Skip to main content

A Django application to retrieve user's IP address

Project description

Django IPware

A Django application to retrieve client's IP address

status-image version-image coverage-image

Overview

Best attempt to get client's IP address while keeping it DRY.

Notice

There is not a good out-of-the-box solution against fake IP addresses, aka IP Address Spoofing. You are encouraged to read the (Advanced users) section of this page and use trusted_proxies_ips and/or proxy_count features to match your needs, especially if you are planning to include ipware in any authentication, security or anti-fraud related architecture.

How to install

1. easy_install django-ipware
2. pip install django-ipware
3. git clone http://github.com/un33k/django-ipware
    a. cd django-ipware
    b. run python setup.py install
4. wget https://github.com/un33k/django-ipware/zipball/master
    a. unzip the downloaded file
    b. cd into django-ipware-* directory
    c. run python setup.py install

How to use

 # In a view or a middleware where the `request` object is available

 from ipware import get_client_ip
 client_ip, is_routable = get_client_ip(request)
 if client_ip is None:
    # Unable to get the client's IP address
 else:
     # We got the client's IP address
     if is_routable:
         # The client's IP address is publicly routable on the Internet
     else:
         # The client's IP address is private

 # Order of precedence is (Public, Private, Loopback, None)

Advanced users:

  • Precedence Order

    The default meta precedence order is top to bottom. However, you may customize the order by providing your own IPWARE_META_PRECEDENCE_ORDER by adding it to your project's settings.py

     # The default meta precedence order
     IPWARE_META_PRECEDENCE_ORDER = (
         'HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR', 'X_FORWARDED_FOR',  # <client>, <proxy1>, <proxy2>
         'HTTP_CLIENT_IP',
         'HTTP_X_REAL_IP',
         'HTTP_X_FORWARDED',
         'HTTP_X_CLUSTER_CLIENT_IP',
         'HTTP_FORWARDED_FOR',
         'HTTP_FORWARDED',
         'HTTP_VIA',
         'REMOTE_ADDR',
     )
    

    Alternatively, you can provide your custom request header meta precedence order when calling get_client_ip().

get_client_ip(request, request_header_order=['X_FORWARDED_FOR'])
get_client_ip(request, request_header_order=['X_FORWARDED_FOR', 'HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR'])

Private Prefixes

You may customize the prefixes to indicate an IP address is private. This is done by adding your own IPWARE_PRIVATE_IP_PREFIX to your project's settings.py. IP addresses matching the following prefixes are considered private & are not publicly routable.

# The default private IP prefixes
IPWARE_PRIVATE_IP_PREFIX = getattr(settings,
   'IPWARE_PRIVATE_IP_PREFIX', (
     '0.',  # messages to software
     '10.',  # class A private block
     '100.64.',  '100.65.',  '100.66.',  '100.67.',  '100.68.',  '100.69.',
     '100.70.',  '100.71.',  '100.72.',  '100.73.',  '100.74.',  '100.75.',
     '100.76.',  '100.77.',  '100.78.',  '100.79.',  '100.80.',  '100.81.',
     '100.82.',  '100.83.',  '100.84.',  '100.85.',  '100.86.',  '100.87.',
     '100.88.',  '100.89.',  '100.90.',  '100.91.',  '100.92.',  '100.93.',
     '100.94.',  '100.95.',  '100.96.',  '100.97.',  '100.98.',  '100.99.',
     '100.100.', '100.101.', '100.102.', '100.103.', '100.104.', '100.105.',
     '100.106.', '100.107.', '100.108.', '100.109.', '100.110.', '100.111.',
     '100.112.', '100.113.', '100.114.', '100.115.', '100.116.', '100.117.',
     '100.118.', '100.119.', '100.120.', '100.121.', '100.122.', '100.123.',
     '100.124.', '100.125.', '100.126.', '100.127.',  # carrier-grade NAT
     '169.254.',  # link-local block
     '172.16.', '172.17.', '172.18.', '172.19.',
     '172.20.', '172.21.', '172.22.', '172.23.',
     '172.24.', '172.25.', '172.26.', '172.27.',
     '172.28.', '172.29.', '172.30.', '172.31.',  # class B private blocks
     '192.0.0.',  # reserved for IANA special purpose address registry
     '192.0.2.',  # reserved for documentation and example code
     '192.168.',  # class C private block
     '198.18.', '198.19.',  # reserved for inter-network communications between two separate subnets
     '198.51.100.',  # reserved for documentation and example code
     '203.0.113.',  # reserved for documentation and example code
     '224.', '225.', '226.', '227.', '228.', '229.', '230.', '231.', '232.',
     '233.', '234.', '235.', '236.', '237.', '238.', '239.',  # multicast
     '240.', '241.', '242.', '243.', '244.', '245.', '246.', '247.', '248.',
     '249.', '250.', '251.', '252.', '253.', '254.', '255.',  # reserved
   ) + (
     '::',  # Unspecified address
     '::ffff:', '2001:10:', '2001:20:'  # messages to software
     '2001::',  # TEREDO
     '2001:2::',  # benchmarking
     '2001:db8:',  # reserved for documentation and example code
     'fc00:',  # IPv6 private block
     'fe80:',  # link-local unicast
     'ff00:',  # IPv6 multicast
   )
)

