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I want to setup an android phone as a wifi-hotspot, then run a webserver on it, and browse it from another phone connected to the hotspot.

My phone isn't rooted, but I have termux, which has many unix utilities. I don't want to install an extra app. (But happy to write one!)

I can view python's simple webserver on http://localhost (on the host), but not on the other phone. I tried using the public-facing IP of the host phone (checking it using whatsmyip-type webpages), but didn't work. Someone said that mobile ISPs prevent this, by mapping different internal and external IPs... but here, it's not going through the ISP, just the hotspot...

I also tried IP addresses from ifconfig and from the wifi controls within android, which does work for netcat - but only the IP of the client phone connected to the hotspot (not the host).

That is, netcat is on the phone connected to the hotspot and listens, then netcat on hotspot phone connects to it. (i.e.role swap: hotspot client is netcat server). Weirdly, the hotspot phone doesn't seem to have an IP (at least, not one I've been able to discover, so far). But it must have one, mustn't it, for netcat to connect...?

Anyway, I want the webserver on the hotspot host, so I need its IP to connect to it... is there a way to get it?

This has been bugging me for ages. Many thanks for any help!

EDIT the answers to this question says it's (almost) always 192.168.43.1. I can't try it right now; will update when I have.

UPDATE
1. 192.168.43.1 works
2. py http.server works fine for regular files (e.g. txt, pdf), but video files seem to require some streaming protocol it lacks. I found lighttpd had this (available within termux using apt install lighttpd). But it needs config (and no eg/default). I used:

$ cat > lighttp.conf
dir-listing.activate = "enable"
server.port = 8000
server.document-root = "MY PATH HERE"
$ lighttpd -D -f lighttpd.conf

The dir listing makes it much easier to use, but obviously no security configured here, so want to be careful what you make available.
3. Android (my 5.1, anyway) needs airplane mode off before you can make it a wifi hotspot - which makes sense for internet access... but here, I want only the client to have access to the host, not have it accessible to the whole internet. So I found you can turn off data-access to prevent that, and the hotspot still works. (There's surely a way to have a hotspot in airplane mode programmatically...)

There you have it! Phone as media server.

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  • Yes its mostly 192.168.43.1 And you can easily get it on the device itself. Like you can also easily get the ip on the device itself when it is not a hotspot.
    – greenapps
    Dec 1, 2017 at 17:34
  • @greenapps how do you easily get it? Dec 2, 2017 at 0:27
  • The serversocket has a member for that. Further you can google for this obvious task.
    – greenapps
    Dec 2, 2017 at 9:37
  • Followup question.. (sorry, I know it has been a few months) Do we know if 192.168.43.1 will always be the same? Does this work for all android phones? What about for iOS? Apr 5, 2018 at 21:04
  • @luckyging3r Sorry all I know is it has worked on both androids I tried it on. You could ask a new specific question. Because it's specitic, you might get better answers. Apr 5, 2018 at 23:34

1 Answer 1

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public static String getDeviceIpAddress( ) {
String deviceIpAddress = "###.###.###.###";

try {
    for (Enumeration<NetworkInterface> enumeration = NetworkInterface.getNetworkInterfaces(); enumeration.hasMoreElements();) {
        NetworkInterface networkInterface = enumeration.nextElement();

        for (Enumeration<InetAddress> enumerationIpAddr = networkInterface.getInetAddresses(); enumerationIpAddr.hasMoreElements();) {
            InetAddress inetAddress = enumerationIpAddr.nextElement();

           if (!inetAddress.isLoopbackAddress() && inetAddress.getAddress().length == 4) 
            {
                deviceIpAddress = inetAddress.getHostAddress();

                Log.e(TAG, "deviceIpAddress: " + deviceIpAddress);
            }
        }
    }
} catch (SocketException e) {
    Log.e(TAG, "SocketException:" + e.getMessage());
}

return deviceIpAddress;
}

This will help you i think.

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  • Thanks for posting an answer. I tried this approach yesterday (docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/networking/nifs/listing.html), but it doesn't give the hotspot ip. (I didn't check it, but I think the ip it gives is the public-facing ip). Anyway, I'd got my problem fixed, I was just looking into it again because @luckyging3r asked about it. Apr 7, 2018 at 1:52
  • Well, I must have messed up my tests yesterday (perhaps the hotspot wasn't properly on), but today it gives the correct ip (192.168.43.1) is amongst those listed. And your non-loopback and len==4 identifies it. BTW when connected to wifi (i.e. not being a hotspot) it gives another ip which differs from the public ip (that you see from whatsmyip websites). Apr 7, 2018 at 2:16
  • That other ip (when connected to wifi) works the same as 127.0.0.1, i.e. on the device, I can browse a webserver running on the device. I can also browse it from a different device connected to the same wifi. Unfortunately, I only have wifi at the moment, so can't do a public test. Anyway, that's a different question altogether - thanks for your help! Apr 7, 2018 at 2:31
  • if gives another ip which differs from the public ip (that you see from whatsmyip websites). Of course. It gives the ip the device got from the router. A local ip. Every device in your lan has a different ip. But they look all the same for the last block of digits. Whatsmyip gives the public ip of the router. Every device in your lan candetermine it.
    – greenapps
    Apr 7, 2018 at 8:35
  • Whatsmyip gives the public ip of the router. Every device in your lan candetermine it. How can we determine this in code? (Also, BTW, how are you formatting your reply-quotes in the comments? nvm, I see how it's backticks code formatting) Apr 8, 2018 at 4:06

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