I am trying to get the IP address of an device i.e using WIFI or 3G connection. I am getting the ip address in IPV6 format which is not understandable. I want in IPV4 format IP address.I have done google but dint found any proper solutions.
here is code which I am using to get IP address of an device
public String getLocalIpAddress() {
try {
try {
for (Enumeration<NetworkInterface> en = NetworkInterface
.getNetworkInterfaces(); en.hasMoreElements();) {
NetworkInterface intf = en.nextElement();
for (Enumeration<InetAddress> enumIpAddr = intf.getInetAddresses(); enumIpAddr.hasMoreElements();)
{
InetAddress inetAddress = enumIpAddr.nextElement();
System.out.println("ip1--:" + inetAddress);
System.out.println("ip2--:" + inetAddress.getHostAddress());
if (!inetAddress.isLoopbackAddress()) {
String ip = inetAddress.getHostAddress().toString();
System.out.println("ip---::" + ip);
EditText tv = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.ipadd);
tv.setText(ip);
return inetAddress.getHostAddress().toString();
}
}
}
} catch (Exception ex) {
Log.e("IP Address", ex.toString());
}
return null;
}
I am getting this ouput :
ip1--:/fe80::5054:ff:fe12:3456%eth0%2
ip2--:fe80::5054:ff:fe12:3456%eth0
It should be displayed like this :
192.168.1.1
please help me out..
After trying many tricks.. finally I can get the IP address in IPV4 format.. Here is my code..
Added if condition as shown below
instead of this
Many Thanks.. Rahul
An alternative for checking if the address is a version 4 address is:
You cannot assume that any device has just one network address. You also cannot assume that it will have any IPv4 - it may be IPv6 only, so your application will need to be able to handle both IPv4 and IPv6 address displays.
Typically, an Android phone has at least two interfaces that get assigned usable ip addresses, rmnet0 for the 3G data, which for IPv4 is often carrier-grade NATed and so cannot accept incoming socket connections, and may also have an IPv6 address; and wlan0 for the wifi, which will have whatever IPv4 and/or IPv6 address it can negotiate with the network it attaches to.
Some versions of Android will intentionally drop the (typically more expensive) rmnet0 link when it attaches to wifi - in an attempt to reduce 3G data usage. This behaviour is a problem when the wifi has attached to something that is a captive portal that requires a manual sign-in.
It seems there is a seperate class Inet4Address in the Java API for IPv4 addresses.