I am trying to develop a system where there are different nodes that are run on different system or on different ports on the same system.
Now all the nodes create a Socket with a target IP as the IP of a special node known as a bootstrapping node. The nodes then create their own ServerSocket
and start listening for connections.
The bootstrapping node maintains a list of Nodes and returns them on being queried.
Now what I need is the node must register its IP to the bootstrapping node. I tried using cli.getInetAddress()
once the client connects to the ServerSocket
of bootstrapping node but that didn't work.
Using the code:
System.out.println(Inet4Address.getLocalHost().getHostAddress());
or
System.out.println(InetAddress.getLocalHost().getHostAddress());
My PPP Connection IP address is: 117.204.44.192 but the above returns me 192.168.1.2
EDIT
I am using the following code:
Enumeration e = NetworkInterface.getNetworkInterfaces(); while(e.hasMoreElements()) { NetworkInterface n = (NetworkInterface) e.nextElement(); Enumeration ee = n.getInetAddresses(); while (ee.hasMoreElements()) { InetAddress i = (InetAddress) ee.nextElement(); System.out.println(i.getHostAddress()); } }
I am able to get all the IP addresses associated all NetworkInterface
s, but how do I distinguish them? This is the output I am getting:
127.0.0.1 192.168.1.2 192.168.56.1 117.204.44.19
In Java, you can use InetAddress. getLocalHost() to get the Ip Address of the current Server running the Java app and InetAddress. getHostName() to get Hostname of the current Server name.
First, click on your Start Menu and type cmd in the search box and press enter. A black and white window will open where you will type ipconfig /all and press enter. There is a space between the command ipconfig and the switch of /all. Your ip address will be the IPv4 address.
Java InetAddress class represents an IP address. The java. net. InetAddress class provides methods to get the IP of any host name for example www.javatpoint.com, www.google.com, www.facebook.com, etc. An IP address is represented by 32-bit or 128-bit unsigned number.
This could be a bit tricky in the most general case.
On the face of it, InetAddress.getLocalHost()
should give you the IP address of this host. The problem is that a host could have lots of network interfaces, and an interface could be bound to more than one IP address. And to top that, not all IP addresses will be reachable outside of your machine or your LAN. For example, they could be IP addresses for virtual network devices, private network IP addresses, and so on.
What this means is that the IP address returned by InetAddress.getLocalHost()
might not be the right one to use.
How can you deal with this?
NetworkInterface.getNetworkInterfaces()
to get all of the known network interfaces on the host, and then iterate over each NI's addresses.InetAddress.getByName()
to look up the primary IP address. (But how do you get it, and how do you deal with a DNS-based load balancer?)In summary, InetAddress.getLocalHost()
will typically work, but you may need to provide an alternative method for the cases where your code is run in an environment with "complicated" networking.
I am able to get all the IP addresses associated all Network Interfaces, but how do i distinguish them?
In fact, the InetAddress API provides methods for testing for loopback, link local, site local, multicast and broadcast addresses. You can use these to sort out which of the IP addresses you get back is most appropriate.
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