This is a Python client and command line interface (CLI) for the ipdata.co IP Geolocation API. ipdata offers a fast, highly-available API to enrich IP Addresses with Location, Company, Threat Intelligence and numerous other data attributes.
Note that you need an API Key to use this package. You can get a free one with a 1,500 daily request limit by Signing up here.
Visit our Documentation for more examples and tutorials.
Install the latest version of the cli with pip
.
pip install ipdata
or easy_install
easy_install ipdata
You need a valid API key from ipdata to use the library. You can get a free key by Signing up here.
Replace test
with your API Key in the following examples.
You can look up the calling IP address, that is, the IP address of the computer you are running this on by not passing an IP address to the lookup
method.
>>> import ipdata
>>> ipdata.api_key = "<YOUR API KEY>"
>>> ipdata.lookup()
You can look up any valid IPv4 or IPv6 address by passing it to the lookup
method.
>>> import ipdata
>>> ipdata.api_key = "<YOUR API KEY>"
>>> response = ipdata.lookup('69.78.70.144')
pprint(response)
Sample Response
{
"ip": "69.78.70.144",
"is_eu": false,
"city": null,
"region": null,
"region_code": null,
"country_name": "United States",
"country_code": "US",
"continent_name": "North America",
"continent_code": "NA",
"latitude": 37.750999450683594,
"longitude": -97.8219985961914,
"postal": null,
"calling_code": "1",
"flag": "https://ipdata.co/flags/us.png",
"emoji_flag": "\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8",
"emoji_unicode": "U+1F1FA U+1F1F8",
"asn": {
"asn": "AS6167",
"name": "Verizon Business",
"domain": "verizon.com",
"route": "69.78.0.0/17",
"type": "business"
},
"company": {
"name": "Verizon Business",
"domain": "verizon.com",
"network": "69.78.0.0/17",
"type": "business"
},
"carrier": {
"name": "Verizon",
"mcc": "310",
"mnc": "004"
},
"languages": [
{
"name": "English",
"native": "English",
"code": "en"
}
],
"currency": {
"name": "US Dollar",
"code": "USD",
"symbol": "$",
"native": "$",
"plural": "US dollars"
},
"time_zone": {
"name": null,
"abbr": null,
"offset": null,
"is_dst": null,
"current_time": null
},
"threat": {
"is_tor": false,
"is_icloud_relay": false,
"is_proxy": false,
"is_datacenter": false,
"is_anonymous": false,
"is_known_attacker": false,
"is_known_abuser": false,
"is_threat": false,
"is_bogon": false,
"blocklists": []
},
"count": "3895",
"status": 200
}
If you only need a single data attribute about an IP address you can extract it by passing a select_field
parameter to the lookup
method.
>>> import ipdata
>>> ipdata.api_key = "<YOUR API KEY>"
>>> ipdata.lookup('8.8.8.8', select_field='asn')
Response
{
"asn": {
"asn": "AS15169",
"name": "Google LLC",
"domain": "about.google",
"route": "8.8.8.0/24",
"type": "business"
},
"status": 200
}
If instead you need to get multiple specific fields you can pass a list of valid field names in a fields
parameter.
>>> import ipdata
>>> ipdata.api_key = "<YOUR API KEY>"
>>> ipdata.lookup('8.8.8.8',fields=['ip','asn','country_name'])
Response
{
"ip": "8.8.8.8",
"asn": {
"asn": "AS15169",
"name": "Google LLC",
"domain": "about.google",
"route": "8.8.8.0/24",
"type": "business"
},
"country_name": "United States",
"status": 200
}
The API provides a /bulk
endpoint that allows you to look up upto 100 IP addresses at a time. This is convenient for quickly clearing your backlog.
NOTE: Alternatively it is much simpler to process bulk lookups using the ipdata
cli's batch
command. All you need is a csv file with a list of IP addresses and you can get your results as either a JSON file or a CSV file! See the CLI Bulk Lookup Documentation for details.
