What's the most concise way to resolve a hostname to an IP address in a Bash script? I'm using Arch Linux.
28 Answers
You can use getent
, which comes with glibc
(so you almost certainly have it on Linux). This resolves using gethostbyaddr/gethostbyname2, and so also will check /etc/hosts
/NIS/etc:
getent hosts unix.stackexchange.com | awk '{ print $1 }'
Or, as Heinzi said below, you can use dig
with the +short
argument (queries DNS servers directly, does not look at /etc/hosts
/NSS/etc) :
dig +short unix.stackexchange.com
If dig +short
is unavailable, any one of the following should work. All of these query DNS directly and ignore other means of resolution:
host unix.stackexchange.com | awk '/has address/ { print $4 }'
nslookup unix.stackexchange.com | awk '/^Address: / { print $2 }'
dig unix.stackexchange.com | awk '/^;; ANSWER SECTION:$/ { getline ; print $5 }'
If you want to only print one IP, then add the exit
command to awk
's workflow.
dig +short unix.stackexchange.com | awk '{ print ; exit }'
getent hosts unix.stackexchange.com | awk '{ print $1 ; exit }'
host unix.stackexchange.com | awk '/has address/ { print $4 ; exit }'
nslookup unix.stackexchange.com | awk '/^Address: / { print $2 ; exit }'
dig unix.stackexchange.com | awk '/^;; ANSWER SECTION:$/ { getline ; print $5 ; exit }'
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3By default, using dig only works with ipv4, where host gives both ipv4 and ipv6 answers. This might be unexpected. You can try
host www.google.com
,dig +short www.google.com
,host ipv6.google.com
,dig +short ipv6.google.com
,host www.facebook.com
,dig +short www.facebook.com
.– jfg956Commented Sep 21, 2011 at 15:21 -
9
-
6Sometimes,
host
can be timed out and returns nothing. For some domains,dig +short
may return domain alias in the first line. So, to ensure the output is an IPv4 address, usedig +short example.com | grep -Eo '[0-9\.]{7,15}' | head -1
. Commented Jun 7, 2014 at 15:25 -
23Using
getent hosts <host>
is incorrect, as for instance it may give an IPv6 address while IPv6 doesn't work. The correct solution is to usegetent ahosts <host>
to try both IPv6 and IPv4 if needed.– vinc17Commented Oct 3, 2016 at 15:02 -
11Worth mentioning: host, dig and nslookup seems to directly talk to the servers listed in resolv.conf, whereas "getent hosts" respect both the local hosts file and library-level caching (such as nscd) if enabled.– SaustrupCommented Jun 12, 2017 at 11:59
With host
from the dnsutils package:
$ host unix.stackexchange.com
unix.stackexchange.com has address 64.34.119.12
(Corrected package name according to the comments. As a note other distributions have host
in different packages: Debian/Ubuntu bind9-host, openSUSE bind-utils, Frugalware bind.)
-
1See the resolveip entry below if you need to resolve something not in DNS (e.g. /etc/hosts) Commented Jul 2, 2012 at 8:56
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2Be aware that
host
sometimes returns multi-line output (in the case of redirects), you'll wanthost unix.stackexchange.com | tail -n1
if you just want the line with the IP address. Commented Jan 23, 2013 at 5:04 -
There are multiple versions of "host" with different output formats. E.g. most systems seem to have the BIND9 version, but my Ubuntu 10.04 LTS server has some completely different version somehow..– ColinMCommented May 22, 2014 at 19:51
-
if you don't have
host
ordig
installed you can use ping instead which is always available:ping unix.stackexchange.com -c 1 -q 2>&1 | grep -Po "(\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3}"
this does not need any extra packages install on most Unix/Linux matchines.– BoynuxCommented May 23, 2014 at 8:18 -
6This answer deserves a serious downvote.
host
is a DNS tool (similar tonslookup
) so it only looks up hosts in DNS, not in e.g./etc/hosts
. So it is NOT an answer to OP's question.– peterhCommented Sep 11, 2014 at 9:49
The following command using dig
allows you to read the result directly without any sed/awk/etc. magic:
$ dig +short unix.stackexchange.com
64.34.119.12
dig
is also included in the dnsutils
package.
