ipwhois is a simple package for retrieving and parsing whois data for IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
- Parses a majority of whois fields in to a standard dictionary
- IPv4 and IPv6 support
- Supports REST queries (useful if whois is blocked from your network)
- Proxy support for REST queries
- Recursive network parsing for IPs with parent/children networks listed
- Python 2.6+ and 3.3+ supported
- Useful set of utilities
- BSD license
Typical usage:
>>>> from ipwhois import IPWhois >>>> from pprint import pprint >>>> obj = IPWhois('74.125.225.229') >>>> results = obj.lookup() >>>> pprint(results) { 'asn': '15169', 'asn_cidr': '74.125.225.0/24', 'asn_country_code': 'US', 'asn_date': '2007-03-13', 'asn_registry': 'arin', 'nets': [{'abuse_emails': 'arin-contact@google.com', 'address': '1600 Amphitheatre Parkway', 'cidr': '74.125.0.0/16', 'city': 'Mountain View', 'country': 'US', 'created': '2007-03-13T00:00:00', 'description': 'Google Inc.', 'handle': 'NET-74-125-0-0-1', 'misc_emails': None, 'name': 'GOOGLE', 'postal_code': '94043', 'range': '74.125.0.0 - 74.125.255.255', 'state': 'CA', 'tech_emails': 'arin-contact@google.com', 'updated': '2012-02-24T00:00:00'}], 'query': '74.125.225.229', 'raw': None, 'raw_referral': None, 'referral': None }
REST (HTTP):
>>>> from ipwhois import IPWhois >>>> from pprint import pprint >>>> obj = IPWhois('74.125.225.229') >>>> results = obj.lookup_rws() >>>> pprint(results) { 'asn': '15169', 'asn_cidr': '74.125.225.0/24', 'asn_country_code': 'US', 'asn_date': '2007-03-13', 'asn_registry': 'arin', 'nets': [{'abuse_emails': 'arin-contact@google.com', 'address': '1600 Amphitheatre Parkway', 'cidr': '74.125.0.0/16', 'city': 'Mountain View', 'country': 'US', 'created': '2007-03-13T12:09:54-04:00', 'description': 'Google Inc.', 'handle': 'NET-74-125-0-0-1', 'misc_emails': None, 'name': 'GOOGLE', 'postal_code': '94043', 'range': '74.125.0.0 - 74.125.255.255', 'state': 'CA', 'tech_emails': 'arin-contact@google.com', 'updated': '2012-02-24T09:44:34-05:00'}], 'query': '74.125.225.229', 'raw': None }
Proxy:
>>>> from urllib import request >>>> from ipwhois import IPWhois >>>> handler = request.ProxyHandler({'http': 'http://192.168.0.1:80/'}) >>>> opener = request.build_opener(handler) >>>> obj = IPWhois('74.125.225.229', proxy_opener = opener)
Hostname:
>>>> from ipwhois import IPWhois >>>> from pprint import pprint >>>> obj = IPWhois('74.125.225.229') >>>> results = obj.get_host() >>>> pprint(results) ('dfw06s26-in-f5.1e100.net', [], ['74.125.225.229'])
Countries:
>>>> from ipwhois import IPWhois >>>> from ipwhois.utils import get_countries >>>> countries = get_countries() >>>> obj = IPWhois('74.125.225.229') >>>> results = obj.lookup(False) >>>> print(countries[results['nets'][0]['country']]) United States
Unique IP Addresses:
>>>> from ipwhois.utils import unique_addresses >>>> from pprint import pprint >>>> input_data = ( 'You can have IPs like 74.125.225.229, or 2001:4860:4860::8888' 'Put a port at the end 74.125.225.229:80 or for IPv6: ' '[2001:4860:4860::8888]:443 or even networks like ' '74.125.0.0/16 and 2001:4860::/32.' ) >>>> results = unique_addresses(data=input_data, file_path=None) >>>> pprint(results) {'2001:4860:4860::8888': {'count': 2, 'ports': {'443': 1}}, '2001:4860::/32': {'count': 1, 'ports': {}}, '74.125.0.0/16': {'count': 1, 'ports': {}}, '74.125.225.229': {'count': 2, 'ports': {'80': 1}}}
Python 2.6, 2.7:
dnspython ipaddr
Python 3.3+:
dnspython3
Latest version from PyPi:
pip install --upgrade ipwhois
Latest version from GitHub:
pip install -e git+https://github.com/secynic/ipwhois@master#egg=ipwhois
Parsing is currently limited to CIDR, country, name, handle, range, description, state, city, address, postal_code, abuse_emails, tech_emails, misc_emails, created and updated fields. This is assuming that those fields are present (for both whois and rwhois).
Some IPs have parent networks listed. The parser attempts to recognize this, and break the networks into individual dictionaries. If a single network has multiple CIDRs, they will be separated by ', '.
Sometimes, you will see whois information with multiple consecutive same name fields, e.g., Description: some text\nDescription: more text. The parser will recognize this and the returned result will have the values separated by '\n'.
IPWhois.lookup_rws() should be faster than IPWhois.lookup(), but may not be as reliable. AFRINIC does not have a Whois-RWS service yet. We have to rely on the Ripe RWS service, which does not contain all of the data we need. The LACNIC RWS service is supported, but is in beta v2. This may result in availability or performance issues.
There are no plans for domain whois support in this project. It is under consideration as a new library in the future.
Consider using Sven Slootweg's python-whois for a library with domain support.