$ curl ip.dnns.icu 44.200.112.172 $ http -b ip.dnns.icu 44.200.112.172 $ wget -qO- ip.dnns.icu 44.200.112.172 $ fetch -qo- https://ip.dnns.icu 44.200.112.172 $ bat -print=b ip.dnns.icu/ip 44.200.112.172
$ http ip.dnns.icu/country United States $ http ip.dnns.icu/country-iso US
$ http ip.dnns.icu/city Ashburn
$ http ip.dnns.icu/asn AS14618
Looks like you're with AMAZON-AES
$ http ip.dnns.icu/json { "ip": "44.200.112.172", "ip_decimal": 751333548, "country": "United States", "country_iso": "US", "country_eu": false, "region_name": "Virginia", "region_code": "VA", "metro_code": 511, "zip_code": "20149", "city": "Ashburn", "latitude": 39.0469, "longitude": -77.4903, "time_zone": "America/New_York", "asn": "AS14618", "asn_org": "AMAZON-AES", "hostname": "ec2-44-200-112-172.compute-1.amazonaws.com", "user_agent": { "product": "CCBot", "version": "2.0", "comment": "(https://commoncrawl.org/faq/)", "raw_value": "CCBot/2.0 (https://commoncrawl.org/faq/)" } }
Setting the Accept: application/json
header also works as expected.
Always returns the IP address including a trailing newline, regardless of user agent.
$ http ip.dnns.icu/ip 44.200.112.172
$ http ip.dnns.icu/port/8080 { "ip": "44.200.112.172", "port": 8080, "reachable": false }
As of 2018-07-25 it's no longer possible to force protocol using
the v4 and v6 subdomains. IPv4 or IPv6 still can be forced
by passing the appropiate flag to your client, e.g curl -4
or curl -6
.
Yes, as long as the rate limit is respected. The rate limit is in place to ensure a fair service for all.
Please limit automated requests to 1 request per minute. No guarantee is made for requests that exceed this limit. They may be rate-limited, with a 429 status code, or dropped entirely.
Yes, the source code and documentation is available on GitHub.