What is the order in which NetworkInterface.getNetworkInterfaces()
returns an enumeration of network interfaces? Is there a way to affect that on JVM level or on Linux OS level?
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The enumeration is based on the result of a call to a native method (in openJDK1.6): getNetworkInterfaces– Andreas DolkMay 19, 2011 at 8:18
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I don't know the answer to your question, but I'm curious why you would like to change the order?– MarcoSMay 19, 2011 at 8:19
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is there a way to affect that on Linux level?– Andrey AdamovichMay 19, 2011 at 8:20
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@MarcoS, because my application server (weblogic) chooses wrong ip address as default one and I know it uses NetworkInterface.getNetworkInterfaces() to get a list of local interfaces, and it starts listeners on all of them. I still want it to listen to all local addresses, but choose different one as a default one.– Andrey AdamovichMay 19, 2011 at 8:22
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2Well, not to sound persnickety, but wouldn't it have been nice to clearly state all this :)– MJBMay 19, 2011 at 8:38
3 Answers
According to the source of the OpenJDK (found in src/solaris/native/java/net/NetworkInterface.c
, method enumInterfaces
) it will return IPv4 interfaces first (method enumIPv4Interfaces
), followed by IPv6 interfaces (method enumIPv6Interfaces
).
The order within those categories seems to be the same that the OS uses (it uses the SIOCGIFCONF
ioctl).
Note that this is implementation dependent and not defined, so any implementation can very easily do it differently.
This simply delegates to a native call, and no I'm not aware of any way to alter it.
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1but the question was about how to affect the order, I guess if you don't know the answer there is no big reason to answer. May 19, 2011 at 8:25
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My point was it is obviously implementation dependent, since neither the external javadocs nor the source indicate a specific order. And no system properties were used/passed. So yes, I think there is relevance to my answer– MJBMay 19, 2011 at 8:28
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@Andrey - if you want people to bother to answer your questions, don't criticize their answers. May 19, 2011 at 9:19
If you take a look at sources, then you see that getNetworkInterfaces just return enumeration, which backed with a NetworkInterface array, which is returned by getAll() method, which is native. So, it is implementation dependent and system dependent. You can't do anything with this.