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How can I find local IP addresses (i.e. 192.168.x.x or 10.0.x.x) in Python platform independently and using only the standard library?

6
  • 12
    The local IP? Or public IP? How are you going to deal with systems with multiple IPs? Nov 5, 2008 at 17:29
  • use ifconfig -a and use the output from there... Jun 23, 2011 at 11:18
  • 19
    @Fredrik That's a bad idea. First of all, you're unnecessarily forking a new process, and that may prevent your program from working in tightly locked configurations (or, you'll have to allow rights your program doesn't need). Secondly, you'll introduce bugs for users of different locales. Thirdly, if you decide to start a new program at all, you shouldn't start a deprecated one - ip addr is far more suitable (and easier to parse, to boot).
    – phihag
    Jun 23, 2011 at 13:07
  • 14
    @phihag you are absolutely correct, thanks for correcting my stupidity Jun 24, 2011 at 20:16
  • 1
    A more fundamental problem here is that in a properly written modern networking program the right (set of) local IP address(es) depends on the peer, or the set of potential peers. If the local IP address is needed to bind a socket to a particular interface, then it is a policy matter. If the local IP address is needed to hand it over to a peer so that the peer can "call back", i.e. to open a connection back to the local machine, then the situation depends on whether there are any NAT (Network Address Translation) boxes in between. If there are no NATs, getsocknameis a good choice. Apr 30, 2012 at 4:58

50 Answers 50

640

I just found this but it seems a bit hackish, however they say tried it on *nix and I did on windows and it worked.

import socket
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
s.connect(("8.8.8.8", 80))
print(s.getsockname()[0])
s.close()

This assumes you have an internet access, and that there is no local proxy.

24
  • 39
    Nice if you have several interfaces on the machine, and needs the one which routes to e.g. gmail.com
    – elzapp
    Oct 20, 2010 at 14:16
  • 5
    It might be a good idea to catch socket.error exceptions which may be risen by s.connect()!
    – phobie
    Oct 14, 2011 at 14:52
  • 45
    It would be better to use IP address instead of a domain name -- it must be faster and independent from DNS availability. E.g. we can use 8.8.8.8 IP -- Google's public DNS server.
    – wobmene
    Apr 16, 2012 at 12:27
  • 12
    Very clever, works perfectly. Instead of gmail or 8.8.8.8, you can also use the IP or address of the server you want to be seen from, if that is applicable. Aug 22, 2013 at 8:07
  • 3
    This example has an external dependency of being able to actually resolve gmail.com. If you set it to an ip address that is not on your local lan (doesn't matter if it's up or down) it'll work without dependencies and without network traffic.
    – grim
    May 11, 2015 at 18:29
568
import socket
socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname())

This won't work always (returns 127.0.0.1 on machines having the hostname in /etc/hosts as 127.0.0.1), a paliative would be what gimel shows, use socket.getfqdn() instead. Of course your machine needs a resolvable hostname.

22
  • 55
    One should note that this isn't a platform independent solution. A lot of Linuxes will return 127.0.0.1 as your IP address using this method. Oct 3, 2008 at 12:07
  • 25
    A variation: socket.gethostbyname(socket.getfqdn())
    – gimel
    Oct 3, 2008 at 12:08
  • 65
    This appears to only return a single IP address. What if the machine has multiple addresses? Oct 23, 2009 at 14:39
  • 42
    On Ubuntu this returns 127.0.1.1 for some reason.
    – slikts
    Mar 20, 2012 at 5:52
  • 27
    @Jason R. Coombs, use following code to retrieve list of IPv4 addresses that belong to the host machine: socket.gethostbyname_ex(socket.gethostname())[-1]
    – Barmaley
    May 15, 2015 at 20:36
473

This method returns the "primary" IP on the local box (the one with a default route).

  • Does NOT need routable net access or any connection at all.
  • Works even if all interfaces are unplugged from the network.
  • Does NOT need or even try to get anywhere else.
  • Works with NAT, public, private, external, and internal IP's
  • Pure Python 2 (or 3) with no external dependencies.
  • Works on Linux, Windows, and OSX.

Python 3 or 2:

    import socket
    def get_ip():
        s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
        s.settimeout(0)
        try:
            # doesn't even have to be reachable
            s.connect(('10.254.254.254', 1))
            IP = s.getsockname()[0]
        except Exception:
            IP = '127.0.0.1'
        finally:
            s.close()
        return IP
    print(get_ip())

This returns a single IP which is the primary (the one with a default route). If you need instead all IP's attached to all interfaces (including localhost, etc), see something like this answer.