>>> import ipdata
>>> ipdata.api_key = "<YOUR API KEY>"
>>> ipdata.bulk(['8.8.8.8','1.1.1.1'])
Sample Response
{
"responses": [
{
"ip": "8.8.8.8",
"is_eu": false,
"city": null,
"region": null,
"region_code": null,
"country_name": "United States",
"country_code": "US",
"continent_name": "North America",
"continent_code": "NA",
"latitude": 37.750999450683594,
"longitude": -97.8219985961914,
"postal": null,
"calling_code": "1",
"flag": "https://ipdata.co/flags/us.png",
"emoji_flag": "\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8",
"emoji_unicode": "U+1F1FA U+1F1F8",
"asn": {
"asn": "AS15169",
"name": "Google LLC",
"domain": "about.google",
"route": "8.8.8.0/24",
"type": "business"
},
"company": {
"name": "Google LLC",
"domain": "google.com",
"network": "8.8.8.0/24",
"type": "business"
},
"languages": [
{
"name": "English",
"native": "English",
"code": "en"
}
],
"currency": {
"name": "US Dollar",
"code": "USD",
"symbol": "$",
"native": "$",
"plural": "US dollars"
},
"time_zone": {
"name": null,
"abbr": null,
"offset": null,
"is_dst": null,
"current_time": null
},
"threat": {
"is_tor": false,
"is_icloud_relay": false,
"is_proxy": false,
"is_datacenter": false,
"is_anonymous": false,
"is_known_attacker": false,
"is_known_abuser": false,
"is_threat": false,
"is_bogon": false,
"blocklists": []
},
"count": "3931"
},
{
"ip": "1.1.1.1",
"is_eu": null,
"city": null,
"region": null,
"region_code": null,
"country_name": null,
"country_code": null,
"continent_name": null,
"continent_code": null,
"latitude": null,
"longitude": null,
"postal": null,
"calling_code": null,
"flag": null,
"emoji_flag": null,
"emoji_unicode": null,
"asn": {
"asn": "AS13335",
"name": "Cloudflare, Inc.",
"domain": "cloudflare.com",
"route": "1.1.1.0/24",
"type": "business"
},
"company": {
"name": "Cloudflare, Inc.",
"domain": "cloudflare.com",
"network": "1.1.1.0/24",
"type": "business"
},
"languages": null,
"currency": {
"name": null,
"code": null,
"symbol": null,
"native": null,
"plural": null
},
"time_zone": {
"name": null,
"abbr": null,
"offset": null,
"is_dst": null,
"current_time": null
},
"threat": {
"is_tor": false,
"is_icloud_relay": false,
"is_proxy": false,
"is_datacenter": false,
"is_anonymous": false,
"is_known_attacker": false,
"is_known_abuser": false,
"is_threat": false,
"is_bogon": false,
"blocklists": []
},
"count": "3931"
}
],
"status": 200
}
IPData CLI needs Python 3.9+. Python Windows installation program provides PIP so you can install IPData CLI the same way:
pip install ipdata
ipdata --help
Usage: ipdata [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Welcome to the ipdata CLI
Options:
--api-key TEXT Your ipdata API Key. Get one for free from
https://ipdata.co/sign-up.html
--help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
lookup* Lookup resources by using the IPData class methods.
batch Batch command for doing fast bulk processing.
init Initialize the CLI by setting an API key.
usage Get today's usage.
validate Validates a geofeed file.
You need a valid API key from ipdata to use the cli. You can get a free key by Signing up here.
ipdata init <API Key>
_ _ _
(_)_ __ __| | __ _| |_ __ _
| | '_ \ / _` |/ _` | __/ _` |
| | |_) | (_| | (_| | || (_| |
|_| .__/ \__,_|\__,_|\__\__,_|
|_|
✨ Successfully initialized.
You can also pass the --api-key <API Key>
parameter to any command to specify a different API Key.
Running the ipdata
command without any parameters will look up the IP address of the computer you are running the command on. Alternatively you can explicitly look up your own IP address by running ipdata
.
