How can I determine the IP address of a given request from within a controller? For example (in express):
app.post('/get/ip/address', function (req, res) {
// need access to IP address here
})
In your request
object there is a property called socket
, which is a net.Socket
object. The net.Socket
object has a property remoteAddress
, therefore you should be able to get the IP with this call:
request.socket.remoteAddress
(if your node version is below 13, use the deprecated now request.connection.remoteAddress
)
EDIT
As @juand points out in the comments, the correct method to get the remote IP, if the server is behind a proxy, is request.headers['x-forwarded-for']
EDIT 2
When using express
with Node.js:
If you set app.set('trust proxy', true)
, req.ip
will return the real IP address even if behind proxy. Check the documentation for further information
request.headers['x-forwarded-for']
Commented
Oct 22, 2014 at 10:51
var ip = req.headers['x-forwarded-for'] ||
req.socket.remoteAddress ||
null;
Note that sometimes you can get more than one IP address in req.headers['x-forwarded-for']
. Also, an x-forwarded-for
header will not always be set which may throw an error.
The general format of the field is:
x-forwarded-for: client, proxy1, proxy2, proxy3
where the value is a comma+space separated list of IP addresses, the left-most being the original client, and each successive proxy that passed the request adding the IP address where it received the request from. In this example, the request passed through proxy1
, proxy2
, and then proxy3
. proxy3
appears as remote address of the request.
This is the solution suggested by Arnav Gupta with a fix Martin has suggested below in the comments for cases when x-forwarded-for
is not set :
var ip = (req.headers['x-forwarded-for'] || '').split(',').pop().trim() ||
req.socket.remoteAddress
Suggestion using modern JS:
x-forwarded-for
only if set, if so, take the first addressconst parseIp = (req) =>
req.headers['x-forwarded-for']?.split(',').shift()
|| req.socket?.remoteAddress
console.log(parseIp(req))
// => 127.0.0.1
req.connection.socket
. I'm not sure why/what conditions cause that to be the case but it would be good to check that req.connection.socket
exists to avoid your server crashing if this happens.
Commented
Nov 14, 2014 at 20:02
app.set('trust proxy', true)
, req.ip
will return the real IP address even if behind proxy. Check the documentation for further information.
Commented
May 10, 2021 at 22:46
You can stay DRY and just use node-ipware that supports both IPv4 and IPv6.
Install:
npm install ipware
In your app.js or middleware:
var getIP = require('ipware')().get_ip;
app.use(function(req, res, next) {
var ipInfo = getIP(req);
console.log(ipInfo);
// { clientIp: '127.0.0.1', clientIpRoutable: false }
next();
});
It will make the best attempt to get the user's IP address or returns 127.0.0.1
to indicate that it could not determine the user's IP address. Take a look at the README file for advanced options.
:ffff:(not my IP address)
when tested from Heroku. @edmar-miyake's answer is working properly for me.
clientIp: '::1'
for me. It doesn't seem to work.
Commented
Jan 11, 2016 at 11:48
You can use request-ip, to retrieve a user's ip address. It handles quite a few of the different edge cases, some of which are mentioned in the other answers.
Disclosure: I created this module
Install:
npm install request-ip
In your app:
var requestIp = require('request-ip');
// inside middleware handler
var ipMiddleware = function(req, res, next) {
var clientIp = requestIp.getClientIp(req); // on localhost > 127.0.0.1
next();
};
Hope this helps
request.headers['x-forwarded-for']
Commented
Jan 24, 2020 at 7:35
request.headers['x-forwarded-for']
is one of the many headers that can potentially contain the user's IP. That's why I set out to create the request-ip package.
request.headers['x-forwarded-for'] || request.connection.remoteAddress
If the x-forwarded-for
header is there then use that, otherwise use the .remoteAddress
property.
The x-forwarded-for
header is added to requests that pass through load balancers (or other types of proxy) set up for HTTP or HTTPS (it's also possible to add this header to requests when balancing at a TCP level using proxy protocol). This is because the request.connection.remoteAddress
the property will contain the private IP address of the load balancer rather than the public IP address of the client. By using an OR statement, in the order above, you check for the existence of an x-forwarded-for
header and use it if it exists otherwise use the request.connection.remoteAddress
.