If you are behind a NAT firewall like your wifi router at home, then this will not show your public NAT IP, but instead your private IP on the local network which has a default route to your local WIFI router. If you instead need your external IP:

  • running this function on THAT external device (wifi router), or

  • connecting to an external service such as https://www.ipify.org/ that could reflect back the IP as it's seen from the outside world

... but those ideas are completely different from the original question. :)

21
  • 11
    Works in Raspbian with Python 2 and 3 ! Sep 23, 2015 at 17:03
  • 3
    Brilliant. Works on Win7,8,8.1 + Linux Mint & Arch, including VMs.
    – shermy
    Mar 3, 2016 at 0:07
  • 3
    For some reason this does not work on Mac OS X El Capitan 10.11.6 (it generates an exception OS error: [Errno 49] Can't assign requested address). Changing the port from '0' to '1' : s.connect(('10.255.255.255', 1)) worked for me both on Mac OS X and Linux Ubuntu 17.04 Apr 15, 2017 at 6:36
  • 40
    This should be the accepted answer. socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname()) gives horrible results. Oct 15, 2018 at 18:19
  • 3
    I get a Permission denied exception with this, on Ubuntu 22.04
    – Bram
    Jun 14, 2022 at 17:17
166

As an alias called myip:

alias myip="python -c 'import socket; print([l for l in ([ip for ip in socket.gethostbyname_ex(socket.gethostname())[2] if not ip.startswith(\"127.\")][:1], [[(s.connect((\"8.8.8.8\", 53)), s.getsockname()[0], s.close()) for s in [socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)]][0][1]]) if l][0][0])'"
  • Works correctly with Python 2.x, Python 3.x, modern and old Linux distros, OSX/macOS and Windows for finding the current IPv4 address.
  • Will not return the correct result for machines with multiple IP addresses, IPv6, no configured IP address or no internet access.
  • Reportedly, this does not work on the latest releases of macOS.

NOTE: If you intend to use something like this within a Python program, the proper way is to make use of a Python module that has IPv6 support.


Same as above, but only the Python code:

import socket
print([l for l in ([ip for ip in socket.gethostbyname_ex(socket.gethostname())[2] if not ip.startswith("127.")][:1], [[(s.connect(('8.8.8.8', 53)), s.getsockname()[0], s.close()) for s in [socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)]][0][1]]) if l][0][0])
  • This will throw an exception if no IP address is configured.

Version that will also work on LANs without an internet connection:

import socket
print((([ip for ip in socket.gethostbyname_ex(socket.gethostname())[2] if not ip.startswith("127.")] or [[(s.connect(("8.8.8.8", 53)), s.getsockname()[0], s.close()) for s in [socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)]][0][1]]) + ["no IP found"])[0])

(thanks @ccpizza)


Background:

Using socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname()) did not work here, because one of the computers I was on had an /etc/hosts with duplicate entries and references to itself. socket.gethostbyname() only returns the last entry in /etc/hosts.

This was my initial attempt, which weeds out all addresses starting with "127.":

import socket
print([ip for ip in socket.gethostbyname_ex(socket.gethostname())[2] if not ip.startswith("127.")][:1])

This works with Python 2 and 3, on Linux and Windows, but does not deal with several network devices or IPv6. However, it stopped working on recent Linux distros, so I tried this alternative technique instead. It tries to connect to the Google DNS server at 8.8.8.8 at port 53:

import socket
print([(s.connect(('8.8.8.8', 53)), s.getsockname()[0], s.close()) for s in [socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)]][0][1])

This method also works on the latest versions of macOS!

Then I combined the two above techniques into a one-liner that should work everywhere, and created the myip alias and Python snippet at the top of this answer.

With the increasing popularity of IPv6, and for servers with multiple network interfaces, using a third-party Python module for finding the IP address is probably both more robust and reliable than any of the methods listed here.

18
  • 3
    @Alexander: Just saying that this answer is much less useful than it used to be (and it's not like filtering out duplicates is a big deal ;). According to documentation socket.getaddrinfo() should work consistently across platforms - but I only checked it on Linux, didn't bother about any other operating systems. Oct 4, 2013 at 7:01
  • 1
    @Alexander, /etc/resolve.conf: No such file or directory and I have local IPv4 address shown by ifconfig. Dec 16, 2013 at 16:30
  • 2
    I can confirm that the updated version works with Ubuntu 14.04 with both Python2 and Py3k. Jun 6, 2014 at 22:55
  • 4
    The "update" shows a nice trick with connect() on a UDP socket. It sends no traffic but does let you find what would be the sender address for packets to the specified recipient. The port is likely irrelevant (even 0 should work). On a multihomed host it's important to pick an address in the right subnet. Jun 13, 2014 at 21:19
  • 1
    The combined alias code initiates an unnecessary external connection to 8.8.8.8 even if gethostbyname_ex returned a valid IP. This will break in 'walled garden'-type of LANs with no internet. The external call can be made conditional by using or, e.g.: ips = [ip for ip in socket.gethostbyname_ex(socket.gethostname())[2] if not ip.startswith("127.")] or [[(s.connect(("8.8.8.8", 53)), s.getsockname()[0], s.close()) for s in [socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)]][0][1]]
    – ccpizza
    Oct 22, 2017 at 9:47
105

You can use the netifaces module. Just type:

pip install netifaces

in your command shell and it will install itself on default Python installation.

