Post

Replies

Boosts

Views

Activity

iOS reports incorrect own IP address to apps when connected to WiFi
I have an iPhone app which relies heavily on TCP/IP communication in the local network. Therefore, the application starts a server socket and accepts incoming connections. This worked flawlessly for a long time and we had no problems with this. Problem In the last days however, we observed that for some iPhones with the server role other devices cannot connect to the server of our app. The server does not accept incoming connections on the devices IP address and the client times out. Environment Both iPhones (the server and the client) are in the same network with 192.168.1.0 address range and 255.255.255.0 subnet mask. The server has the IP 192.168.1.11 and the client has 192.168.1.22. This is a normal home WiFi network with no special firewall rules. Both devices have mobile data disabled and the "access local network" permission is granted. The server socket is bound to all interfaces (0.0.0.0). More technical symptoms When the server iPhone is in this faulty state, it seems like it somehow has two ip addresses: 192.168.2.123 and 192.168.1.11 The WiFi preferences show the (correct) .1.11 ip address. The Apps however see the (wrong) .2.123 ip address. I cannot explain where the other ip address comes from and why the device thinks it has this ip address. I've collected interface diagnosis information on a faulty iPhone and it listed the following interfaces and IPs: en0 -> 192.168.2.123 lo0 -> 127.0.0.1 pdp_ip0 (cellular) -> 192.0.0.2 pdp_ip1 to pdp_ip6 (cellular) -> -/- ipsec0 to ipsec6 (vpn) -> -/- llw0 (vpn) -> -/- awdl0 -> -/- anpi0 -> -/- ap1 -> -/- XHC0 -> -/- en1 and en2 (wired) -> -/- utun0 to utun2 (vpn) -> -/- The correct ip of the device is not listed anywhere in this list. A reboot helped to temporarily fix this problem. One user reported the same issue again a few hours later after a reboot. Switching off WiFi and reconnecting does not solve the problem. This issue occurred on several iPhones with the following specs: iOS Version 18.1.1, 18.3.1 iPhone 13 Pro, iPhone 13 Pro Max, iPhone 15 Pro The problem must be on the server side as the client can successfully connect to any other device in the same network. Question(s) Where does this second IP come from and why does the server not accept connections to either ip even though it is bound to 0.0.0.0? Are there any iOS system settings which could lead to this problem? (privacy setting, vpn, ...) What could be done to permanently fix this issue?
1
0
249
Mar ’25
No TCP connections to IPs in the local network
I am developing an app which heavily relies on TCP device to device connections in the local network. The devices (multiple iPhones 13) are connected through a common consumer wifi router and act as server and client simultaneously. My problem is that 2 out of 3 iPhones can't establish outgoing TCP connections. However, they can act as server and accept incoming connections. All devices have the same iOS version (17.5.1) and access to Local Network is granted in the Privacy & Security settings. All devices have IPs in the range 192.168.x.x and the correct subnet is set. Safari can connect to IPs in the local network but not my app. The wifi network does not provide access to internet. Mobile data is turned off on all devices. As the error is happening out in the field, I cannot reproduce it under controlled conditions. What settings (beside not granting access to Local Network) may block outgoing connections to local IPs? What configurations of the app (e.g. entries in Info.plist) may result in or fix this behaviour?
2
0
527
Jul ’24