I'm writing a function in C# using Azure Functions and need to get the ip address of the client that called the function, is this possible?
7 Answers
Here is an answer based on the one here.
#r "System.Web"
using System.Net;
using System.Web;
public static HttpResponseMessage Run(HttpRequestMessage req, TraceWriter log)
{
string clientIP = ((HttpContextWrapper)req.Properties["MS_HttpContext"]).Request.UserHostAddress;
return req.CreateResponse(HttpStatusCode.OK, $"The client IP is {clientIP}");
}
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So this means one needs to shoehorn a System.Web.dll reference into the function somehow? Apr 12, 2018 at 11:44
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@ChristoferOhlsson unfortunately I thin that's indeed the case. It's not Functions specific, as you'd have the same pattern in Web API (or anything that uses
HttpRequestMessage
). Apr 12, 2018 at 16:44 -
I dont think this works any more, I get the same collection of IPS for all users, all within the 100* range. I've seen a post on MSDN where someone else confirms that things recently changed and he now gets the same even though MS_HttpContext worked before Jun 25, 2018 at 11:45
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1
you should use these function Get the IP address of the remote host
request.Properties["MS_HttpContext"] is not available if you debug precompiled functions local request.Properties[RemoteEndpointMessageProperty.Name] is not available on azure
private string GetClientIp(HttpRequestMessage request)
{
if (request.Properties.ContainsKey("MS_HttpContext"))
{
return ((HttpContextWrapper)request.Properties["MS_HttpContext"]).Request.UserHostAddress;
}
if (request.Properties.ContainsKey(RemoteEndpointMessageProperty.Name))
{
RemoteEndpointMessageProperty prop;
prop = (RemoteEndpointMessageProperty)request.Properties[RemoteEndpointMessageProperty.Name];
return prop.Address;
}
return null;
}
Update 21.08.2018: Now Azure Functions are behind a LoadBalancer --> we have to inspect Request-Headers to determine the correct Client IP
private static string GetIpFromRequestHeaders(HttpRequestMessage request)
{
IEnumerable<string> values;
if (request.Headers.TryGetValues("X-Forwarded-For", out values))
{
return values.FirstOrDefault().Split(new char[] { ',' }).FirstOrDefault().Split(new char[] { ':' }).FirstOrDefault();
}
return "";
}
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Nice, thanks! Was having a hard time with everyone saying "MS_HttpContext", yet it not being present in my function. Mar 24, 2018 at 6:58
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Here is an extension method based on what I am seeing in
.Net Core 3.1
public static IPAddress GetClientIpn(this HttpRequest request)
{
IPAddress result = null;
if (request.Headers.TryGetValue("X-Forwarded-For", out StringValues values))
{
var ipn = values.FirstOrDefault().Split(new char[] { ',' }).FirstOrDefault().Split(new char[] { ':' }).FirstOrDefault();
IPAddress.TryParse(ipn, out result);
}
if (result == null)
{
result = request.HttpContext.Connection.RemoteIpAddress;
}
return result;
}
.NET 6.+
public static IPAddress GetClientIpn(this HttpRequestMessage request)
{
IPAddress result = null;
if (request.Headers.TryGetValues("X-Forwarded-For", out IEnumerable<string> values))
{
var ipn = values.FirstOrDefault().Split(new char[] { ',' }).FirstOrDefault().Split(new char[] { ':' }).FirstOrDefault();
IPAddress.TryParse(ipn, out result);
}
return result;
}
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1
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While you're there, you can search the headers to determine if any comparable header is available.– N-ateJan 31, 2023 at 20:10
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@JussiPalo - it does for us... however it doesn't work for .NET 8 isolated worker. Perhaps some sort of config change required - would be good to know what this is if so!– KramFeb 13 at 13:14
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@Kram as you can see by the code, this functions based on headers. The best recommendation that I can give you is to first write all of the header keys and values to a log file and see if what you need is already there. It may be named differently. If you find it, let's update the answer with a second if-statement to catch the header value that you find.– N-ateFeb 13 at 21:51
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1@N-ate yes I am certain I write all values for the header - I also note that when it is "wrong" (i.e. in the case where Host = localhost), the header name is capitalised differently "X-Forwarded-For" instead of "x-forwarded-for" and the IP doesn't have the port. There definitely feels to be some sort of difference in deployment going on - I wonder if the load balancer sometimes has the Azure functions on the same VM as the Azure Static Web site and sometimes not - it does seem it's something like that but I can't be sure.– KramFeb 15 at 8:55
Now that Azure functions get an HttpRequest parameter, and they're behind a load balancer, this function to get the IP address works for me:
private static string GetIpFromRequestHeaders(HttpRequest request)
{
return (request.Headers["X-Forwarded-For"].FirstOrDefault() ?? "").Split(new char[] { ':' }).FirstOrDefault();
}
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Unfortunately, this does work, but it returns the IP address of an internal box a 10.x.x.x address as of Decmeber 2021. Even using Azure Insights - their logs do not even provide the IP address of the clients.– RedgumDec 4, 2021 at 7:58
Update 18-Oct-2019:
The solution I tried is much easier and quicker and is mentioned below stepwise. But some more lengthy/tricky alternates are available @ https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-monitor/app/ip-collection:
- Login into Azure portal.