Then you can use it like this:

from netifaces import interfaces, ifaddresses, AF_INET
for ifaceName in interfaces():
    addresses = [i['addr'] for i in ifaddresses(ifaceName).setdefault(AF_INET, [{'addr':'No IP addr'}] )]
    print '%s: %s' % (ifaceName, ', '.join(addresses))

On my computer it printed:

{45639BDC-1050-46E0-9BE9-075C30DE1FBC}: 192.168.0.100
{D43A468B-F3AE-4BF9-9391-4863A4500583}: 10.5.9.207

Author of this module claims it should work on Windows, UNIX and Mac OS X.

6
  • 24
    As stated in the question I want something from the default install, as in no additional installs needed.
    – UnkwnTech
    Oct 3, 2008 at 12:52
  • 6
    @MattJoiner Neither of this things is true any more (the latest version has Windows binaries on PyPI and does support Py3K).
    – al45tair
    May 2, 2014 at 15:42
  • 6
    @Jean-PaulCalderone FWIW, the latest version of netifaces does support IPv6 on Windows.
    – al45tair
    May 2, 2014 at 15:43
  • 3
    this module must be part of the standard library, given that python claims a 'batteries included' philosophy
    – ccpizza
    Oct 22, 2017 at 8:42
  • 1
    @MattJoiner - Note that on Ubuntu, the latest version requires no C compiler for either python or Py3K. And there are packages for the module as well. May 30, 2019 at 3:59
55

If the computer has a route to the Internet, this will always work to get the preferred local ip address, even if /etc/hosts is not set correctly.

import socket

s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
s.connect(('8.8.8.8', 1))  # connect() for UDP doesn't send packets
local_ip_address = s.getsockname()[0]
2
52

Socket API method

see https://stackoverflow.com/a/28950776/711085

Downsides:

  • Not cross-platform.
  • Requires more fallback code, tied to existence of particular addresses on the internet
  • This will also not work if you're behind a NAT
  • Probably creates a UDP connection, not independent of (usually ISP's) DNS availability (see other answers for ideas like using 8.8.8.8: Google's (coincidentally also DNS) server)
  • Make sure you make the destination address UNREACHABLE, like a numeric IP address that is spec-guaranteed to be unused. Do NOT use some domain like fakesubdomain.google.com or somefakewebsite.com; you'll still be spamming that party (now or in the future), and spamming your own network boxes as well in the process.

Reflector method

(Do note that this does not answer the OP's question of the local IP address, e.g. 192.168...; it gives you your public IP address, which might be more desirable depending on use case.)

You can query some site like whatismyip.com (but with an API), such as:

from urllib.request import urlopen
import re
def getPublicIp():
    data = str(urlopen('http://checkip.dyndns.com/').read())
    # data = '<html><head><title>Current IP Check</title></head><body>Current IP Address: 65.96.168.198</body></html>\r\n'

    return re.compile(r'Address: (\d+\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+)').search(data).group(1)

or if using python2:

from urllib import urlopen
import re
def getPublicIp():
    data = str(urlopen('http://checkip.dyndns.com/').read())
    # data = '<html><head><title>Current IP Check</title></head><body>Current IP Address: 65.96.168.198</body></html>\r\n'

    return re.compile(r'Address: (\d+\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+)').search(data).group(1)

Advantages:

  • One upside of this method is it's cross-platform
  • It works from behind ugly NATs (e.g. your home router).

Disadvantages (and workarounds):

  • Requires this website to be up, the format to not change (almost certainly won't), and your DNS servers to be working. One can mitigate this issue by also querying other third-party IP address reflectors in case of failure.
  • Possible attack vector if you don't query multiple reflectors (to prevent a compromised reflector from telling you that your address is something it's not), or if you don't use HTTPS (to prevent a man-in-the-middle attack pretending to be the server)

edit: Though initially I thought these methods were really bad (unless you use many fallbacks, the code may be irrelevant many years from now), it does pose the question "what is the internet?". A computer may have many interfaces pointing to many different networks. For a more thorough description of the topic, google for gateways and routes. A computer may be able to access an internal network via an internal gateway, or access the world-wide web via a gateway on for example a router (usually the case). The local IP address that the OP asks about is only well-defined with respect to a single link layer, so you have to specify that ("is it the network card, or the ethernet cable, which we're talking about?"). There may be multiple non-unique answers to this question as posed. However the global IP address on the world-wide web is probably well-defined (in the absence of massive network fragmentation): probably the return path via the gateway which can access the TLDs.

3
  • This will return your LAN-wide address if you're behind a NAT. If you're connecting to the Internet, you can connect to a web service that returns one of your public IP addresses.
    – phihag
    Jun 23, 2011 at 11:10
  • It doesn't create a TCP connection because it creates a UDP connection.
    – Anuj Gupta
    Mar 26, 2013 at 16:41
  • 2
    As an alternative in the socket API version, replace s.connect(('INSERT SOME TARGET WEBSITE.com', 0)) with s.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_BROADCAST, 1);s.connect(('<broadcast>', 0)) to avoid DNS lookup. (I guess there might be a problem with a broadcast if there is a firewall)
    – dlm
    Aug 12, 2013 at 3:55
41

On Linux:

