I'm using node.js and I need to get my external IP address, provided by my ISP.
Is there a way to achieve this without using a service like http://myexternalip.com/raw ?
Thanks.
I'm using node.js and I need to get my external IP address, provided by my ISP.
Is there a way to achieve this without using a service like http://myexternalip.com/raw ?
Thanks.
Can do the same as what they do in Python to get external IP, connect to some website and get your details from the socket connection:
const net = require('net');
const client = net.connect({port: 80, host:"google.com"}, () => {
console.log('MyIP='+client.localAddress);
console.log('MyPORT='+client.localPort);
});
*Unfortunately cannot find the original Python Example anymore as reference..
Update 2019: Using built-in http library and public API from https://whatismyipaddress.com/api
const http = require('http');
var options = {
host: 'ipv4bot.whatismyipaddress.com',
port: 80,
path: '/'
};
http.get(options, function(res) {
console.log("status: " + res.statusCode);
res.on("data", function(chunk) {
console.log("BODY: " + chunk);
});
}).on('error', function(e) {
console.log("error: " + e.message);
});
Tested with Node.js v0.10.48 on Amazon AWS server
--
Update 2021
ipv4bot is closed, here is another public API:
var http = require('http');
http.get({'host': 'api.ipify.org', 'port': 80, 'path': '/'}, function(resp) {
resp.on('data', function(ip) {
console.log("My public IP address is: " + ip);
});
});
--
Update 2022
ChatGPT wrote longer example using ipify with json: *Yes, i've tested it.
https://gist.github.com/unitycoder/745a58d562180994a3025afcb84c1753
More info https://www.ipify.org/
192.168.xxx
address, not the public address
Feb 25, 2019 at 15:20
resp
is a stream, so you must not rely on a single data
event thinking that you'll receive the entire data
packet sent by the server. For such a small data, if the connection is REALLY congested, you may get half the IP. You must rely on data
for concatenating and on end
to get the notification that the entire IP has been received.
Jun 7, 2022 at 11:47
Use my externalip
package on GitHub
externalip(function (err, ip) {
console.log(ip); // => 8.8.8.8
});
Edit: This was written back in 2013... The site is gone. I'm leaving the example request code for now unless anyone complains but go for the accepted answer.
http://fugal.net/ip.cgi was similar to that one.
or you can
require('http').request({
hostname: 'fugal.net',
path: '/ip.cgi',
agent: false
}, function(res) {
if(res.statusCode != 200) {
throw new Error('non-OK status: ' + res.statusCode);
}
res.setEncoding('utf-8');
var ipAddress = '';
res.on('data', function(chunk) { ipAddress += chunk; });
res.on('end', function() {
// ipAddress contains the external IP address
});
}).on('error', function(err) {
throw err;
}).end();
Ref: http://www.nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback
end
. Anyone trying out this script, don't forget to change the last line like so: }).end();
this should work well without any external dependencies (with the exception of ipify.org):
var https = require('https');
var callback = function(err, ip){
if(err){
return console.log(err);
}
console.log('Our public IP is', ip);
// do something here with the IP address
};
https.get({
host: 'api.ipify.org',
}, function(response) {
var ip = '';
response.on('data', function(d) {
ip += d;
});
response.on('end', function() {
if(ip){
callback(null, ip);
} else {
callback('could not get public ip address :(');
}
});
});
You could also use https://httpbin.org
Simply use superagent
var superagent = require('superagent');
var getip = function () {
superagent
.get('http://ip.cn/')
.set('User-Agent', 'curl/7.37.1')
.end(function (err, res) {
if (err) {
console.log(err);
}
var ip = res.text.match(/\d+\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+/)[0];
console.log(ip)
// Here is the result
});
};
Another little node module is ext-ip
. The difference is, that you can use different response options, matching your coding style. It's ready to use out of the box ...
let extIP = require('ext-ip')();
extIP.get().then(ip => {
console.log(ip);
})
.catch(err => {
console.error(err);
});
let extIP = require('ext-ip')();
extIP.on("ip", ip => {
console.log(ip);
});
extIP.on("err", err => {
console.error(err);
});
extIP();
let extIP = require('ext-ip')();
extIP((err, ip) => {
if( err ){
throw err;
}
console.log(ip);
});
The simplest answer, based on experience is that you can't get your external IP in most cases without using an external service, since you'll typically be behind a NAT or shielded by a firewall. I say in most cases, since there may be situations where you can get it from your router, but it is too case specific to provide a general answer.