Note: dig
has a return value of 0
, even if the name could not be resolved. Thus, you'd need to check if the output is empty instead of checking the return value:
hostname=unix.stackexchange.com
ip=`dig +short $hostname`
if [ -n "$ip" ]; then
echo IP: $ip
else
echo Could not resolve hostname.
fi
Note 2: If a hostname has multiple IP addresses (try debian.org
, for example), all of them will be returned. This "problem" affects all of the tools mentioned in this question so far:
-
3Note that if a domain has a CNAME entry its domain may be printed in the first line instead of an IP address.– pcworldCommented Apr 27, 2018 at 23:27
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dig doesn't work when DNS is not configured, or when the host has no DNS server entry but exists in /etc/hosts Commented Feb 21 at 17:07
I have a tool on my machine that seems to do the job. The man page shows it seems to come with mysql... Here is how you could use it:
resolveip -s unix.stackexchange.com
64.34.119.12
The return value of this tool is different from 0 if the hostname cannot be resolved :
resolveip -s unix.stackexchange.coma
resolveip: Unable to find hostid for 'unix.stackexchange.coma': host not found
exit 2
UPDATE On fedora, it comes with mysql-server :
yum provides "*/resolveip"
mysql-server-5.5.10-2.fc15.x86_64 : The MySQL server and related files
Dépôt : fedora
Correspondance depuis :
Nom de fichier : /usr/bin/resolveip
I guess it would create a strange dependency for your script...
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8This seems to be the only solution on here that uses the OS's build in resolver - so works for /etc/hosts as well as DNS. Commented Jul 2, 2012 at 8:57
-
13
getent
, as detailed in the other answer, also looks at /etc/hosts, and comes with glibc, so has no dependencies on a Linux system. Commented Apr 16, 2016 at 13:32 -
1I would not use resolveip since you create a dependency on another package. getent is installed by default. host, nslookup, and dig are all in optional packages. Definitely use getent in a script. Commented Apr 21, 2020 at 17:07
-
-
> pacman -Qo /bin/resolveip /usr/bin/resolveip is owned by mariadb 10.5.9-1– ifeCommented May 7, 2021 at 2:07
getent hosts unix.stackexchange.com | cut -d' ' -f1
-
8
-
cut
will not for getent's, which use\t
to separate columns. This is the case on Solaris.– cevingCommented Mar 18, 2016 at 9:51 -
1@ceving: On Solaris you might have to run
cut
without-d
(defaults to\t
as delimiter ). On Linux it's spaces, thus the line above works.– sborskyCommented Apr 7, 2016 at 22:24
The solutions given so far mostly work in the simpler case: the hostname directly resolves to a single IPv4 address. This might be the only case where you need to resolve hostnames, but if not, below is a discussion on some cases that you might need to handle.
Chris Down and Heinzi briefly discussed the case where the hostname resolves to more than one IP addresses. In this case (and others below), basic scripting under the assumption that a hostname directly resolves to a single IP address may break. Below, an example with a hostname resolving to more than a single IP address:
$ host www.l.google.com
www.l.google.com has address 209.85.148.147
www.l.google.com has address 209.85.148.103
www.l.google.com has address 209.85.148.99
www.l.google.com has address 209.85.148.106
www.l.google.com has address 209.85.148.105
www.l.google.com has address 209.85.148.104
But what is www.l.google.com
? This is where the alias case needs to be introduced. Let's check the example below:
$ host www.google.com
www.google.com is an alias for www.l.google.com.
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.103
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.147
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.105
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.99
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.106
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.104
So www.google.com
does not directly resolve to IP addresses, but to an alias that itself resolves to multiple IP addresses. For more information on aliases, check here. Of course, the case where an alias has a single IP address is possible, as shown below:
$ host g.www.ms.akadns.net
g.www.ms.akadns.net is an alias for lb1.www.ms.akadns.net.
lb1.www.ms.akadns.net has address 207.46.19.190
But can aliases be chained? The answer is yes:
$ host www.microsoft.com
www.microsoft.com is an alias for toggle.www.ms.akadns.net.
toggle.www.ms.akadns.net is an alias for g.www.ms.akadns.net.
g.www.ms.akadns.net is an alias for lb1.www.ms.akadns.net.
lb1.www.ms.akadns.net has address 207.46.19.254
$ host www.google.fr
www.google.fr is an alias for www.google.com.
www.google.com is an alias for www.l.google.com.
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.147
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.103
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.99
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.106
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.104
www.l.google.com has address 74.125.39.105
I did not find any example where a hostname resolves to an alias that does not resolve to an IP address, but I think the case might occur.
More than multiple IP addresses and aliases, is there some other special cases... what about IPv6? You could try:
$ host ipv6.google.com
ipv6.google.com is an alias for ipv6.l.google.com.
ipv6.l.google.com has IPv6 address 2a00:1450:8007::68
Where the hostname ipv6.google.com
is an IPv6-only hostname. What about dual-stack hostnames:
$ host www.facebook.com
www.facebook.com has address 66.220.153.15
www.facebook.com has IPv6 address 2620:0:1c08:4000:face:b00c::
Again about IPv6, if your host is IPv4 only, you can still resolve IPv6 addresses (tested on a IPv4 only WinXP and with ipv6.google.com, you could try it on Linux). In this case, the resolution succeeds, but a ping fails with an unknown host error message. This might be a case where your scripting fails.