>>> import socket, struct, fcntl
>>> sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
>>> sockfd = sock.fileno()
>>> SIOCGIFADDR = 0x8915
>>>
>>> def get_ip(iface = 'eth0'):
...     ifreq = struct.pack('16sH14s', iface, socket.AF_INET, '\x00'*14)
...     try:
...         res = fcntl.ioctl(sockfd, SIOCGIFADDR, ifreq)
...     except:
...         return None
...     ip = struct.unpack('16sH2x4s8x', res)[2]
...     return socket.inet_ntoa(ip)
... 
>>> get_ip('eth0')
'10.80.40.234'
>>> 
7
  • So this effectively opens a socket that it does nothing with and you check the raw data about that socket to get the local IP?
    – Dave
    Nov 14, 2013 at 18:00
  • 1
    The socket is opened to get an fd to communicate with the kernel (via ioctl). The socket isn't bound the interface for which you want addr info about- its just a communication mechanism between userspace and the kernel. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ioctl lxr.free-electrons.com/source/net/socket.c
    – tMC
    Nov 14, 2013 at 20:04
  • 3
    Works on Python3 with one modification: struct.pack('16sH14s', iface, socket.AF_INET, '\x00'*14) should be replaced with struct.pack('16sH14s', iface.encode('utf-8'), socket.AF_INET, b'\x00'*14)
    – pepoluan
    Jan 3, 2014 at 8:28
  • 2
    @ChristianFischer ioctl is a legacy interface I don't believe supports IPv6 and likely never will. I think the 'Right' way is via Netlink which isn't very straightforward in Python. I think libc should have the function getifaddrs which can be accessed via pythons ctypes module which may work - man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/getifaddrs.3.html
    – tMC
    Feb 12, 2014 at 15:37
  • 1
    @Maddy ioctl is a legacy interface I don't believe supports IPv6 and likely never will. I think the 'Right' way is via Netlink which isn't very straightforward in Python. I think libc should have the function getifaddrs which can be accessed via pythons ctypes module which may work - man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/getifaddrs.3.html
    – tMC
    Apr 2, 2014 at 12:57
28

im using following module:

#!/usr/bin/python
# module for getting the lan ip address of the computer

import os
import socket

if os.name != "nt":
    import fcntl
    import struct
    def get_interface_ip(ifname):
        s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
        return socket.inet_ntoa(fcntl.ioctl(
                s.fileno(),
                0x8915,  # SIOCGIFADDR
                struct.pack('256s', bytes(ifname[:15], 'utf-8'))
                # Python 2.7: remove the second argument for the bytes call
            )[20:24])

def get_lan_ip():
    ip = socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname())
    if ip.startswith("127.") and os.name != "nt":
        interfaces = ["eth0","eth1","eth2","wlan0","wlan1","wifi0","ath0","ath1","ppp0"]
        for ifname in interfaces:
            try:
                ip = get_interface_ip(ifname)
                break;
            except IOError:
                pass
    return ip

Tested with windows and linux (and doesnt require additional modules for those) intended for use on systems which are in a single IPv4 based LAN.

The fixed list of interface names does not work for recent linux versions, which have adopted the systemd v197 change regarding predictable interface names as pointed out by Alexander. In such cases, you need to manually replace the list with the interface names on your system, or use another solution like netifaces.

3
24

Variation on ninjagecko's answer. This should work on any LAN that allows UDP broadcast and doesn't require access to an address on the LAN or internet.

import socket
def getNetworkIp():
    s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
    s.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_BROADCAST, 1)
    s.connect(('<broadcast>', 0))
    return s.getsockname()[0]

print (getNetworkIp())
7
  • Wait, how is <broadcast> a valid hostname?!! How many of these kinds of verbal hostnames are valid? Feb 24, 2019 at 11:21
  • 1
    This works for me on Ubuntu 20.04 - getting 192.168.0.24 not 127.0.0.1 Jun 8, 2020 at 20:18
  • 1
    Works on every system I've tested it on. Windows, Android, Linux, Mac.
    – dlm
    Jun 18, 2020 at 21:48
  • When I use <broadcast> on Windows 10, I get Wireless NIC IP address. When I use 10.255.255.255 then I get Ethernet TAP Adapter's IP address. Both are valid. But results re different, lol.
    – RandomB
    Dec 13, 2020 at 10:25
  • 2
    Did not work on Mac OS 11.1. Saw this error: socket.error: [Errno 49] Can't assign requested address May 28, 2021 at 19:47
24

[Windows only] If you don't want to use external packages and don't want to rely on outside Internet servers, this might help. It's a code sample that I found on Google Code Search and modified to return required information:

