As the title says, how do you obtain the details of the connection so to speak. Is there a way to get it through the WebSocketSession? I feel like I am missing something...
I need a way in order to ban ip addresses of bad users and also I wanted to display all users who are online on a map (like a dot on a map). I don't need help with the later I need help with getting a client's IP address.
I am using Spring's WebFlux WebSocket.
EDIT: I created a feature request : https://jira.spring.io/browse/SWF-1728
The Servlet-based WebSocketSession object does provide that information. This seems to be missing from the reactive flavor.
You should create a Spring Framework issue to request this as an enhancement.
WebSocketSession has a method called getRemoteAddress(), you can get the remote address using any of its implemetation.
you can find ip address using HttpServletRequest for example
String remoteHost = request.getRemoteHost();
String remoteAddr = request.getRemoteAddr();
if (remoteAddr.equals("0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1")) {
InetAddress localip = java.net.InetAddress.getLocalHost();
remoteAddr = localip.getHostAddress();
remoteHost = localip.getHostName();
}
I did it by
public Mono<ServerResponse> hello(ServerRequest request) {
String remoteAddr = request.remoteAddress().get().getAddress().getHostAddress());
return null;
}
Related
I have an application implemented with Spring Boot, where I use Spring Security for authentication. I already have "token based" authentication in place, where clients are required to retrieve a token, and then use that token to authenticate in subsequent requests.
I would like to enhance this so that a token could be restricted to a specific hostname, so that is can only be used for requests from that host. This is similar to what the google maps API does with its API keys, where it is possible to restrict them by IP or host name.
Here is the code I have implemented to try to retrieve the request's host name
public String getClientHostName(HttpServletRequest request) {
String hostName = null;
// get the request's IP address
String clientAddress = httpRequest.getRemoteAddr();
String xfHeader = httpRequest.getHeader("X-Forwarded-For");
if (xfHeader != null) {
clientAddress = xfHeader.split(",")[0];
}
// try to resolve the host name from the IP address
try {
InetAddress address = InetAddress.getByName(clientAddress);
hostName = address.getHostName();
} catch (UnknownHostException e) {
logger.error("Failed to get the host name from the request's remote address. ", e);
}
return hostName;
}
I have 2 issues right now:
This code does not always manage to retrieve the hostname. Sometimes it just returns the IP address. I understand this may be down to some IP spoofing check the InetAddress class does.
When testing requests from different hosts, I do not always get the IP address I am expecting. I often get the IP of another host that is forwarding the request (which I thought would be solved by checking "X-Forwarded-For"). This makes me wonder how to even retrieve the IP of the host that is the real originator of the request.
Is there a reliable way to check the host name of the originator of a request?
have you tried getting hostname by String referrer = request.getHeader("referer"); ?
Also, on client side also you can add a snippet to find out the hostname in the headers.
Or you can provide below code to be added on client side and on server you can read the value of domain which will return hostname
<input type="button" value="Register" onClick="call()"/>
<script>
function call(){
var domain=window.location.hostname;
window.open('http://<your-hostname>/register?domain='+domain,'_self');
}
</script>
I am using blazeDS remote object. I need to get a client ip address from clien request. Is it any way to get ip address and system information in blazeDS java.
Try this
FlexClient flexClient = FlexContext.getFlexClient();
HttpServletRequest httpRequest = FlexContext.getHttpRequest();
String clientIP = httpRequest.getRemoteAddr();
Regards,
I am writing a Java Rest Web Service and need the caller's IP Address. I thought I saw this in the cookie once but now I don't see it. Is there a consistent place to get this information?
I saw one example of using an "OperationalContext" to get it but that was not in java.
Inject a HttpServletRequest into your Rest Service as such:
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
#GET
#Path("/yourservice")
#Produces("text/xml")
public String activate(#Context HttpServletRequest req,#Context SecurityContext context){
String ipAddressRequestCameFrom = requestContext.getRemoteAddr();
// header name is case insensitive
String xForwardedForIP = req.getHeader("X-Forwarded-For");
// if xForwardedForIP is populated use it, else return ipAddressRequestCameFrom
String ip = xForwardedForIP != null ? xForwardedForIP : ipAddressRequestCameFrom;
System.out.println("IP is "+ip);
// get the host name the client contacted. If the header `Host` is populated the `Host` header is automatically returned.
// An AWS ALB populated the Host header for you.
String hostNameRequestCameFrom = req.getServerName();
System.out.println("Host is "+hostNameRequestCameFrom);
//Also if security is enabled
Principal principal = context.getUserPrincipal();
String userName = principal.getName();
}
As #Hemant Nagpal mentions, you can also check the X-Forwarded-For header to determine the real source if a load balancer inserts this into the request.
According to this answer, the getHeader() call is case insensitive.
You can also get the servername that the client contacted. This is either the DNS name or the value set in the Host header with an OSI layer 7 load balancer can populate.
