == 4) {
         stringAddress = anAddress;
        break;
    } else {
        stringAddress = @"IPv4 address not available" ;
    }
}
        //NSLog (@"getIPWithNSHost: stringAddress = %@ ",stringAddress);    

}

NSString *stringAddress; is declared else where

3
  • 1
    I like this answer, but when I use the code I get a different output from what whatismyipaddress.com gives me (although they are both dotted quads). The reason why I don't understand the difference is definitely due to my ignorance on the subject. I guess this is one of those questions where there is not one simple answer :) Jul 18, 2010 at 11:07
  • It get you private IP address on you network. whatismyipaddress.com will be getting you public Ip address. The one seen from the internet. See my new answer below..
    – markhunte
    Jul 19, 2010 at 19:36
  • @markhunte Is there a possibility that IPv4 is not available ?? or is it always expected to be present ?
    – Ahmed
    Feb 21, 2013 at 7:57
1

I wanted to update my original answer on getting an external ip.

There is not much change but I wanted to show how to get and parse the HTML with use NSXMLDocument and Xquary

This also gives a small illustration of how you can parse HTML by getting the nodes. Which in my opinion is more straight forward. Although NSXMLDocument is initially for XML it will parse the HTML DOM tree

    NSString *externalIP;

    ///--DYNDNS.ORG  URL

    NSURL *iPURL = [NSURL URLWithString:@"http://www.dyndns.org/cgi-bin/check_ip.cgi"];
    if (iPURL) {

        NSError *err_p = nil;


        //--use NSXMLDocument to get the url:(*Requests NSXMLNode to preserve whitespace characters (such as tabs and carriage returns) in the XML source that are not part of node content*)
    NSXMLDocument * xmlDoc = [[NSXMLDocument alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:iPURL
                                                                  options:(NSXMLNodePreserveWhitespace|
                                                                           NSXMLNodePreserveCDATA)
                                                                    error:&err_p];

    if (xmlDoc == nil) {

        //-- That did not work so lets see if we can change the malformed XML into valid XML during processing of the document.
        xmlDoc = [[NSXMLDocument alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:iPURL
                                                      options:NSXMLDocumentTidyXML
                                                        error:&err_p];

    }


    if (!err_p) {
 NSError * error;
        //-- We will use XQuary to get the text from the child node. Dyndns.org page is very simple. So we just need to get the Body text.

    NSString *xpathQueryTR =  @"//body/text()";
        //-- we get the first node's string value. We use string value to in effect cast to NSString.
        //We the seperate the string into components using a space. and obtain the last object in the returned array.
        //--This gives us the IP string without the "Current IP Address:" string.
    externalIP = [[[[[xmlDoc nodesForXPath:xpathQueryTR error:&error]objectAtIndex:0] stringValue]componentsSeparatedByString:@" "]lastObject];

    if (!error) {

    NSLog(@"%@",externalIP);

    }else {
        NSLog(@"Oops... g %ld, %@",
              (long)[error code],
              [error localizedDescription]);
    }

    }else {
        NSLog(@"Oops... g %ld, %@",
              (long)[err_p code],
              [err_p localizedDescription]);
    }
}
1

Made an utility class to find the IP addresses. Minimalistic approach. You can robustify it with more conditions or regex checking.

 NSLog(@"Addresses: %@", [[NSHost currentHost] addresses]);

This is the list returned by NSHost

 "fe80::1610:9fff:fee1:8c2f%en0",
 "192.168.212.61",
 "fe80::2829:3bff:fee6:9133%awdl0",
 "fe80::e54b:8494:bbc8:3989%utun0",
 "fd68:cc16:fad8:ded9:e54b:8494:bbc8:3989",
 "10.11.51.61",
 "::1",
 "127.0.0.1",
 "fe80::1%lo0"

Test method,

- (void)testHost {
    NSLog(@"Addresses: %@", [[NSHost currentHost] addresses]);

    for (NSString *s in [[NSHost currentHost] addresses]) {
        IPAddress *addr = [[IPAddress alloc] initWithString:s];
        if (![addr isLocalHost] && [addr isIPV4]) {
            // do something
        }
    }
}

IPAddress.h

#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>

@interface IPAddress : NSObject

@property (nonatomic, strong) NSString *IPAddress;

- (id)initWithString:(NSString *)ipaddress;

- (BOOL)isLocalHost;
- (BOOL) isIPV4;
- (BOOL) isIPV6;

@end

IPAddress.m

#import "IPAddress.h"

@implementation IPAddress

- (id)initWithString:(NSString *)ipaddress {
    self = [super init];
    if (self) {
        self.IPAddress = ipaddress;
    }
    return self;
}