def getIPAddresses():
    from ctypes import Structure, windll, sizeof
    from ctypes import POINTER, byref
    from ctypes import c_ulong, c_uint, c_ubyte, c_char
    MAX_ADAPTER_DESCRIPTION_LENGTH = 128
    MAX_ADAPTER_NAME_LENGTH = 256
    MAX_ADAPTER_ADDRESS_LENGTH = 8
    class IP_ADDR_STRING(Structure):
        pass
    LP_IP_ADDR_STRING = POINTER(IP_ADDR_STRING)
    IP_ADDR_STRING._fields_ = [
        ("next", LP_IP_ADDR_STRING),
        ("ipAddress", c_char * 16),
        ("ipMask", c_char * 16),
        ("context", c_ulong)]
    class IP_ADAPTER_INFO (Structure):
        pass
    LP_IP_ADAPTER_INFO = POINTER(IP_ADAPTER_INFO)
    IP_ADAPTER_INFO._fields_ = [
        ("next", LP_IP_ADAPTER_INFO),
        ("comboIndex", c_ulong),
        ("adapterName", c_char * (MAX_ADAPTER_NAME_LENGTH + 4)),
        ("description", c_char * (MAX_ADAPTER_DESCRIPTION_LENGTH + 4)),
        ("addressLength", c_uint),
        ("address", c_ubyte * MAX_ADAPTER_ADDRESS_LENGTH),
        ("index", c_ulong),
        ("type", c_uint),
        ("dhcpEnabled", c_uint),
        ("currentIpAddress", LP_IP_ADDR_STRING),
        ("ipAddressList", IP_ADDR_STRING),
        ("gatewayList", IP_ADDR_STRING),
        ("dhcpServer", IP_ADDR_STRING),
        ("haveWins", c_uint),
        ("primaryWinsServer", IP_ADDR_STRING),
        ("secondaryWinsServer", IP_ADDR_STRING),
        ("leaseObtained", c_ulong),
        ("leaseExpires", c_ulong)]
    GetAdaptersInfo = windll.iphlpapi.GetAdaptersInfo
    GetAdaptersInfo.restype = c_ulong
    GetAdaptersInfo.argtypes = [LP_IP_ADAPTER_INFO, POINTER(c_ulong)]
    adapterList = (IP_ADAPTER_INFO * 10)()
    buflen = c_ulong(sizeof(adapterList))
    rc = GetAdaptersInfo(byref(adapterList[0]), byref(buflen))
    if rc == 0:
        for a in adapterList:
            adNode = a.ipAddressList
            while True:
                ipAddr = adNode.ipAddress
                if ipAddr:
                    yield ipAddr
                adNode = adNode.next
                if not adNode:
                    break

Usage:

>>> for addr in getIPAddresses():
>>>    print addr
192.168.0.100
10.5.9.207

As it relies on windll, this will work only on Windows.

4
  • The one liner solution above generally works on windows. It's the Linux one that's being a problem.
    – ricree
    Jun 18, 2009 at 0:19
  • 16
    +1 This technique at least attempts to return all addresses on the machine. Oct 23, 2009 at 14:42
  • 1
    This script fails on my machine after returning the first address. Error is "AttributeError: 'LP_IP_ADDR_STRING' object has no attribute 'ipAddress'" I suspect it has something to do with the IPv6 address. Oct 23, 2009 at 14:43
  • 1
    It turns out the issue is that for anything but the first IP address, the adNode isn't dereferenced. Add one more line to the example in the while loop and it works for me: adNode = adNode.contents Oct 23, 2009 at 16:09
23

I use this on my ubuntu machines:

import commands
commands.getoutput("/sbin/ifconfig").split("\n")[1].split()[1][5:]

This doesn't work.

9
  • Nice and simple. Works on Amazon's Linux AMI as well, but only if I am root. Otherwise I would get an error: 'sh: ifconfig: command not found' Nov 10, 2010 at 16:52
  • So you should use "/sbin/ifconfig" like gavaletz said. It also works on Red Hat 4.1.2-48. Nov 10, 2010 at 17:05
  • 9
    Deprecated since 2.6. Use the subprocess module to run commands. Mar 18, 2013 at 21:06
  • 6
    And ifconfig is deprecated as well. Use iproute2. Apr 9, 2013 at 13:04
  • Get all the ips: import sh; [ip.split()[1][5:] for ip in filter(lambda x: 'inet addr' in x, sh.ifconfig().split("\n"))] Feb 27, 2014 at 22:43
19

On Debian (tested) and I suspect most Linux's..

import commands

RetMyIP = commands.getoutput("hostname -I")

On MS Windows (tested)

import socket

socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname())
2
  • 2
    Doesn't work on macOS: hostname: illegal option -- I\nusage: hostname [-fs] [name-of-host] Nov 17, 2017 at 1:57
  • In python 3 you need to replace "commands" with "subprocess", the rest is the same Nov 25, 2020 at 14:13
18

A version I do not believe that has been posted yet. I tested with python 2.7 on Ubuntu 12.04.

Found this solution at : http://code.activestate.com/recipes/439094-get-the-ip-address-associated-with-a-network-inter/

import socket
import fcntl
import struct

def get_ip_address(ifname):
    s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
    return socket.inet_ntoa(fcntl.ioctl(
        s.fileno(),
        0x8915,  # SIOCGIFADDR
        struct.pack('256s', ifname[:15])
    )[20:24])

Example Result:

>>> get_ip_address('eth0')
'38.113.228.130'
1
  • 3
    Works on Python3, Ubuntu 18.04; The string needs to be bytes: >>> socket.inet_ntoa(fcntl.ioctl(s.fileno(), 0x8915, struct.pack('256s', 'enp0s31f6'[:15].encode('utf-8')))[20:24]) '192.168.1.1'
    – cessor
    Jul 28, 2018 at 13:34
11

For linux, you can just use check_output of the hostname -I system command like so:

from subprocess import check_output
check_output(['hostname', '-I'])
2
  • for googlers, I know the question was for a cross platform solution Jul 25, 2019 at 7:37
  • To get the exact IP address check_output(['hostname', '-I']).decode().strip()
    – iku
    Sep 7, 2022 at 18:57
10

This is a variant of UnkwnTech's answer -- it provides a get_local_addr() function, which returns the primary LAN ip address of the host. I'm posting it because this adds a number of things: ipv6 support, error handling, ignoring localhost/linklocal addrs, and uses a TESTNET addr (rfc5737) to connect to.

