In article <e1a84d570901191634u27e6b5d7h2f05a698213f6...@mail.gmail.com>, "James Mills" <prolo...@shortcircuit.net.au> wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 10:28 AM, Nehemiah Dacres <vivacar...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > Is ther an easy way to get the resolved ip address of the machine a script > > is running on? socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname) has only returned > > the ip address of my loop back interface ... not very usefull. > > That's because your /etc/hosts resolves > your hostname to 127.0.0.1 :) > > And no I know of no "easy" way cross > platform way. Perhaps parsing the output > of ifconfig itself ? Also, since the subject is on my brain at the moment, how to find "the address" is not the right question to ask. These days most systems have multiple network interfaces (Ethernet, WiFi, dialup, et al) running multiple protocols, like IPv4 and IPv6. In general, there is no *one* IP address of a machine; often there are many. Ignoring that fact can lead to subtle bugs, like the one causing a urllib2 regression test failure that I've been squashing today! -- Ned Deily, n...@acm.org -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list