Python: check whether a network interface is up

前端 未结 6 438
孤城傲影
孤城傲影 2020-12-03 15:52

In Python, is there a way to detect whether a given network interface is up?

In my script, the user specifies a network interface,

相关标签:
6条回答
  • 2020-12-03 16:16

    As suggested by @Gabriel Samfira, I used netifaces. The following function returns True when an IP address is associated to a given interface.

    def is_interface_up(interface):
        addr = netifaces.ifaddresses(interface)
        return netifaces.AF_INET in addr
    

    The documentation is here

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-03 16:18

    If the question is about checking if the cable is conencted (FreeBSD);

    [status for status in run.cmd(' /usr/local/bin/sudo ifconfig %s ' % interface).split("\t") if status.strip().startswith("status")][0].strip().endswith("active")
    

    For this, no api support so far :( ...

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-03 16:19

    You can see the content of the file in /sys/class/net/<interface>/operstate. If the content is not down then the interface is up.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-03 16:22

    Answer using psutil:

    import psutil
    import socket
    
    def check_interface(interface):
        interface_addrs = psutil.net_if_addrs().get(interface) or []
        return socket.AF_INET in [snicaddr.family for snicaddr in interface_addrs]
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-03 16:23

    With pyroute2.IPRoute:

    from pyroute2 import IPRoute
    ip = IPRoute()
    state = ip.get_links(ip.link_lookup(ifname='em1'))[0].get_attr('IFLA_OPERSTATE')
    ip.close()
    

    With pyroute2.IPDB:

    from pyroute2 import IPDB
    ip = IPDB()
    state = ip.interfaces.em1.operstate
    ip.release()
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-03 16:38

    The interface can be configured with an IP address and not be up so the accepted answer is wrong. You actually need to check /sys/class/net/<interface>/flags. If the content is in the variable flags, flags & 0x1 is whether the interface is up or not.

    Depending on the application, the /sys/class/net/<interface>/operstate might be what you really want, but technically the interface could be up and the operstate down, e.g. when no cable is connected.

    All of this is Linux-specific of course.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题