What you want is simply to choose your favourite http client in NodeJS and find a maintained server that simply responds with the IP address in the body. You can also use a package, but you should see if it is still using a maintained remote server.
While there are plenty of examples already, here is one that first tries IPv6 and then falls back to IPv4. It leverages axios, since that is what I am comfortable with. Also, unless the optional parameter debug
is set to true, the result is either a value or undefined.
const axios = require('axios');
// replace these URLs with whatever is good for you
const remoteIPv4Url = 'http://ipv4bot.whatismyipaddress.com/';
const remoteIPv6Url = 'http://ipv6bot.whatismyipaddress.com/';
// Try getting an external IPv4 address.
async function getExternalIPv4(debug = false) {
try {
const response = await axios.get(remoteIPv4Url);
if (response && response.data) {
return response.data;
}
} catch (error) {
if (debug) {
console.log(error);
}
}
return undefined;
}
// Try getting an external IPv6 address.
async function getExternalIPv6(debug = false) {
try {
const response = await axios.get(remoteIPv6Url);
if (response && response.data) {
return response.data;
}
} catch (error) {
if (debug) {
console.log(error);
}
}
return undefined;
}
async function getExternalIP(debug = false) {
let address;
// Try IPv6 and then IPv4
address = await getExternalIPv6(debug);
if (!address) {
address = await getExternalIPv4(debug);
}
return address;
}
module.exports { getExternalIP, getExternalIPv4, getExternalIPv6 }
Feel free to suggest improvements.
You may use the request-ip package:
const requestIp = require('request-ip');
// inside middleware handler
const ipMiddleware = function(req, res, next) {
const clientIp = requestIp.getClientIp(req);
next();
};
Tested and Working;
async function myIP() {
const response = await fetch("https://api.ipify.org/");
return await response.text();
}
and call this inside async await like
const ip = await myIP();
My shameless plug: canihazip (Disclosure: I'm the author of module, but not of the main page.)
It can be required as a module, exposing a single function that can optionally be passed a callback function an it will return a promise.
It can be also be installed globally and used as CLI.
You could very easily use an api solution for retrieving the external IP! I made a ip tracker site made for this kinda thing a few days ago! Here is a snippit of code you could use to get IP!
async function getIp(cb) {
let output = null;
let promise = new Promise(resolve => {
let http = new XMLHttpRequest();
http.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (this.readyState == 4 && this.status == 200) {
output = this.responseText;
resolve("done");
}
}
http.open("GET", "https://iptrackerz.herokuapp.com/ip", true);
http.send();
});
await promise;
if (cb != undefined) {
cb(JSON.parse(output)["ip"]);
} else {
return JSON.parse(output)["ip"];
}
}
Ok, now you have the function getIp()! The way I coded it allows you to do 2 different ways of invoking it! Here they are.
Asynchronous
async function printIP() { let ip = await getIp(); document.write("Your IP is " + ip); }; printIP();
Callback
getIp(ip => { document.write("Your IP is " + ip); });
I was looking for a solution not relying to other's libraries/ resources, and found this as acceptable alternative:
Just a GET request to external server ( under my control ), where I read req.headers['x-forwarded-for'] and serve it back to my client.
node.js has a lot of great built in modules you can use without including any external dependencies. you can make this file.
WhatsMyIpAddress.js
const http = require('http');
function WhatsMyIpAddress(callback) {
const options = {
host: 'ipv4bot.whatismyipaddress.com',
port: 80,
path: '/'
};
http.get(options, res => {
res.setEncoding('utf8');
res.on("data", chunk => callback(chunk, null));
}).on('error', err => callback(null, err.message));
}
module.exports = WhatsMyIpAddress;
Then call it in your main.js like this.
main.js
const WhatsMyIpAddress = require('./src/WhatsMyIpAddress');
WhatsMyIpAddress((data,err) => {
console.log('results:', data, err);
});
This is just another one-liner:
const axios = require('axios')
axios.get('https://curlmyip.org/').then(resp => console.log(resp.data))
You can use nurl
library command ippublic
to get this. (disclosure: I made nurl)
> npm install nurl-cli -g
> ippublic;
// 50.240.33.6