- Open a new tab in same browser while you are logged in and dial “http://Resources.Azure.Com”
- This is Azure back end services portal so being slightly careful in making changes would be great.
- Expand SUBSCRIPTIONS section from the left panel and expand your Azure Subscription where app insight resource is located.
- Expand Resource Groups section and expand the Resource Group where app insights resource is.
- Expand the Providers section and find the Microsoft.Insights provider and expand it.
- Expand the Components section and find and select your App Insight Instance by name.
- On the right top change your mode to Read Write from Read Only.
- Click EDIT button on the Rest API call.
- ADD NEW “"DisableIpMasking": true property to properties section.
- Press PUT button to apply changes.
- Now your App Insight is enabled to start collecting Client IP addresses.
- Do some queries on the Function.
- Refresh and Test the App Insights data after about 5 to 10 minutes.
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This combined with:
csharp IPAddress result = null; if (req.Headers.TryGetValue("X-Forwarded-For", out StringValues values)) { var ipn = values.FirstOrDefault().Split(new char[] { ',' }).FirstOrDefault().Split(new char[] { ':' }).FirstOrDefault(); IPAddress.TryParse(ipn, out result); } if (result == null) { result = req.HttpContext.Connection.RemoteIpAddress; } string IP = result?.ToString();
Worked– Trevor FApr 7, 2021 at 13:24
As mentioned already by others, the old method of looking at MS_HttpContext
no longer works. Further, while the method of looking at the headers for X-Forwarded-For
does work, it only works after being published in Azure - it doesn't return a value when you're running locally. That may matter if you prefer testing locally to minimize any potential cost-impact, but still want to be able to see that everything works correctly.
To see the IP address even when running locally, try this instead:
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Http;
And then:
String RemoteIP = ((DefaultHttpContext)req.Properties["HttpContext"])?.Connection?.RemoteIpAddress?.ToString();
This is working for me currently in Azure Functions V3.0.
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'HttpRequestMessage.Properties' is obsolete: 'Use Options instead.' Aug 17, 2022 at 0:06
In a .NET 6.0 function, within the Run()
function of the operation, this can be accessed of the HttpRequest req
object:
public static class PingOperation
{
[FunctionName("ping")]
public static async Task<IActionResult> Run(
[HttpTrigger(AuthorizationLevel.Function, "get", "post", Route = null)] HttpRequest req,
ILogger log)
{
string requestBody = await new StreamReader(req.Body).ReadToEndAsync();
log.LogInformation($"PingOperation requested from: {req.HttpContext.Connection.RemoteIpAddress}:{req.HttpContext.Connection.RemotePort}");
string responseMessage = "This HTTP triggered function executed successfully.";
return new OkObjectResult(responseMessage);
}
}
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In an Azure production environment this returns the IP address of the Azure Data Center, not the client IP sadly....– KramFeb 13 at 13:09