I hope those remarks were useful.
-
2What a great complement to the accepted answer, showing all the edge cases that one might want to deal with in scripting. My version
host
does not even state "has address" for my boxes. Commented Feb 15, 2013 at 23:23
Simple but useful:
getent ahostsv4 www.google.de | grep STREAM | head -n 1 | cut -d ' ' -f 1
getent ahostsv6 www.google.de | grep STREAM | head -n 1 | cut -d ' ' -f 1
getent hosts google.de | head -n 1 | cut -d ' ' -f 1
All commands will resolve an IP address if the host still exists. If the host points to a CNAME it will also get the IP in that case.
The first command returns the resolved IPv4 address.
The second command returns the resolved IPv6 address.
The third command will return the owner's preferred address, which may either an IPv4 or an IPv6 address.
-
By far the most simple one. And its avilable by default. Not like
host
that require install of thebindutils
Commented Oct 21, 2015 at 6:45 -
ping -q -c 1 -t 1 your_host_here | grep PING | sed -e "s/).*//" | sed -e "s/.*(//"
works without dependencies on other systems (and for hosts specified in /etc/hosts)
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2The use of ping is what I needed as I need the value from the hosts file but the sed pattern parsing correctly but this worked ping -q -c 1 -t 1 your_host_here | grep PING | sed -e "s/^[^(]*[(]//" | sed -e "s/[)].*$//"– ManiacZXCommented Jan 18, 2013 at 19:23
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1To resolve something on my home network like myhostname.local this works so for me this is the best answer. Commented Jan 24, 2015 at 2:59
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1May I suggest this also:
ping -q -c 1 -t 1 bahface.local | grep -m 1 PING | cut -d "(" -f2 | cut -d ")" -f1
Commented Jan 24, 2015 at 3:08 -
getent <ahosts|ahostsv4|ahostsv6|hosts> <hostname>
works for declarations inside/etc/hosts
, too ... and it's the go-to-tool for all kinds of system databases (passwd, group, aliases, services). Commented Apr 30, 2015 at 7:53
To avoid the problem with aliases and always get a single IP address ready for use:
python -c 'import socket; print socket.gethostbyname("www.example.com")'
-
I made a bash function to stick in my bashrc from this answer: gist.github.com/brycepg/ba117a37de53906dc8fcc312bd7d5fee Commented Aug 11, 2017 at 16:58
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2
python3 -c 'import socket; print(socket.gethostbyname("www.example.com"))'
– FelikZCommented Nov 21, 2019 at 12:35 -
awesome tip. As far as I can see this is the only one that also will work on my mac and my windows machines Commented Nov 13, 2021 at 10:05
Here is a slight variation of the ping
approach that takes "unknown host" into account (by piping through stderr) and uses tr
to avoid the use of sed
regexps:
ping -c1 -t1 -W0 www.example.com 2>&1 | tr -d '():' | awk '/^PING/{print $3}'
In case it's important to capture the exit value, then the following will work (although less elegant):
ping -c1 -t1 -W0 www.example.com &>/dev/null && ping -c1 -t1 -W0 www.example.com 2>&1 | tr -d '():' | awk '/^PING/{print $3}'
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1I love this solution, because it works without any extra tools. Commented Aug 9, 2018 at 8:14
To complete Chris Down's answer, and address jfgagne comments about (possibly chained) aliases, here is a solution that :
- takes into account multiple IPs
- takes into account one or more aliases (CNAME)
- does not query
/etc/hosts
file (in my case I didn't want it); to query it, dbernt's python solution is perfect) does not use awk/sed
dig +short www.alias.com | grep -v "\.$" | head -n 1
Always returns the first IP address, or empty tring if not resolved. with version of dig :
$ dig -v
DiG 9.8.1-P1
-
1Thanks, other answers assume "dig +short" always returns a single ip address. They weren't accounting for CNAMEs.– jamshidCommented May 10, 2016 at 0:46
here's a Bash recipe I cooked up using other folk's answers — first tries /etc/hosts
, then falls back to nslookup:
resolveip(){
local host="$1"
if [ -z "$host" ]
then
return 1
else
local ip=$( getent hosts "$host" | awk '{print $1}' )
if [ -z "$ip" ]
then
ip=$( dig +short "$host" )
if [ -z "$ip" ]
then
echo "unable to resolve '$host'" >&2
return 1
else
echo "$ip"
return 0
fi
else
echo "$ip"
return 0
fi
fi
}
-
To be clear,
getent hosts
isn't just a lookup in /etc/hosts - it's a full-on DNS-resolving call to gethostbyaddr(3), and it's very unlikely to fail in a case wheredig
will succeed. See the man page for getent. Commented Aug 3, 2014 at 11:42 -
@Stuart is right — i've learned a great deal since writing that and oversimplified a powerful command.
