public class InetAddress
extends java.lang.Object
implements java.io.Serializable
An IP address is either a 32-bit or 128-bit unsigned number used by IP, a lower-level protocol on which protocols like UDP and TCP are built. The IP address architecture is defined by RFC 790: Assigned Numbers, RFC 1918: Address Allocation for Private Internets, RFC 2365: Administratively Scoped IP Multicast, and RFC 2373: IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture. An instance of an InetAddress consists of an IP address and possibly its corresponding host name (depending on whether it is constructed with a host name or whether it has already done reverse host name resolution).
unicast An identifier for a single interface. A packet sent to a unicast address is delivered to the interface identified by that address. The Unspecified Address -- Also called anylocal or wildcard address. It must never be assigned to any node. It indicates the absence of an address. One example of its use is as the target of bind, which allows a server to accept a client connection on any interface, in case the server host has multiple interfaces.
The unspecified address must not be used as the destination address of an IP packet.
The Loopback Addresses -- This is the address assigned to the loopback interface. Anything sent to this IP address loops around and becomes IP input on the local host. This address is often used when testing a client.
multicast An identifier for a set of interfaces (typically belonging to different nodes). A packet sent to a multicast address is delivered to all interfaces identified by that address.
Link-local addresses are designed to be used for addressing on a single link for purposes such as auto-address configuration, neighbor discovery, or when no routers are present.
Site-local addresses are designed to be used for addressing inside of a site without the need for a global prefix.
Global addresses are unique across the internet.
For IPv4 address format, please refer to Inet4Address#format; For IPv6 address format, please refer to Inet6Address#format.
There is a couple of System Properties affecting how IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are used.
Reverse name resolution means that for any IP address, the host associated with the IP address is returned.
The InetAddress class provides methods to resolve host names to their IP addresses and vice versa.
By default, when a security manager is installed, in order to protect against DNS spoofing attacks, the result of positive host name resolutions are cached forever. When a security manager is not installed, the default behavior is to cache entries for a finite (implementation dependent) period of time. The result of unsuccessful host name resolution is cached for a very short period of time (10 seconds) to improve performance.
If the default behavior is not desired, then a Java security property can be set to a different Time-to-live (TTL) value for positive caching. Likewise, a system admin can configure a different negative caching TTL value when needed.
Two Java security properties control the TTL values used for positive and negative host name resolution caching:
- networkaddress.cache.ttl
- Indicates the caching policy for successful name lookups from the name service. The value is specified as as integer to indicate the number of seconds to cache the successful lookup. The default setting is to cache for an implementation specific period of time.
A value of -1 indicates "cache forever".
- networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl (default: 10)
- Indicates the caching policy for un-successful name lookups from the name service. The value is specified as as integer to indicate the number of seconds to cache the failure for un-successful lookups.
A value of 0 indicates "never cache". A value of -1 indicates "cache forever".
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
boolean |
equals(java.lang.Object obj)
Compares this object against the specified object.
|
byte[] |
getAddress()
Returns the raw IP address of this
InetAddress object. |
static InetAddress[] |
getAllByName(java.lang.String host)
Given the name of a host, returns an array of its IP addresses, based on the configured name service on the
system.
|
static InetAddress |
getByAddress(byte[] addr)
Returns an
InetAddress object given the raw IP address . |
static InetAddress |
getByAddress(java.lang.String host,
byte[] addr)
Creates an InetAddress based on the provided host name and IP address.
|
static InetAddress |
getByName(java.lang.String host)
Determines the IP address of a host, given the host's name.
|
java.lang.String |
getCanonicalHostName()
Gets the fully qualified domain name for this IP address.
|
java.lang.String |
getHostAddress()
Returns the IP address string in textual presentation.
|
java.lang.String |
getHostName()
Gets the host name for this IP address.
|
static InetAddress |
getLocalHost()
Returns the address of the local host.
|
static InetAddress |
getLoopbackAddress()
Returns the loopback address.
|
int |
hashCode()
Returns a hashcode for this IP address.
|
boolean |
isAnyLocalAddress()
Utility routine to check if the InetAddress in a wildcard address.
|
boolean |
isLinkLocalAddress()
Utility routine to check if the InetAddress is an link local address.
|
boolean |
isLoopbackAddress()
Utility routine to check if the InetAddress is a loopback address.
|
boolean |
isMCGlobal()
Utility routine to check if the multicast address has global scope.
|
boolean |
isMCLinkLocal()
Utility routine to check if the multicast address has link scope.
|
boolean |
isMCNodeLocal()
Utility routine to check if the multicast address has node scope.
|
boolean |
isMCOrgLocal()
Utility routine to check if the multicast address has organization scope.
|
boolean |
isMCSiteLocal()
Utility routine to check if the multicast address has site scope.
|
boolean |
isMulticastAddress()
Utility routine to check if the InetAddress is an IP multicast address.
|
boolean |
isSiteLocalAddress()
Utility routine to check if the InetAddress is a site local address.