# imports
import errno
import socket
import logging

# localhost prefixes
_local_networks = ("127.", "0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1")

# ignore these prefixes -- localhost, unspecified, and link-local
_ignored_networks = _local_networks + ("0.", "0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0", "169.254.", "fe80:")

def detect_family(addr):
    if "." in addr:
        assert ":" not in addr
        return socket.AF_INET
    elif ":" in addr:
        return socket.AF_INET6
    else:
        raise ValueError("invalid ipv4/6 address: %r" % addr)

def expand_addr(addr):
    """convert address into canonical expanded form --
    no leading zeroes in groups, and for ipv6: lowercase hex, no collapsed groups.
    """
    family = detect_family(addr)
    addr = socket.inet_ntop(family, socket.inet_pton(family, addr))
    if "::" in addr:
        count = 8-addr.count(":")
        addr = addr.replace("::", (":0" * count) + ":")
        if addr.startswith(":"):
            addr = "0" + addr
    return addr

def _get_local_addr(family, remote):
    try:
        s = socket.socket(family, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
        try:
            s.connect((remote, 9))
            return s.getsockname()[0]
        finally:
            s.close()
    except socket.error:
        # log.info("trapped error connecting to %r via %r", remote, family, exc_info=True)
        return None

def get_local_addr(remote=None, ipv6=True):
    """get LAN address of host

    :param remote:
        return  LAN address that host would use to access that specific remote address.
        by default, returns address it would use to access the public internet.

    :param ipv6:
        by default, attempts to find an ipv6 address first.
        if set to False, only checks ipv4.

    :returns:
        primary LAN address for host, or ``None`` if couldn't be determined.
    """
    if remote:
        family = detect_family(remote)
        local = _get_local_addr(family, remote)
        if not local:
            return None
        if family == socket.AF_INET6:
            # expand zero groups so the startswith() test works.
            local = expand_addr(local)
        if local.startswith(_local_networks):
            # border case where remote addr belongs to host
            return local
    else:
        # NOTE: the two addresses used here are TESTNET addresses,
        #       which should never exist in the real world.
        if ipv6:
            local = _get_local_addr(socket.AF_INET6, "2001:db8::1234")
            # expand zero groups so the startswith() test works.
            if local:
                local = expand_addr(local)
        else:
            local = None
        if not local:
            local = _get_local_addr(socket.AF_INET, "192.0.2.123")
            if not local:
                return None
    if local.startswith(_ignored_networks):
        return None
    return local
2
  • I thought this could have been a really good answer.. but it always return None Jan 27, 2020 at 16:31
  • @JamieLindsey Do you have some details about your OS, network configuration? Also, what does something like get_local_addr(remove="www.google.com") return? Logging the socket.error thrown by _get_local_addr() might help diagnostically. Jan 28, 2020 at 20:07
8

I'm afraid there aren't any good platform independent ways to do this other than connecting to another computer and having it send you your IP address. For example: findmyipaddress. Note that this won't work if you need an IP address that's behind NAT unless the computer you're connecting to is behind NAT as well.

Here's one solution that works in Linux: get the IP address associated with a network interface.

8

FYI I can verify that the method:

import socket
addr = socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname())

Works in OS X (10.6,10.5), Windows XP, and on a well administered RHEL department server. It did not work on a very minimal CentOS VM that I just do some kernel hacking on. So for that instance you can just check for a 127.0.0.1 address and in that case do the following:

if addr == "127.0.0.1":
     import commands
     output = commands.getoutput("/sbin/ifconfig")
     addr = parseaddress(output)

And then parse the ip address from the output. It should be noted that ifconfig is not in a normal user's PATH by default and that is why I give the full path in the command. I hope this helps.

1
  • This is what I see on Mac OS 11.1: socket.gaierror: [Errno 8] nodename nor servname provided, or not known May 28, 2021 at 19:44
8

One simple way to produce "clean" output via command line utils:

import commands
ips = commands.getoutput("/sbin/ifconfig | grep -i \"inet\" | grep -iv \"inet6\" | " +
                         "awk {'print $2'} | sed -ne 's/addr\:/ /p'")
print ips

It will show all IPv4 addresses on the system.