ipdata
To pretty print the result pass the -p
flag
╭────────────────────────────────╮ ╭────────────╮ ╭─────────────────╮ ╭──────────╮ ╭─────────────╮ ╭───────────────╮ ╭──────────────╮ ╭────────────────╮ ╭────────────────╮ ╭────────╮ ╭──────────────╮
│ ip │ │ is_eu │ │ city │ │ region │ │ region_code │ │ country_name │ │ country_code │ │ continent_name │ │ continent_code │ │ postal │ │ calling_code │
│ 24.24.24.24 │ │ False │ │ Syracuse │ │ New York │ │ NY │ │ United States │ │ US │ │ North America │ │ NA │ │ 13261 │ │ 1 │
╰────────────────────────────────╯ ╰────────────╯ ╰─────────────────╯ ╰──────────╯ ╰─────────────╯ ╰───────────────╯ ╰──────────────╯ ╰────────────────╯ ╰────────────────╯ ╰────────╯ ╰──────────────╯
╭────────────────────────────────╮ ╭────────────╮ ╭─────────────────╮ ╭──────────╮
│ flag │ │ emoji_flag │ │ emoji_unicode │ │ count │
│ https://ipdata.co/flags/us.png │ │ 🇺🇸 │ │ U+1F1FA U+1F1F8 │ │ 4086 │
╰────────────────────────────────╯ ╰────────────╯ ╰─────────────────╯ ╰──────────╯
╭────────────────────────────────╮ ╭──────────────────╮ ╭─────────────────╮ ╭────────────────╮ ╭───────────────────────────────╮ ╭───────────────────────╮
│ asn │ │ company │ │ languages │ │ currency │ │ time_zone │ │ threat │
│ ├── asn │ │ ├── name │ │ └── │ │ ├── name │ │ ├── name │ │ ├── is_tor │
│ │ AS11351 │ │ │ Rr-Route │ │ ├── name │ │ │ US Dollar │ │ │ America/New_York │ │ │ False │
│ ├── name │ │ ├── domain │ │ │ English │ │ ├── code │ │ ├── abbr │ │ ├── is_icloud_relay │
│ │ Charter Communications Inc │ │ │ │ │ ├── native │ │ │ USD │ │ │ EDT │ │ │ False │
│ ├── domain │ │ ├── network │ │ │ English │ │ ├── symbol │ │ ├── offset │ │ ├── is_proxy │
│ │ spectrum.com │ │ │ 24.24.0.0/19 │ │ └── code │ │ │ $ │ │ │ -0400 │ │ │ False │
│ ├── route │ │ └── type │ │ en │ │ ├── native │ │ ├── is_dst │ │ ├── is_datacenter │
│ │ 24.24.0.0/18 │ │ business │ ╰─────────────────╯ │ │ $ │ │ │ True │ │ │ False │
│ └── type │ ╰──────────────────╯ │ └── plural │ │ └── current_time │ │ ├── is_anonymous │
│ business │ │ US dollars │ │ 2022-07-15T16:59:44-04:00 │ │ │ False │
╰────────────────────────────────╯ ╰────────────────╯ ╰───────────────────────────────╯ │ ├── is_known_attacker │
│ │ False │
│ ├── is_known_abuser │
│ │ False │
│ ├── is_threat │
│ │ False │
│ ├── is_bogon │
│ │ False │
│ └── blocklists │
│ [] │
╰───────────────────────╯
You can pass any valid IPv4 or IPv6 address to the ipdata
command to look it up. In case an invalid value is passed you will get the error ERROR 'BLEH' does not appear to be an IPv4 or IPv6 address"
.
ipdata 8.8.8.8
Use -c
to copy the results to the clipboard!
ipdata 1.1.1.1 -f ip -f asn -c
📋️ Copied result to clipboard!
Use --fields
to filter the responses
ipdata --fields city --fields country_name'
or use -f
ipdata 1.1.1.1 -f ip -f asn
{
"ip": "1.1.1.1",
"asn": {
"asn": "AS13335",
"name": "Cloudflare, Inc.",
"domain": "cloudflare.com",
"route": "1.1.1.0/24",
"type": "business"
},
"status": 200
}
Perhaps the most useful command provided by the CLI is the ability to process a csv file with a list of IP addresses and write the results to file as either CSV or JSONL/NDJSON! It could be a list of tens of thousands to millions of IP addresses and it will all be processed and the results filtered to your liking!
When you use the JSON output format, the results are written to the output file you provide with one result per line. Each line being a valid and full JSON response object. If you only need a few fields eg. only the country name you can specify a field argument with the names of the fields you want, if you combine this with the CSV output format you will get very clean results with only the data you need!
This is the default output format, so you could omit the --format JSON
ipdata batch my_ip_backlog.csv --output geolocation_results.json --format JSON
ipdata batch my_ip_backlog.csv --output results.csv --output-format CSV --fields ip --fields country_code
The --fields
option is required to use CSV output.
# ip,country_code
107.175.75.83,US
35.155.95.229,US
13.0.0.164,US
209.248.120.14,US
142.0.202.238,US
...
A list of all the fields returned by the API is maintained at Response Fields
Geofeed publishers can use the ipdata validate
command to validate their geofeeds before submission to ipdata. This will catch most but not all issues that might cause processing your geofeed to fail.
The validation closely follows https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-google-self-published-geofeeds-02 with one caveat, we expect the country field to be provided at the minimum.
You can provide either a url or a path to a local file.
ipdata validate https://example.com/geofeed.txt
or
ipdata validate geofeed.txt
A list of possible errors is available at Status Codes
To run all tests
pytest