|
java.lang.String |
toString()
Converts this IP address to a
String . |
public boolean isMulticastAddress()
boolean
indicating if the InetAddress is an IP multicast addresspublic boolean isAnyLocalAddress()
boolean
indicating if the Inetaddress is a wildcard address.public boolean isLoopbackAddress()
boolean
indicating if the InetAddress is a loopback address; or false otherwise.public boolean isLinkLocalAddress()
boolean
indicating if the InetAddress is a link local address; or false if address is not a
link local unicast address.public boolean isSiteLocalAddress()
boolean
indicating if the InetAddress is a site local address; or false if address is not a
site local unicast address.public boolean isMCGlobal()
boolean
indicating if the address has is a multicast address of global scope, false if it is
not of global scope or it is not a multicast addresspublic boolean isMCNodeLocal()
boolean
indicating if the address has is a multicast address of node-local scope, false if it
is not of node-local scope or it is not a multicast addresspublic boolean isMCLinkLocal()
boolean
indicating if the address has is a multicast address of link-local scope, false if it
is not of link-local scope or it is not a multicast addresspublic boolean isMCSiteLocal()
boolean
indicating if the address has is a multicast address of site-local scope, false if it
is not of site-local scope or it is not a multicast addresspublic boolean isMCOrgLocal()
boolean
indicating if the address has is a multicast address of organization-local scope, false
if it is not of organization-local scope or it is not a multicast addresspublic java.lang.String getHostName()
If this InetAddress was created with a host name, this host name will be remembered and returned; otherwise, a
reverse name lookup will be performed and the result will be returned based on the system configured name lookup
service. If a lookup of the name service is required, call getCanonicalHostName
.
If there is a security manager, its checkConnect
method is first called with the hostname and -1
as its arguments to see if the operation is allowed. If the operation is not allowed, it will return the textual
representation of the IP address.
getCanonicalHostName()
public java.lang.String getCanonicalHostName()
If there is a security manager, this method first calls its checkConnect
method with the hostname and
-1
as its arguments to see if the calling code is allowed to know the hostname for this IP address, i.e.,
to connect to the host. If the operation is not allowed, it will return the textual representation of the IP
address.
public byte[] getAddress()
InetAddress
object. The result is in network byte order: the highest
order byte of the address is in getAddress()[0]
.public java.lang.String getHostAddress()
public int hashCode()
hashCode
in class java.lang.Object
public boolean equals(@Nullable java.lang.Object obj)
true
if and only if the argument is not
null
and it represents the same IP address as this object.
Two instances of InetAddress
represent the same IP address if the length of the byte arrays returned by
getAddress
is the same for both, and each of the array components is the same for the byte arrays.
equals
in class java.lang.Object
obj
- the object to compare against.true
if the objects are the same; false
otherwise.getAddress()
public java.lang.String toString()
String
. The string returned is of the form: hostname / literal IP address.
If the host name is unresolved, no reverse name service lookup is performed. The hostname part will be
represented by an empty string.toString
in class java.lang.Object
public static InetAddress getByAddress(java.lang.String host, byte[] addr) throws UnknownHostException
The host name can either be a machine name, such as "java.sun.com
", or a textual representation of its IP
address.
No validity checking is done on the host name either.
If addr specifies an IPv4 address an instance of Inet4Address will be returned; otherwise, an instance of Inet6Address will be returned.
IPv4 address byte array must be 4 bytes long and IPv6 byte array must be 16 bytes long
host
- the specified hostaddr
- the raw IP address in network byte orderUnknownHostException
- if IP address is of illegal lengthpublic static InetAddress getByName(@Nullable java.lang.String host) throws UnknownHostException
The host name can either be a machine name, such as "java.sun.com
", or a textual representation of its IP
address. If a literal IP address is supplied, only the validity of the address format is checked.
For host
specified in literal IPv6 address, either the form defined in RFC 2732 or the literal IPv6
address format defined in RFC 2373 is accepted. IPv6 scoped addresses are also supported. See
here for a description of IPv6 scoped addresses.
If the host is null
then an InetAddress
representing an address of the loopback interface is
returned. See RFC 3330 section 2 and
RFC 2373 section 2.5.3.
host
- the specified host, or null
.UnknownHostException
- if no IP address for the host
could be found, or if a scope_id was specified for a global
IPv6 address.java.lang.SecurityException
- if a security manager exists and its checkConnect method doesn't allow the operationpublic static InetAddress[] getAllByName(@Nullable java.lang.String host) throws UnknownHostException
The host name can either be a machine name, such as "java.sun.com
", or a textual representation of its IP
address. If a literal IP address is supplied, only the validity of the address format is checked.
For host
specified in literal IPv6 address, either the form defined in RFC 2732 or the literal
IPv6 address format defined in RFC 2373 is accepted. A literal IPv6 address may also be qualified by appending a
scoped zone identifier or scope_id. The syntax and usage of scope_ids is described
here.
If the host is null
then an InetAddress
representing an address of the loopback interface is
returned. See RFC 3330 section 2 and
RFC 2373 section 2.5.3.
If there is a security manager and host
is not null and host.length()
is not equal to zero, the
security manager's checkConnect
method is called with the hostname and -1
as its arguments to see
if the operation is allowed.
host
- the name of the host, or null
.UnknownHostException
- if no IP address for the host
could be found, or if a scope_id was specified for a global
IPv6 address.java.lang.SecurityException
- if a security manager exists and its checkConnect
method doesn't allow the operation.public static InetAddress getLoopbackAddress()
The InetAddress returned will represent the IPv4 loopback address, 127.0.0.1, or the IPv6 loopback address, ::1. The IPv4 loopback address returned is only one of many in the form 127.*.*.*
public static InetAddress getByAddress(byte[] addr) throws UnknownHostException
InetAddress
object given the raw IP address . The argument is in network byte order: the
highest order byte of the address is in getAddress()[0]
.
This method doesn't block, i.e. no reverse name service lookup is performed.
IPv4 address byte array must be 4 bytes long and IPv6 byte array must be 16 bytes long
addr
- the raw IP address in network byte orderUnknownHostException
- if IP address is of illegal lengthpublic static InetAddress getLocalHost() throws UnknownHostException
InetAddress
.
Note: The resolved address may be cached for a short period of time.
If there is a security manager, its checkConnect
method is called with the local host name and -1
as its arguments to see if the operation is allowed. If the operation is not allowed, an InetAddress representing
the loopback address is returned.
UnknownHostException
- if the local host name could not be resolved into an address.getByName(java.lang.String)