How to use Django to get the name for the host server?
I need the name of the hosting server instead of the client name?
I generally put something like this in settings.py
:
import socket
try:
HOSTNAME = socket.gethostname()
except:
HOSTNAME = 'localhost'
If you have a request (e.g., this is inside a view), you can look at request.get_host()
which gets you a complete locname (host and port), taking into account reverse proxy headers if any. If you don't have a request, you should configure the hostname somewhere in your settings. Just looking at the system hostname can be ambiguous in a lot of cases, virtual hosts being the most common.
If you need to get http(s)://hostname/
you can use the following:
request.build_absolute_uri('/')
All useful methods are listed here
Just add to @Tobu's answer. If you have a request object, and you would like to know the protocol (i.e. http / https), you can use request.scheme (as suggested by @RyneEverett's comment).
Alternatively, you can do (original answer below):
if request.is_secure():
protocol = 'https'
else:
protocol = 'http'
Because is_secure() returns True
if request was made with HTTPS.
Try os.environ.get('HOSTNAME')
Basically, You can take with request.get_host()
in your view/viewset. It returns <ip:port>
If you have a request object, you can use this function:
def get_current_host(self, request: Request) -> str:
scheme = request.is_secure() and "https" or "http"
return f'{scheme}://{request.get_host()}/'
f"{request.scheme}://{request.get_host()}/"
?
request.get_raw_uri() # example https://192.168.32.181:10555/
To get my django server name I tried this
host = f"{ request.scheme }://{ request.META.get('REMOTE_ADDR') }"
REMOTE_ADDR
is usually the IP address of the client. The only time that is going to be the host server is if the request is made from localhost.
Nov 1, 2021 at 7:35