How do you get loopback addresses other than 127.0.0.1 to work on OS X

According to everything I read, the entire 127.x.x.x subnet should loopback.

However, on my Mac, I can only ping 127.0.0.1

I know I’ve done this before (though possibly on another OS) and has come in very useful for developing multiple SSL sites locally and for tunneling remote services for access on a local IP (for example I could ssh into my MySQL server, and just port forward the standard port to the same port on my local machine but on 127.0.0.2 while my local server ran at 127.0.0.1.

Answer

Here is the short answer: sudo ifconfig lo0 alias 127.0.0.* up

Each alias must be added individually (sudo ifconfig lo0 alias 127.0.0.2 up, sudo ifconfig lo0 alias 127.0.0.3 up). It can be done manually for testing, or a subset or the complete list of the other 250 available numbers in that subnet can be made into StartupItems script that will do it automagically at boot time.

The long answer:
According to RFC3330,
127.0.0.0/8 – This block is assigned for use as the Internet host loopback address. A datagram sent by a higher level protocol to an address anywhere within this block should loop back inside the host. This is ordinarily implemented using only 127.0.0.1/32 for loopback, but no addresses within this block should ever appear on any network anywhere.

Attribution
Source : Link , Question Author : elliotbetancourt , Answer Author : Canadian Luke

Leave a Comment