- (BOOL)isLocalHost {
    if (self.IPAddress == nil) return NO;
    if ([@"127.0.0.1" compare:self.IPAddress options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch] == NSOrderedSame) {
        return YES;
    }

    if ([@"localhost" compare:self.IPAddress options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch] == NSOrderedSame) {
        return YES;
    }

    if ([@"::1" compare:self.IPAddress options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch] == NSOrderedSame) {
        return YES;
    }

    return NO;
}

- (BOOL) isIPV4 {
    NSArray *ar = [self.IPAddress componentsSeparatedByString:@"."];
    if (ar.count == 4) {
        return YES;
    }
    return NO;
}

- (BOOL) isIPV6 {
    if (![self isIPV4]) {
        if ([self.IPAddress rangeOfString:@":"].location != NSNotFound) {
            return YES;
        }
    }
    return NO;
}

@end
0

As the answers to the question you mention above have said, there are a variety of IP addresses that a single machine can have. If that is what you want, then you might be better off using the names method of NSHost to get an array of names, which you can then filter for the suffix (i.e *.lan) to get the name of the host you want with this name. In my case. the .lan address returns my network ip address as a dotted quad.

If you want to find the external ip address, then this is a good answer to look at.

0

My first Answer is to supply the Private IP address assigned to the Machine on private network from say your router.

If you want to see the public IP, which is the one facing the internet. Normally assigned by your service provider. You may want to look at the answer by Jim Dovey --> here

I tested it and it worked well, but read the rest of the comments and answers which point to ambiguities in trying to get a public IP.

1
  • Mark, thanks for the explanation. The main problem with Jim Dovey's answer is that it uses PortMapper which only runs on 10.5 and newer (check link to docs). The app I'm working on needs to be able to run on 10.4. If you have any suggestions, I'm all ears ;) developer.apple.com/mac/library/samplecode/PortMapper/… Jul 20, 2010 at 11:20
0

You can create a category on NSHost and do something like this:

#import <arpa/inet.h>
#import <ifaddrs.h>
#import <net/if.h>

.h

+ (NSDictionary *) interfaceIP4Addresses;
+ (NSDictionary *) interfaceIP6Addresses;
+ (NSDictionary *) interfaceIPAddresses;

.m

typedef NS_ENUM(NSUInteger, AddressType) {

    AddressTypeBoth     = 0,
    AddressTypeIPv4     = 1,
    AddressTypeIPv6     = 2
};

@implementation SomeClass

#pragma mark - Helper Methods:

+ (NSDictionary *) _interfaceAddressesForFamily:(AddressType)family {

    NSMutableDictionary *interfaceInfo = [NSMutableDictionary dictionary];
    struct ifaddrs *interfaces;

    if ( (0 == getifaddrs(&interfaces)) ) {

        struct ifaddrs *interface;

        for ( interface=interfaces; interface != NULL; interface=interface->ifa_next ) {

            if ( (interface->ifa_flags & IFF_UP) && !(interface->ifa_flags & IFF_LOOPBACK) ) {

                const struct sockaddr_in *addr = (const struct sockaddr_in *)interface->ifa_addr;

                if ( addr && addr->sin_family == PF_INET ) {

                    if ( (family == AddressTypeBoth) || (family == AddressTypeIPv4) ) {
                        char ip4Address[INET_ADDRSTRLEN];
                        inet_ntop( addr->sin_family, &(addr->sin_addr), ip4Address, INET_ADDRSTRLEN );

                        [interfaceInfo setObject:[NSString stringWithUTF8String:interface->ifa_name]
                                          forKey:[NSString stringWithUTF8String:ip4Address]];

                } } else if ( addr && addr->sin_family == PF_INET6 ) {

                    if ( (family == AddressTypeBoth) || (family == AddressTypeIPv6) ) {
                        char ip6Address[INET6_ADDRSTRLEN];
                        inet_ntop( addr->sin_family, &(addr->sin_addr), ip6Address, INET6_ADDRSTRLEN );

                        [interfaceInfo setObject:[NSString stringWithUTF8String:interface->ifa_name]
                                          forKey:[NSString stringWithUTF8String:ip6Address]];
                } }
            }

        } freeifaddrs( interfaces );

    } return [NSDictionary dictionaryWithDictionary:interfaceInfo];
}

#pragma mark - Class Methods:

+ (NSDictionary *) interfaceIP4Addresses { return [self _interfaceAddressesForFamily:AddressTypeIPv4]; }
+ (NSDictionary *) interfaceIP6Addresses { return [self _interfaceAddressesForFamily:AddressTypeIPv6]; }
+ (NSDictionary *) interfaceIPAddresses  { return [self _interfaceAddressesForFamily:AddressTypeBoth]; }

@end

This works really fast and well. If you need other info or to monitor then use System Configuration framework.

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