I have tried all of them didn't work though,
console.log(clientIp);
console.log(req.ip);
console.log(req.headers['x-forwarded-for']);
console.log(req.connection.remoteAddress);
console.log(req.socket.remoteAddress);
console.log(req.connection.socket.remoteAddress.split(",")[0]);
When running an Express app behind a proxy for me Nginx, you have to set the application variable trust proxy to true. Express offers a few other trust proxy values which you can review in their documentation, but below steps worked for me.
app.set('trust proxy', true);
location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:3001; proxy_http_version 1.1; proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade; proxy_set_header Connection 'upgrade'; proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr; # this line proxy_cache_bypass $http_upgrade; }
module.exports = function(req, res, next) { let enable = true; // true/false let blacklist = ['x.x.x.x']; let whitelist = ['x.x.x.x']; let clientIp = req.header('x-forwarded-for') || req.connection.remoteAddress; if (!clientIp) { return res.json('Error'); } if (enable && paths.some((path) => (path === req.originalUrl))) { let blacklist = blacklist || []; if (blacklist.some((ip) => clientIp.match(ip) !== null)) { return res.json({ status: 401, error: 'Your IP is black-listed !'}); } let whitelist = whitelist || []; if (whitelist.length === 0 || whitelist.some((ip) => clientIp.match(ip) !== null)) { next(); return; } else { return res.json({ status: 401, error: 'Your IP is not listed !'}); } } next(); };
Following Function has all the cases covered will help
var ip;
if (req.headers['x-forwarded-for']) {
ip = req.headers['x-forwarded-for'].split(",")[0];
} else if (req.connection && req.connection.remoteAddress) {
ip = req.connection.remoteAddress;
} else {
ip = req.ip;
}console.log("client IP is *********************" + ip);
Don't just blindly use this for important rate-limiting:
let ip = request.headers['x-forwarded-for'].split(',')[0];
It's very easy to spoof:
curl --header "X-Forwarded-For: 1.2.3.4" "https://example.com"
In that case ther user's real IP address will be:
let ip = request.headers['x-forwarded-for'].split(',')[1];
I'm surprised that no other answers have mentioned this.
pop()
ing from the array, which is more general than getting the element at index 1, which can be fooled by curl --header "X-Forwarded-For: 1.2.3.4, 5.6.7.8" "https://example.com"
.
Commented
May 29, 2020 at 8:06
function getCallerIP(request) {
var ip = request.headers['x-forwarded-for'] ||
request.connection.remoteAddress ||
request.socket.remoteAddress ||
request.connection.socket.remoteAddress;
ip = ip.split(',')[0];
ip = ip.split(':').slice(-1); //in case the ip returned in a format: "::ffff:146.xxx.xxx.xxx"
return ip;
}
There are two ways to get the ip address :
let ip = req.ip
let ip = req.connection.remoteAddress;
But there is a problem with above approaches.
If you are running your app behind Nginx or any proxy, every single IP addresses will be 127.0.0.1
.
So, the best solution to get the ip address of user is :-
let ip = req.header('x-forwarded-for') || req.connection.remoteAddress;
In node 10.14 , behind nginx, you can retrieve the ip by requesting it through nginx header like this:
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
Then in your app.js:
app.set('trust proxy', true);
After that, wherever you want it to appear:
var userIp = req.header('X-Real-IP') || req.connection.remoteAddress;
If you're using express version 3.x or greater, you can use the trust proxy setting (http://expressjs.com/api.html#trust.proxy.options.table) and it will walk the chain of addresses in the x-forwarded-for header and put the latest ip in the chain that you've not configured as a trusted proxy into the ip property on the req object.
If you're using express.js then,
app.post('/get/ip/address', function (req, res) {
res.send(req.ip);
})
var ipaddress = (req.headers['x-forwarded-for'] ||
req.connection.remoteAddress ||
req.socket.remoteAddress ||
req.connection.socket.remoteAddress).split(",")[0];
There were a lot of great points here but nothing that was comprehensive, so here's what I ended up using:
function getIP(req) {
// req.connection is deprecated
const conRemoteAddress = req.connection?.remoteAddress
// req.socket is said to replace req.connection
const sockRemoteAddress = req.socket?.remoteAddress
// some platforms use x-real-ip
const xRealIP = req.headers['x-real-ip']
// most proxies use x-forwarded-for
const xForwardedForIP = (() => {
const xForwardedFor = req.headers['x-forwarded-for']
if (xForwardedFor) {
// The x-forwarded-for header can contain a comma-separated list of
// IP's. Further, some are comma separated with spaces, so whitespace is trimmed.
const ips = xForwardedFor.split(',').map(ip => ip.trim())
return ips[0]
}
})()
// prefer x-forwarded-for and fallback to the others
return xForwardedForIP || xRealIP || sockRemoteAddress || conRemoteAddress
}
If you get multiple IPs , this works for me:
var ipaddress = (req.headers['x-forwarded-for'] ||
req.connection.remoteAddress ||
req.socket.remoteAddress ||
req.connection.socket.remoteAddress).split(",")[0];
Simple get remote ip in nodejs:
var ip = req.header('x-forwarded-for') || req.connection.remoteAddress;
req.connection
has been deprecated since [email protected]. Using req.connection.remoteAddress
to get the client IP might still work but is discouraged.
