48

How can I get the public IP using python2.7? Not private IP.

2

7 Answers 7

109

Currently there are several options:

  • ip.42.pl
  • jsonip.com
  • httpbin.org
  • ipify.org

Below are exact ways you can utilize each of the above.

ip.42.pl

from urllib2 import urlopen
my_ip = urlopen('http://ip.42.pl/raw').read()

This is the first option I have found. It is very convenient for scripts, you don't need JSON parsing here.

jsonip.com

from json import load
from urllib2 import urlopen

my_ip = load(urlopen('https://ipv4.jsonip.com'))['ip']

Seemingly the sole purpose of this domain is to return IP address in JSON.

httpbin.org

from json import load
from urllib2 import urlopen

my_ip = load(urlopen('http://httpbin.org/ip'))['origin']

httpbin.org is service I often recommend to junior developers to use for testing their scripts / applications.

ipify.org

from json import load
from urllib2 import urlopen

my_ip = load(urlopen('https://api.ipify.org/?format=json'))['ip']

Power of this service results from lack of limits (there is no rate limiting), infrastructure (placed on Heroku, with high availability in mind) and flexibility (works for both IPv4 and IPv6).

EDIT: Added httpbin.org to the list of available options.

EDIT: Added ipify.org thanks to kert's note.

3
  • 3
    I like icanhazip.com, it's a whole website with just your raw IP; no need to add arrays, formats, etc.
    – anonymous
    Aug 9, 2017 at 1:01
  • Just to add for ipify.org: With the url https://api.ipify.org/?format=raw you'll get the IP in plaintext, no JSON nonsense.
    – pepoluan
    Jul 17, 2020 at 3:37
  • api.ident.me works too, please fallback to tnedi.me if you want to write a complete code example ;) Feb 22, 2022 at 22:35
15

I like the requests package with http://ip.42.pl/raw

import requests
requests.get('http://ip.42.pl/raw').text
4

With requests module

import requests

public_IP = requests.get("https://www.wikipedia.org").headers["X-Client-IP"]
print public_IP
1
  • 1
    nice! :) i like this over pinging some random site. i want to say it's more fragile, but i guess it's a bigger name than some of the other sites. As long as they don't change how their headers operate...
    – digitalfoo
    Feb 24, 2020 at 0:15
2

Try this:

import ipgetter
import requests

IP = ipgetter.myip()
url = 'http://freegeoip.net/json/'+IP
r = requests.get(url)
js = r.json()
print 'IP Adress: '         +   js['ip']
print 'Country Code: '      +   js['country_code']
print 'Country Name: '      +   js['country_name']
print 'Region Code: '       +   js['region_code']
print 'Region Name: '       +   js['region_name']
print 'City Name: '         +   js['city']
print 'Zip code: '          +   js['zip_code']
print 'Time Zone: '         +   js['time_zone']
print 'Latitude: '          +   str(js['latitude'])
print 'Longitude: '         +   str(js['longitude'])
3
  • 1
    import ipgetter; IP = ipgetter.myip() is enough for the job.
    – Niko Fohr
    Feb 28, 2017 at 21:18
  • ipgetter does not (yet) support IPv6, although IPv6 is already celebrating its twentieth birthday. :(
    – qräbnö
    Jun 6, 2018 at 20:19
  • Dead as of 2022-01-24, try this: freegeoip.net/json/1.1.1.1 and it redirects to freegeoip.net/shutdown.
    – Contango
    Jan 24, 2022 at 18:37
1

You can just do this:

import requests
print requests.get("http://ipecho.net/plain?").text

Produces:

XX.XX.XXX.XXX
1

in python 2.7 it's just a code of 2 lines.

>>> import requests
>>print requests.get("http://ipconfig.in/ip").text
2
  • 1
    Please don't reply to duplicate questions. Mark them as duplicate. It makes SO more organized.
    – toliveira
    Apr 19, 2020 at 23:37
  • It's actually three lines if you include pip install requests Feb 25, 2022 at 20:22
0

This is a way not to have to make a call to the internet:

Please let me know if this doesn't work, then I can update the answer (it works for ~10 servers of mine)

from subprocess import check_output
out = check_output("/sbin/ifconfig | awk '/inet / { print $2 }' | sed 's/addr://'", shell=True)
[x for x in out.decode().split() if not x == "127.0.0.1" and 
                                    not (x.startswith("172") and x.endswith("0.1"))]
["x.x.x.x.x"]

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