Question

What's the best way, using C# or other .NET language, to determine if a file path string is on the local machine or a remote server?

It's possible to determine if a path string is UNC using the following:

new Uri(path).IsUnc

That works great for paths that start with C:\ or other drive letter, but what about paths like:

\\machinename\sharename\directory
\\10.12.34.56\sharename\directory

...where both refer to the local machine - these are UNC paths but are still local.

Was it helpful?

Solution

Don't know if there's a more efficient way of doing this, but it seems to work for me:

    IPAddress[] host;
    IPAddress[] local;
    bool isLocal = false;

    host = Dns.GetHostAddresses(uri.Host);
    local = Dns.GetHostAddresses(Dns.GetHostName());

    foreach (IPAddress hostAddress in host)
    {
        if (IPAddress.IsLoopback(hostAddress))
        {
            isLocal = true;
            break;
        }
        else
        {
            foreach (IPAddress localAddress in local)
            {
                if (hostAddress.Equals(localAddress))
                {
                    isLocal = true;
                    break;
                }
            }

            if (isLocal)
            {
                break;
            }
        }
    }

OTHER TIPS

This is how I did it.

    public static bool IsLocal(DirectoryInfo dir)
    {
        foreach (DriveInfo d in DriveInfo.GetDrives())
        {
            if (string.Compare(dir.Root.FullName, d.Name, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) == 0) //[drweb86] Fix for different case.
            {
                return (d.DriveType != DriveType.Network);
            }
        }
         throw new DriveNotFoundException();
    }

.NET 3.5 version of Eric's answer with an extra check whether the host exists:

    private bool IsLocalHost(string input)
    {
        IPAddress[] host;
        //get host addresses
        try { host = Dns.GetHostAddresses(input); }
        catch (Exception) { return false; }
        //get local adresses
        IPAddress[] local = Dns.GetHostAddresses(Dns.GetHostName()); 
        //check if local
        return host.Any(hostAddress => IPAddress.IsLoopback(hostAddress) || local.Contains(hostAddress));
    }

The following should work for mapped drives and for UNC paths.

private static bool IsLocalPath(String path)
{
    if (!PathIsUNC(path))
    {
        return !PathIsNetworkPath(path);
    }

    Uri uri = new Uri(path);
    return IsLocalHost(uri.Host); // Refer to David's answer
}

[DllImport("Shlwapi.dll")]
[return: MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)]
static extern bool PathIsNetworkPath(String pszPath);

[DllImport("Shlwapi.dll")]
[return: MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)]
static extern bool PathIsUNC(String pszPath);

Here is how I addressed a similar need.

        internal static bool IsFileRemote(string path)
    {
            if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(path))
            {
                return false;
            }
            if (new Uri(path).IsUnc)
            {
                return true;
            }
            if (new DriveInfo(path).DriveType == DriveType.Network)
            {
                return true;
            }
            return false;
    }

Maybe

var isLocal = Dns.GetHostName() == _host || Dns.GetHostEntry(Dns.GetHostName()).AddressList.Any(i => i.ToString().Equals(_host));

I don't know of a single method to check that. However, you can compare the Uri's Host property to either the local host name or IP address.

You can get the local machine name using:

string hostName = System.Net.Dns.GetHostName()

You can then get an array of IP addresses by passing that string to:

System.Net.IPAddress[] addresses = System.Net.Dns.GetHostAddresses(hostName);

Switch on the Uri's HostNameType property, probably UriHostNameType.Dns or UriHostNameType.IPv4, to match either the name or IP address.

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