2
  • 1
    It will not show all IPv4 addresses, because ifconfig only tells you about primary ones. You need to use "ip" from iproute2 to see all addresses. Apr 9, 2013 at 13:02
  • That's a hell of a lot of shell for a question asking for the standard library… Also, parsing ifconfig is neither portable and will not even work reliably on one machine. Sep 12, 2017 at 7:42
6
import socket
[i[4][0] for i in socket.getaddrinfo(socket.gethostname(), None)]
2
  • 2
    Hmm...on a server with two NICs this gives one of the assigned IP addresses, but repeated three times. On my laptop it gives '127.0.1.1' (repeated three times...)...
    – bryn
    Nov 20, 2013 at 13:30
  • Gives me ['fe80::34e8:fe19:1459:2cde%22','fe80::d528:99fb:d572:e289%12', '192.168.56.1', '192.168.1.2'] on Windows desktop.
    – Nakilon
    Jul 19, 2014 at 3:48
5

This will work on most linux boxes:

import socket, subprocess, re
def get_ipv4_address():
    """
    Returns IP address(es) of current machine.
    :return:
    """
    p = subprocess.Popen(["ifconfig"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
    ifc_resp = p.communicate()
    patt = re.compile(r'inet\s*\w*\S*:\s*(\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3})')
    resp = patt.findall(ifc_resp[0])
    print resp

get_ipv4_address()
5

This answer is my personal attempt to solve the problem of getting the LAN IP, since socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname()) also returned 127.0.0.1. This method does not require Internet just a LAN connection. Code is for Python 3.x but could easily be converted for 2.x. Using UDP Broadcast:

import select
import socket
import threading
from queue import Queue, Empty

def get_local_ip():
        def udp_listening_server():
            s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
            s.bind(('<broadcast>', 8888))
            s.setblocking(0)
            while True:
                result = select.select([s],[],[])
                msg, address = result[0][0].recvfrom(1024)
                msg = str(msg, 'UTF-8')
                if msg == 'What is my LAN IP address?':
                    break
            queue.put(address)

        queue = Queue()
        thread = threading.Thread(target=udp_listening_server)
        thread.queue = queue
        thread.start()
        s2 = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
        s2.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_BROADCAST, 1)
        waiting = True
        while waiting:
            s2.sendto(bytes('What is my LAN IP address?', 'UTF-8'), ('<broadcast>', 8888))
            try:
                address = queue.get(False)
            except Empty:
                pass
            else:
                waiting = False
        return address[0]

if __name__ == '__main__':
    print(get_local_ip())
1
  • 1
    What happens if you run this simultaneously on two machines on the same network ? As you broadcast your message on the network, all the machines will receive the 'What is my LAN IP address. Your udp_listening_server could reply 'your IP address is xxx' to the message. Jan 21, 2015 at 11:47
5

If you're looking for an IPV4 address different from your localhost IP address 127.0.0.1, here is a neat piece of python codes:

import subprocess
address = subprocess.check_output(['hostname', '-s', '-I'])
address = address.decode('utf-8') 
address=address[:-1]

Which can also be written in a single line:

address = subprocess.check_output(['hostname', '-s', '-I']).decode('utf-8')[:-1]

Even if you put localhost in /etc/hostname, the code will still give your local IP address.

4

127.0.1.1 is your real IP address. More generally speaking, a computer can have any number of IP addresses. You can filter them for private networks - 127.0.0.0/8, 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12 and 192.168.0.0/16.

However, there is no cross-platform way to get all IP addresses. On Linux, you can use the SIOCGIFCONF ioctl.

1
  • 3
    He means his externally visible IP. The 127.*.*.* range typically refers to localhost or an internal network, which is clearly not what he wants.
    – Cerin
    May 17, 2012 at 18:59
4

A slight refinement of the commands version that uses the IP command, and returns IPv4 and IPv6 addresses:

import commands,re,socket

#A generator that returns stripped lines of output from "ip address show"
iplines=(line.strip() for line in commands.getoutput("ip address show").split('\n'))

#Turn that into a list of IPv4 and IPv6 address/mask strings
addresses1=reduce(lambda a,v:a+v,(re.findall(r"inet ([\d.]+/\d+)",line)+re.findall(r"inet6 ([\:\da-f]+/\d+)",line) for line in iplines))
#addresses1 now looks like ['127.0.0.1/8', '::1/128', '10.160.114.60/23', 'fe80::1031:3fff:fe00:6dce/64']

#Get a list of IPv4 addresses as (IPstring,subnetsize) tuples
ipv4s=[(ip,int(subnet)) for ip,subnet in (addr.split('/') for addr in addresses1 if '.' in addr)]
#ipv4s now looks like [('127.0.0.1', 8), ('10.160.114.60', 23)]

#Get IPv6 addresses
ipv6s=[(ip,int(subnet)) for ip,subnet in (addr.split('/') for addr in addresses1 if ':' in addr)]
4

Well you can use the command "ip route" on GNU/Linux to know your current IP address.

This shows the IP given to the interface by the DHCP server running on the router/modem. Usually "192.168.1.1/24" is the IP for local network where "24" means the range of posible IP addresses given by the DHCP server within the mask range.

