Class: ActionDispatch::RemoteIp::GetIp

Inherits:
Object
  • Object
show all
Defined in:
lib/action_dispatch/middleware/remote_ip.rb

Overview

The GetIp class exists as a way to defer processing of the request data into an actual IP address. If the ActionDispatch::Request#remote_ip method is called, this class will calculate the value and then memoize it.

Instance Method Summary collapse

Constructor Details

#initialize(req, check_ip, proxies) ⇒ GetIp

Returns a new instance of GetIp.



103
104
105
106
107
# File 'lib/action_dispatch/middleware/remote_ip.rb', line 103

def initialize(req, check_ip, proxies)
  @req      = req
  @check_ip = check_ip
  @proxies  = proxies
end

Instance Method Details

#calculate_ipObject

Sort through the various IP address headers, looking for the IP most likely to be the address of the actual remote client making this request.

REMOTE_ADDR will be correct if the request is made directly against the Ruby process, on e.g. Heroku. When the request is proxied by another server like HAProxy or NGINX, the IP address that made the original request will be put in an ‘X-Forwarded-For` header. If there are multiple proxies, that header may contain a list of IPs. Other proxy services set the `Client-Ip` header instead, so we check that too.

As discussed in [this post about Rails IP Spoofing](web.archive.org/web/20170626095448/https://blog.gingerlime.c om/2012/rails-ip-spoofing-vulnerabilities-and-protection/), while the first IP in the list is likely to be the “originating” IP, it could also have been set by the client maliciously.

In order to find the first address that is (probably) accurate, we take the list of IPs, remove known and trusted proxies, and then take the last address left, which was presumably set by one of those proxies.



128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
# File 'lib/action_dispatch/middleware/remote_ip.rb', line 128

def calculate_ip
  # Set by the Rack web server, this is a single value.
  remote_addr = ips_from(@req.remote_addr).last

  # Could be a CSV list and/or repeated headers that were concatenated.
  client_ips    = ips_from(@req.client_ip).reverse!
  forwarded_ips = ips_from(@req.x_forwarded_for).reverse!

  # `Client-Ip` and `X-Forwarded-For` should not, generally, both be set. If they
  # are both set, it means that either:
  #
  # 1) This request passed through two proxies with incompatible IP header
  #     conventions.
  #
  # 2) The client passed one of `Client-Ip` or `X-Forwarded-For`
  #     (whichever the proxy servers weren't using) themselves.
  #
  # Either way, there is no way for us to determine which header is the right one
  # after the fact. Since we have no idea, if we are concerned about IP spoofing
  # we need to give up and explode. (If you're not concerned about IP spoofing you
  # can turn the `ip_spoofing_check` option off.)
  should_check_ip = @check_ip && client_ips.last && forwarded_ips.last
  if should_check_ip && !forwarded_ips.include?(client_ips.last)
    # We don't know which came from the proxy, and which from the user
    raise IpSpoofAttackError, "IP spoofing attack?! " \
      "HTTP_CLIENT_IP=#{@req.client_ip.inspect} " \
      "HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR=#{@req.x_forwarded_for.inspect}"
  end

  # We assume these things about the IP headers:
  #
  #     - X-Forwarded-For will be a list of IPs, one per proxy, or blank
  #     - Client-Ip is propagated from the outermost proxy, or is blank
  #     - REMOTE_ADDR will be the IP that made the request to Rack
  ips = forwarded_ips + client_ips
  ips.compact!

  # If every single IP option is in the trusted list, return the IP that's
  # furthest away
  filter_proxies(ips + [remote_addr]).first || ips.last || remote_addr
end

#to_sObject

Memoizes the value returned by #calculate_ip and returns it for ActionDispatch::Request to use.



172
173
174
# File 'lib/action_dispatch/middleware/remote_ip.rb', line 172

def to_s
  @ip ||= calculate_ip
end