getent
remains my favorite, although i also likedig +short
Commented Aug 3, 2014 at 18:26
php -r "echo gethostbyname('unix.stackexchange.com');"
-
this works, but it requires that php is installed on your terminal Commented Aug 9, 2018 at 8:29
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1can be useful on a typical php docker container where "host", "dig" etc. are not available Commented Sep 5, 2018 at 19:42
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nmap -sP 192.168.178.0/24|grep YOUR_HOSTNAME|sed -n 's/.*[(]\([0-9\.]*\)[)].*/\1/p'
was the solution I found without DNS server
I would have liked to add this as a comment to Andrew McGregor Re: ping. However it wouldn't let me, so I need to add this as another answer. (If somebody can move it into a comment, feel free to.)
This is another variant, only using ping and grep:
ping -q -c1 -t1 your_host_here | grep -Eo "([0-9]+\.?){4}"
grep -E
for extended regular expression and
grep -o
to return only the matching part.
the regexp itself looks for one or multiple digits ([0-9]+
) and optionally a dot (\.?
) four times ({4}
)
You could use host
:
hostname=example.org
# strips the IP
IP=$( host ${hostname} | sed -e "s/.*\ //" )
# checks for errors
if [ $? -ne 0 ] ; then
echo "Error: cannot resolve ${hostname}" 1>&2
exit 1;
fi
dig is too slow, nslookup is much faster
nslookup google.com | grep -Po 'Address:\s*[0-9.]+' | tail -1 | sed -e 's/Address:\s*//g'
dig +noall +answer +nocomments example.com | awk '{printf "%-36s\t%s\n", $1, $5 }'
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1Some context in what way that answer improves over the already existing ones would be great. Also, please indent commands by 4 spaces (cf. the markdown syntax). Commented Mar 17, 2016 at 21:14
Maybe not the most concise, but it seems to be robust and efficient:
# $(get_host_dns_short "google.com")
#
# Outputs the IPv4 IP Address of a hostname, resolved by DNS. Returns 0 if DNS
# responded successfully; 1 otherwise. Will mask error output.
function get_host_dns_short()
{
(
set -o pipefail
host -4 -W1 -t A "$1" 2>/dev/null | awk '/has address/ { print $NF; exit }'
) && return 0 || return 1
}
This will output a single IPv4 IP, as well as return 1
in the event of failure, while masking stderr output.
You can use it like this:
GOOGLE_IP="$(get_host_dns_short "google.com")"
if [[ $? -eq 0 ]]; then
echo "Google's IP is ${GOOGLE_IP}."
else
echo "Failed to resolve Google's IP."
fi
Google's IP is 216.58.192.46.
If you want an IPv6 address instead, just replace -4
with -6
.
I am doing this all the time on my Mac which does not have getent
. ping
seems like a hack. I would like to take /etc/hosts
into account as well.
So, I wrote a stupid wrapper for dns.lookup
for you who have Node.js installed to provide a CLI:
$ npm install -g lookup-hostname
$ lookup google.com
62.243.192.89
-
60% chance of breakage before you get anywhere near a resolve.– dotbitCommented Aug 27, 2019 at 11:58
-
@dotbit could you elaborate? I've used this weekly since '17 and never had any issues. Commented Aug 27, 2019 at 20:47
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@Jensen but you're the only one ever, as always. The rest of us usually run into FAIL of one sort or the other, and always.– dotbitCommented Aug 30, 2019 at 5:55
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"as always" What do you mean by that? "The rest of us" Who's that? "run into FAIL" What specific issue are you seeing? I'm curious. Commented Aug 31, 2019 at 13:59
I don't know the easiest way for a bash-script but if you want to resolve a hostname and see if the host is up, use ping
!
ping -a hostname -c 1
Will ping
the host one time and resolve the hostname to IP-address.