Here's an example: Note that PyNotify is just an addition to get my point straight and is not required at all

#! /usr/bin/env python

import sys , pynotify

if sys.version_info[1] != 7:
   raise RuntimeError('Python 2.7 And Above Only')       

from subprocess import check_output # Available on Python 2.7+ | N/A 

IP = check_output(['ip', 'route'])
Split_Result = IP.split()

# print Split_Result[2] # Remove "#" to enable

pynotify.init("image")
notify = pynotify.Notification("Ip", "Server Running At:" + Split_Result[2] , "/home/User/wireless.png")    
notify.show()    

The advantage of this is that you don't need to specify the network interface. That's pretty useful when running a socket server

You can install PyNotify using easy_install or even Pip:

easy_install py-notify

or

pip install py-notify

or within python script/interpreter

from pip import main

main(['install', 'py-notify'])
4

netifaces is available via pip and easy_install. (I know, it's not in base, but it could be worth the install.)

netifaces does have some oddities across platforms:

  • The localhost/loop-back interface may not always be included (Cygwin).
  • Addresses are listed per-protocol (e.g., IPv4, IPv6) and protocols are listed per-interface. On some systems (Linux) each protocol-interface pair has its own associated interface (using the interface_name:n notation) while on other systems (Windows) a single interface will have a list of addresses for each protocol. In both cases there is a protocol list, but it may contain only a single element.

Here's some netifaces code to play with:

import netifaces

PROTO = netifaces.AF_INET   # We want only IPv4, for now at least

# Get list of network interfaces
# Note: Can't filter for 'lo' here because Windows lacks it.
ifaces = netifaces.interfaces()

# Get all addresses (of all kinds) for each interface
if_addrs = [netifaces.ifaddresses(iface) for iface in ifaces]

# Filter for the desired address type
if_inet_addrs = [addr[PROTO] for addr in if_addrs if PROTO in addr]

iface_addrs = [s['addr'] for a in if_inet_addrs for s in a if 'addr' in s]
# Can filter for '127.0.0.1' here.

The above code doesn't map an address back to its interface name (useful for generating ebtables/iptables rules on the fly). So here's a version that keeps the above information with the interface name in a tuple:

import netifaces

PROTO = netifaces.AF_INET   # We want only IPv4, for now at least

# Get list of network interfaces
ifaces = netifaces.interfaces()

# Get addresses for each interface
if_addrs = [(netifaces.ifaddresses(iface), iface) for iface in ifaces]

# Filter for only IPv4 addresses
if_inet_addrs = [(tup[0][PROTO], tup[1]) for tup in if_addrs if PROTO in tup[0]]

iface_addrs = [(s['addr'], tup[1]) for tup in if_inet_addrs for s in tup[0] if 'addr' in s]

And, no, I'm not in love with list comprehensions. It's just the way my brain works these days.

The following snippet will print it all out:

from __future__ import print_function  # For 2.x folks
from pprint import pprint as pp

print('\nifaces = ', end='')
pp(ifaces)

print('\nif_addrs = ', end='')
pp(if_addrs)

print('\nif_inet_addrs = ', end='')
pp(if_inet_addrs)

print('\niface_addrs = ', end='')
pp(iface_addrs)

Enjoy!

1
  • netifaces really eases life a lot while dealing with this issue.
    – Drake Guan
    Nov 20, 2014 at 4:53
4
import netifaces as ni 

ni.ifaddresses('eth0')
ip = ni.ifaddresses('eth0')[ni.AF_INET][0]['addr']
print(ip)

This will return you the IP address in the Ubuntu system as well as MacOS. The output will be the system IP address as like my IP: 192.168.1.10.

1
  • 2
    netifaces is not part of the standard library and a very similar answer was already posted. Jan 2, 2018 at 15:30
4

To get the ip address you can use a shell command directly in python:

import socket, subprocess

def get_ip_and_hostname():
    hostname =  socket.gethostname()

    shell_cmd = "ifconfig | awk '/inet addr/{print substr($2,6)}'"
    proc = subprocess.Popen([shell_cmd], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, shell=True)
    (out, err) = proc.communicate()

    ip_list = out.split('\n')
    ip = ip_list[0]

    for _ip in ip_list:
        try:
            if _ip != "127.0.0.1" and _ip.split(".")[3] != "1":
                ip = _ip
        except:
            pass
    return ip, hostname

ip_addr, hostname = get_ip_and_hostname()
1
  • Note that ifconfig is deprecated -- even back when this answer was written in 2016, it didn't support all available kernel socket and address types, and could silently hide things (like secondary addresses that aren't bound to named aliases) that the newer iproute2 tools (such as ip addr list) can show. Nov 29, 2020 at 19:58
4

A Python 3.4 version utilizing the newly introduced asyncio package.

async def get_local_ip():
    loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
    transport, protocol = await loop.create_datagram_endpoint(
        asyncio.DatagramProtocol,
        remote_addr=('8.8.8.8', 80))
    result = transport.get_extra_info('sockname')[0]
    transport.close()
    return result

This is based on UnkwnTech's excellent answer.

2
  • I've +1'd, because I liked (and used) the idea, but the syntax isn't wrong. May 19, 2022 at 8:06
  • 1
    @LogicDaemon, thanks. I just fixed the syntax errors btw. May 19, 2022 at 9:50

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