Luckily, req.socket.remoteAddress
has been there since [email protected] and is a perfect replacement:
The string representation of the remote IP address. For example,
'74.125.127.100'
or'2001:4860:a005::68'
. Value may beundefined
if the socket is destroyed (for example, if the client disconnected).
I realize this has been answered to death, but here's a modern ES6 version I wrote that follows airbnb-base eslint standards.
const getIpAddressFromRequest = (request) => {
let ipAddr = request.connection.remoteAddress;
if (request.headers && request.headers['x-forwarded-for']) {
[ipAddr] = request.headers['x-forwarded-for'].split(',');
}
return ipAddr;
};
The X-Forwarded-For header may contain a comma-separated list of proxy IPs. The order is client,proxy1,proxy2,...,proxyN. In the real world, people implement proxies that may supply whatever they want in this header. If you are behind a load balancer or something, you can at least trust the first IP in the list is at least whatever proxy some request came through.
You can Get User Ip with Express Like this
req.ip
For Example In This case we get the user Ip and send it back to the user With req.ip
app.get('/', (req, res)=> {
res.send({ ip : req.ip})
})
req.ip
may also include an IPv4 subnet prefix ::ffff:
- as explained in this answer. easy to filter out --> req.ip.toString().replace('::ffff:', '');
Commented
Oct 5, 2022 at 15:14
For me using kubernetes ingress (NGINX):
req.headers['x-original-forwarded-for']
Worked like a charm in Node.js
If you are using Graphql-Yoga you can use the following function:
const getRequestIpAddress = (request) => {
const requestIpAddress = request.request.headers['X-Forwarded-For'] || request.request.connection.remoteAddress
if (!requestIpAddress) return null
const ipv4 = new RegExp("(?:(?:25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.){3}(?:25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)")
const [ipAddress] = requestIpAddress.match(ipv4)
return ipAddress
}
I'm using express behind nginx and
req.headers.origin
did the trick for me
req.headers.orgin
returns the IP address the client browser application was pointing to, not the IP of the client itself.
If using express
const ip = req.ip?.replace(/^.*:/, '') //->192.168.0.101
or
const ip_raw = req.headers['x-forwarded-for'] ||
req.socket.remoteAddress ||
null; //->:ffff:192.168.0.101
const ip = ip_raw?.replace(/^.*:/, '')//->192.168.0.101
note: req.ip?.replace(/^.*:/, '')
^ ^
null secure regular expressin
(if ip=!null continue to apply a regular expression)
Well, finaly my solution was IT DEPENDS ! For exampe if you have NGINX as a webserver look at you config for example:
server {
listen 443 ssl;
server_name <your-domain>;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/<your-domain>/fullchain.pem; # managed by Certbot
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/<your-domain>/privkey.pem; # managed by Certbot
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8000;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr; # THIS LINE !!!!
}
}
so the focus is on $remote_addr => x-real-ip
so in nodejs only type req.headers["x-real-ip"]
and thats it !
So when you are using nodejs with express. you can you can simply use req.ip.split(":").pop(); to get client's ipv4 address as in the code below.
app.get("/ipv4", (req, res) => {
const ipv4 = req.ip.split(":").pop();
console.log("ipv4: ", ipv4);
res
.status(200)
.send(
`Hello, your ipv4 address is ${ipv4}`
);
});
In the code above you are simply accessing ip value in the request object which looks something like (::ffff:127.0.0.1) then you are splitting the string by (:) and taking the last value which is the ipv4 part you need.
const express = require('express')
const app = express()
const port = 3000
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
var ip = req.ip
console.log(ip);
res.send('Hello World!')
})
// Run as nodejs ip.js
app.listen(port, () => {
console.log(`Example app listening at http://localhost:${port}`)
})
In a shell, you would just curl https://api.ipify.org
So, let's observe this to port it to node.js!
curl
is a application to fetch data from websites, we pass the website "https://api.ipify.org" as the argument. We could use node-fetch
to replace curl
!
The data we get from the website is our IP address, It's some sort of thing which just fetches your IP.
So to sum it up:
const fetch = require('node-fetch');
fetch('https://api.ipify.org')
.then(response => {/* whatever */})
.catch(err => {/* whatever */})
req.ip
source - expressjs.com/en/api.html#req.iplocalhost
- like I did, the result for all answer below(Nearly all the answers works) might come::1
. This got me confused for sometime. Later found out that::1
is real IP Address and isIPV6
notation for localhost.Hope this helps someone
req.headers['cf-connecting-ip']
::ffff:[my ipv4 address]
. But ffff is not my ipv6 address, does anyone know what that is for?