$ ping -a www.google.com -c 1
PING www.google.com (216.58.211.132) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from arn09s10-in-f4.1e100.net (216.58.211.132): icmp_seq=1 ttl=54 time=1.51 ms
-
using ping is good, because everybody has it, but you need to to filter the IP-Part from the outputs, if you like to use it in a script. Commented Aug 9, 2018 at 8:27
#!/bin/bash
systemd-resolve RT.com -t A | awk '{ print $4 ; exit }'
systemd-resolve unix.stackexchange.com -t A --legend=no | awk '{ print $4 ; exit }'
resolveip -s RT.com
dig +short RT.com
host RT.com | awk '/has address/ { print $4 }'
nslookup RT.com | awk '/^Address: / { print $2 }'
ping -q -c 1 -t 1 RT.com | grep PING | sed -e "s/).*//" | sed -e "s/.*(//"
ruby -rresolv -e ' print Resolv.getaddress "RT.com" '
python2 -c 'import socket; print socket.gethostbyname("RT.com")'
perl -MSocket -MNet::hostent -E 'say inet_ntoa((gethost shift)->addr)' RT.com 2>/dev/null
php -r "echo gethostbyname( 'RT.com' );"
echo " all do work for me - take your pick! "
1 line resolve a list of hostname
for LINE in `cat ~/Desktop/mylist`; do a=$(nslookup $LINE | awk '/^Address: / { print $1 }'); echo $a >> ~/Desktop/ip; done
Yes, there are many answers already, but a solution using perl is missing:
perl -MSocket -MNet::hostent -E 'say inet_ntoa((gethost shift)->addr)' unix.stackexchange.com
In a bash script it could be used like this:
#!/bin/bash
ipaddr=$(perl -MSocket -MNet::hostent -E 'say inet_ntoa((gethost shift)->addr)' unix.stackexchange.com)
echo $ipaddr
Modules used here are core modules, so should be available everywhere without installing with CPAN.
-
perl -MSocket -MNet::hostent -E 'say inet_ntoa((gethost shift)->addr)' unix.stackexchange.com 2>/dev/null
is much cleaner. but no one but the two of us are using pörl , everyone else uses Pascal Script of course.– dotbitCommented Aug 27, 2019 at 12:02 -
Actually I prefer to see the error messages if anything goes wrong.
Can't call method "addr" on an undefined value
isn't exactly the best error message, but may give a hint about the problem. Commented Aug 30, 2019 at 11:21
A python3 based variant that displays all ipv4 and ipv6 addresses from the system dns resolver, each ip as a separate line:
python3 -c 'import socket, sys; print("\n".join([x[4][0] for x in socket.getaddrinfo(sys.argv[1], 0, type=socket.SocketKind.SOCK_STREAM)]))' example.com
If sensible error handling is needed this would need an additional try: block etc.
For completeness a Ruby one liner answer:
$ ruby -rresolv -e "puts Resolv::DNS.new(nameserver: '1.1.1.1').getaddress('duckduckgo.com')"
host -t a cisco.com
this command will show ip address ( will reslove domain to IP )
Besides above solution, you can translate multiple host name to ip via below script, the only dependency is "ping" command in core Unix:
getip(){ ping -c 1 -t 1 $1 | head -1 | cut -d ' ' -f 3 | tr -d '()' 2>&1 | tee >> /tmp/result.log & }
getip 'hostname.number1.net'
getip 'hostname.number2.net'
getip 'hostname.number3.net'
getip 'hostname.number4.net'
getip 'hostname.number5.net'
getip 'hostname.number6.net'
getip 'hostname.number7.net'
getip 'hostname.number8.net'
$ cat /tmp/result.log
ABC.DEF.GHI.XY1
ABC.DEF.GHI.XY2
ABC.DEF.GHI.XY3
ABC.DEF.GHI.XY4
ABC.DEF.GHI.XY5
ABC.DEF.GHI.XY6
ABC.DEF.GHI.XY7
ABC.DEF.GHI.XY8
getent <ahosts|ahostsv4|ahostsv6|hosts> <hostname>
answer is somewhere down there near the bottom. It's the simplest, requires no extra packages and is easier to parse from a Bash script, too.getent hosts somehost
, when running this while onsomehost
will produce an IPv6 address, which is different from how most other tools (ping
,ssh
at least) resolve names, and breaks some things. Use theahosts
instead ofhosts
.ahostsv4
) or IPv6 (ahostsv6
) addresses? Personally I find nothing wrong with the unspecific request returning IPv6. Your code should be prepared. IPv6 has been out there for more than 20 years now.hosts
, and so far 4 people have upvoted vinc17's comment expressing the pain caused by "suddenly IPv6". Being prepared for IPv6 is not always the issue: many programs need a way to determine whether two names/addresses refer to the same host. They can either use simple string matching, or they must know a lot about the network to find the "true" answer. The latter is a minefield, so many 3rd-party programs and systems -- that I have no control over -- use the former.