1. Example: no headers are populated
curl "http://127.0.0.1:8080/"
returns
IP is 127.0.0.1
Host is 127.0.0.1
2. Example: X-Forwarded-For and Host headers are populated
curl --header "X-Forwarded-For: 1.2.3.4" --header "Host: bla.bla.com:8443" "http://127.0.0.1:8080/"
returns
IP is 1.2.3.4
Host is bla.bla.com
I think you can get the IP through the request object.
If I'm not mistaken, request.getRemoteAddr() or so.
You could do something like this:
#WebService
public class YourService {
#Resource
WebServiceContext webServiceContext;
#WebMethod
public String myMethod() {
MessageContext messageContext = webServiceContext.getMessageContext();
HttpServletRequest request = (HttpServletRequest) messageContext.get(MessageContext.SERVLET_REQUEST);
String callerIpAddress = request.getRemoteAddr();
System.out.println("Caller IP = " + callerIpAddress);
}
}
Assuming you are making your "web service" with servlets, the rather simple method call .getRemoteAddr() on the request object will give you the callers IP address.
If your application is running on a webserver that is located behind a reverse proxy or load balancer, then that proxy can be configured to inject the requested IP address in a request header. Different reverse proxies can inject different headers. Consult the documentation for your proxy server. We listed a couple of the most used in our example below but this is by no means a complete list.
When your client uses a (forward) proxy, then it might insert headers to say what the client IP addres is. Or it might not. And the IP address inserded here might be incorrect.
This means that the value you get by calling request.getRemoteAddr() is the IP address of the immediate upstream source of the request.
As we said, there are many headers for different proxies in use, but x-forwareded-for is most likely to be inserted by a proxy.
As a last note, even if you get an IP address either from the header or from request.getRemoteAddr() it is not guarenteed to be the client IP address. e.g.: if your proxy does not include the IP address of the client then you’ll get the IP address of the proxy or load balancer. If your client works on a private network and connect to the internet via a NAT gateway, then the IP address in the HTTP request will be an address of the NAT server. Or even for a hacker it is quite easy to inject a header with a different IP address. So this means that you cannot reliably find out the IP address of the system that the request originated from.
private static final String[] IP_HEADER_CANDIDATES = {
"X-Forwarded-For",
"Proxy-Client-IP",
"WL-Proxy-Client-IP",
"HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR",
"HTTP_X_FORWARDED",
"HTTP_X_CLUSTER_CLIENT_IP",
"HTTP_CLIENT_IP",
"HTTP_FORWARDED_FOR",
"HTTP_FORWARDED",
"HTTP_VIA",
"REMOTE_ADDR" };
public static String getClientIpAddress(HttpServletRequest request) {
for (String header : IP_HEADER_CANDIDATES) {
String ip = request.getHeader(header);
if (ip != null && ip.length() != 0 && !"unknown".equalsIgnoreCase(ip)) {
return ip;
}
}
return request.getRemoteAddr();
}
How can I access client details like IP, browser, etc in a web service in java?
String ip = request.getRemoteAddress();
String browser = request.getHeader("User-Agent");
if you are using axis or Jax Rpc, then you can this to get the IP Address and Browser, This has to be done on the server side stub.
HttpServletRequest httpReq = (HttpServletRequest) MessageContext.getCurrentContext().getProperty(HTTPConstants.MC_HTTP_SERVLETREQUEST);
String ip = httpReq.getRemoteAddr();
String browser = httpReq.getHeader("User-Agent");
Information related to Browser would be available in the HTTP headers like : content type, version etc.
If a web service were able to get the IP address of it clients, the security would have been heavily comprised.
IP address can be never accessed until the client sends it as a param to your call.
I'm writing a web application, I need to do a audit log for all the actions in the application. For this purpose I need to get the IP Address of the client systems.
I'm using request.getRemoteAddr() to get the remote IP Address. But this has a problem, if the client is behind a proxy this method will give the IP of the proxy system.
When I did some search I found a header attribute called 'X-FORWARDED-FOR' in the HttpRequest object.
Can somebody tell me how exactly this header property works and how can I used this header to get the IP address of the client system.
Thank you
getRemoteIP returns the remote IP address of the user (assuming all HTTP intermediaries are well behaved wrt XFF header).
String getRemoteIP(HttpServletRequest request) {
String xff = request.getHeader("X-Forwarded-For");
if (xff != null) {
return xff.split("[\\s,]+")[0];
}
return request.getRemoteAddr();
}
The client's proxy - typically a firewall or somesuch - will populate the x-forwarded-for header with the ip it receives from its client, which is typically, but is not required to be (in the case of a user going through multiple proxies or firewalls) the ip of the user's machine.
'X-FORWARDED-FOR' is used for identifying the originating/actual IP address of a client connecting to a web server through an HTTP proxy.
You can simply use the value for this attribute to find out the originating client IP, even if it's behind a proxy.