Your IP Address is: 3.138.101.51
Obtaining a site's visitor from a servlet or JSP is very simple. All
that is needed is to call the getRemoteAddr()
method
defined in the HttpServletRequest
interface.
An instance of a class implementing HttpServletRequest
is automatically passed to both the doGet()
and doPost()
methods of the HttpServlet
class.
The doGet()
method for a Java servlet obtaining the
visitor's IP address would look something like this:
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
{
String ipAddress = request.getRemoteAddr();
}
After calling request.getRemoteAddr()
, the IP
address of the visitor will be stored in the ipAddress
String variable. We can then do whatever we need to do with it. The doPost()
method of a servlet obtaining the user's IP address would be nearly
identical to the doGet() method described above.
protected void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
{
String ipAddress = request.getRemoteAddr();
}
From a JSP, there is an implicit variable containing a class
implementing the HttpServletRequest
interface. The name of
this implicit variable is, appropriately enough, request
.
If we want to show the user their IP address (like we did in the
beginning of this file), this can be accomplished in a JSP with the
following code snippet: Your IP Address is:
<%=request.getRemoteAddr()%>
.
If instead of just displaying it to the user, we need to store it in a variable, assign it to a field, or do anything else with it, we can obtain it from a JSP scriptlet:
<%
String ipAddress=request.getRemoteAddr();
%>
As can be seen from the above examples, obtaining a visitor's IP
address from a Java Servlet or JSP is trivial. Basically all that is
needed is to call the getRemoteAddr()
method defined in the
HttpServletRequest
interface. This method returns a String
containg the user's IP address.