Trusted Proxies

If your Django server is behind one or more known proxy server(s), you can filter out unwanted requests by providing the trusted proxy list when calling get_client_ip(request, proxy_trusted_ips=['177.139.233.133']). In the following example, your load balancer (LB) can be seen as a trusted proxy.

 `Real` Client  <public> <---> <public> LB (Server) <private> <--------> <private> Django Server
                                                                   ^
                                                                   |
 `Fake` Client  <private> <---> <private> LB (Server) <private> ---^
# In the above scenario, use your load balancer IP address as a way to filter out unwanted requests.
client_ip, is_routable = get_client_ip(request, proxy_trusted_ips=['177.139.233.133'])

# If you have multiple proxies, simply add them to the list
client_ip, is_routable = get_client_ip(request, proxy_trusted_ips=['177.139.233.133', '177.139.233.134'])

# For proxy servers with fixed sub-domain and dynamic IP, use the following pattern.
client_ip, is_routable = get_client_ip(request, proxy_trusted_ips=['177.139.', '177.140'])
client_ip, is_routable = get_client_ip(request, proxy_trusted_ips=['177.139.233.', '177.139.240'])

Please note: By default, the right-most proxy in the chain is the trusted proxy and that is the one your django server talks to. Therefore, ipware checks to see if the right-most proxy address starts with any ip pattern that was passed in via the proxy_trusted_ips list.

Proxy Count

If your Django server is behind a known number of proxy server(s), you can filter out unwanted requests by providing the number of proxies when calling get_client_ip(request, proxy_count=1). In the following example, your load balancer (LB) can be seen as the only proxy.

 `Real` Client  <public> <---> <public> LB (Server) <private> <--------> <private> Django Server
                                                                   ^
                                                                   |
                                       `Fake` Client  <private> ---^
# In the above scenario, the total number of proxies can be used as a way to filter out unwanted requests.
client_ip, is_routable = get_client_ip(request, proxy_count=1)

# The above may be very useful in cases where your proxy server's IP address is assigned dynamically.
# However, If you have the proxy IP address, you can use it in combination to the proxy count.
client_ip, is_routable = get_client_ip(request, proxy_count=1, proxy_trusted_ips=['177.139.233.133'])

Originating Request

If your proxy server is configured such that the right-most IP address is that of the originating client, you can indicate right-most as your proxy_order when calling get_client_ip(request, proxy_order="right-most"). Please note that the de-facto standard for the originating client IP address is the left-most as per <client>, <proxy1>, <proxy2>.

Running the tests

To run the tests against the current environment:

python manage.py test

License

Released under a (MIT) license.

Version

X.Y.Z Version

`MAJOR` version -- when you make incompatible API changes,
`MINOR` version -- when you add functionality in a backwards-compatible manner, and
`PATCH` version -- when you make backwards-compatible bug fixes.

Sponsors

Neekware Inc.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

django-ipware-4.0.2.tar.gz (8.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

django_ipware-4.0.2-py2.py3-none-any.whl (9.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2Python 3

File details

Details for the file django-ipware-4.0.2.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: django-ipware-4.0.2.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 8.9 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.4.2 importlib_metadata/4.6.4 pkginfo/1.7.1 requests/2.26.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.62.1 CPython/3.9.6

File hashes

Hashes for django-ipware-4.0.2.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 602a58325a4808bd19197fef2676a0b2da2df40d0ecf21be414b2ff48c72ad05
MD5 48240909d94530c6de81cea4e5970200
BLAKE2b-256 422ea42b9a9554de99e17fc93f108c49d6627633989b4c95cfa8bee7db1294ee

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file django_ipware-4.0.2-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: django_ipware-4.0.2-py2.py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 9.3 kB
  • Tags: Python 2, Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.4.2 importlib_metadata/4.6.4 pkginfo/1.7.1 requests/2.26.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.62.1 CPython/3.9.6

File hashes

Hashes for django_ipware-4.0.2-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 878dbb06a87e25550798e9ef3204ed70a200dd8b15e47dcef848cf08244f04c9
MD5 c9acbd59c03c55167d3cffc191e81d5b
BLAKE2b-256 451e61cd5bde3a7c640ae4e935c9910e6b4c4a492cb78ff32915f779ff5150ff

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page