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My Tomcat instance is listening to multiple IP adress, but I want to control what source IP address is used when opening a URLConnection. How can I specify this?

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If my tomcat is listening on two IP adresses with different gateways (on different subnets) what will happen if the gateway for the IP address I specify as proxy is temporarily unavailable, will openConnection throw an exception or will it fall back to the the other gateway/ip? – stian Sep 18 '08 at 14:28
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3 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

This should do the trick:

URL url = new URL(yourUrlHere);
Proxy proxy = new Proxy(Proxy.Type.DIRECT, 
    new InetSocketAddress( 
        InetAddress.getByAddress(
            new byte[]{your, ip, interface, here}), yourTcpPortHere));
URLConnection conn = url.openConnection(proxy);

And you are done. Dont forget to handle exceptions nicely and off course change the values to suit your scenario.

Ah and I omitted the import statements

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This fails with "java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: type DIRECT is not compatible with address my.ip.address.here". Diving into the source for Proxy, I see that this exception will be thrown whenever type DIRECT is attempted. – user359996 Sep 9 '11 at 1:03
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Using the Apache commons HttpClient I have also found the following to work (removed try/catch for clarity):

HostConfiguration hostConfiguration = new HostConfiguration();
byte b[] = new byte[4];
b[0] = new Integer(192).byteValue();
b[1] = new Integer(168).byteValue();
b[2] = new Integer(1).byteValue();
b[3] = new Integer(11).byteValue();

hostConfiguration.setLocalAddress(InetAddress.getByAddress(b));

HttpClient client = new HttpClient();
client.setHostConfiguration(hostConfiguration);
GetMethod method = new GetMethod("http://remoteserver/");
method.getParams().setParameter(HttpMethodParams.RETRY_HANDLER,
    new DefaultHttpMethodRetryHandler(3, false));
int statusCode = client.executeMethod(method);

if (statusCode != HttpStatus.SC_OK) {
    System.err.println("Method failed: " + method.getStatusLine());
}

byte[] responseBody = method.getResponseBody();
System.out.println(new String(responseBody));");

However, I still wonder what would happen if the gateway of the IP is down (192.168.1.11 in this case). Will the next gateway be tried or will it fail?

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With the 4.1 codebase (and perhaps earlier?), you can specify the local IP address in a single line: object.getParams().setParameter( "http.route.local-address", ipAddress ), where object is either the HttpClient or the HttpRequest. – user359996 Mar 22 '11 at 5:24
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The obvious portable way would be to set a Proxy in URL.openConnection. The proxy can be in local host, you can then write a very simple proxy that binds the local address of the client socket.

If you can't modify the source where the URL is connected, you can replace the URLStreamHandler either when calling the URL constructor or globally through URL.setURLStreamHandlerFactory. The URLStreamHandler can then delegate to the default http/https handler, modifying the openConnection call.

A more extreme method would be to completely replace the handler (perhaps extending the implementation in your JRE). Alternatively, alternative (open source) http clients are available.

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