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Net::DNS::Resolver (3)
  • >> Net::DNS::Resolver (3) ( Разные man: Библиотечные вызовы )
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    NAME

    Net::DNS::Resolver - DNS resolver class
     
    

    SYNOPSIS

      use Net::DNS;
    
    

      my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new;
    
    

      # Perform a lookup, using the searchlist if appropriate.
      my $answer = $res->search('example.com');
    
    

      # Perform a lookup, without the searchlist
      my $answer = $res->query('example.com', 'MX');
    
    

      # Perform a lookup, without pre or post-processing
      my $answer = $res->send('example.com', 'MX', 'CH');
    
    

      # Send a prebuilt packet
      my $packet = Net::DNS::Packet->new(...);
      my $answer = $res->send($packet);
    
    
     

    DESCRIPTION

    Instances of the "Net::DNS::Resolver" class represent resolver objects. A program can have multiple resolver objects, each maintaining its own state information such as the nameservers to be queried, whether recursion is desired, etc.  

    METHODS

     

    new

      # Use the system defaults
      my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new;
    
    

      # Use my own configuration file
      my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new(config_file => '/my/dns.conf');
    
    

      # Set options in the constructor
      my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new(
            nameservers => [qw(10.1.1.128 10.1.2.128)],
            recurse     => 0,
            debug       => 1,
      );
    
    

    Returns a resolver object. If given no arguments, "new()" returns an object configured to your system's defaults. On UNIX systems the defaults are read from the following files, in the order indicated:

        /etc/resolv.conf
        $HOME/.resolv.conf
        ./.resolv.conf
    
    

    The following keywords are recognized in resolver configuration files:

    domain
    The default domain.
    search
    A space-separated list of domains to put in the search list.
    nameserver
    A space-separated list of nameservers to query.

    Files except for /etc/resolv.conf must be owned by the effective userid running the program or they won't be read. In addition, several environment variables can also contain configuration information; see ``ENVIRONMENT''.

    On Windows systems, an attempt is made to determine the system defaults using the registry. This is still a work in progress; systems with many dynamically configured network interfaces may confuse Net::DNS.

    You can include a configuration file of your own when creating a resolver object:

     # Use my own configuration file 
     my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new(config_file => '/my/dns.conf');
    
    

    This is supported on both UNIX and Windows. Values pulled from a custom configuration file override the the system's defaults, but can still be overridden by the other arguments to new().

    Explicit arguments to new override both the system's defaults and the values of the custom configuration file, if any. The following arguments to new() are supported:

    nameservers
    An array reference of nameservers to query.
    searchlist
    An array reference of domains.
    recurse
    debug
    domain
    port
    srcaddr
    srcport
    tcp_timeout
    udp_timeout
    retrans
    retry
    usecv
    stayopen
    igntc
    defnames
    dnsrch
    persistent_tcp
    persistent_udp
    dnssec

    For more information on any of these options, please consult the method of the same name.  

    search

        $packet = $res->search('mailhost');
        $packet = $res->search('mailhost.example.com');
        $packet = $res->search('192.168.1.1');
        $packet = $res->search('example.com', 'MX');
        $packet = $res->search('user.passwd.example.com', 'TXT', 'HS');
    
    

    Performs a DNS query for the given name, applying the searchlist if appropriate. The search algorithm is as follows:

    1.
    If the name contains at least one dot, try it as is.
    2.
    If the name doesn't end in a dot then append each item in the search list to the name. This is only done if dnsrch is true.
    3.
    If the name doesn't contain any dots, try it as is.

    The record type and class can be omitted; they default to A and IN. If the name looks like an IP address (4 dot-separated numbers), then an appropriate PTR query will be performed.

    Returns a "Net::DNS::Packet" object, or "undef" if no answers were found.  

    query

        $packet = $res->query('mailhost');
        $packet = $res->query('mailhost.example.com');
        $packet = $res->query('192.168.1.1');
        $packet = $res->query('example.com', 'MX');
        $packet = $res->query('user.passwd.example.com', 'TXT', 'HS');
    
    

    Performs a DNS query for the given name; the search list is not applied. If the name doesn't contain any dots and defnames is true then the default domain will be appended.

    The record type and class can be omitted; they default to A and IN. If the name looks like an IP address (IPv4 or IPv6), then an appropriate PTR query will be performed.

    Returns a "Net::DNS::Packet" object, or "undef" if no answers were found.  

    send

        $packet = $res->send($packet_object);
        $packet = $res->send('mailhost.example.com');
        $packet = $res->send('example.com', 'MX');
        $packet = $res->send('user.passwd.example.com', 'TXT', 'HS');
    
    

    Performs a DNS query for the given name. Neither the searchlist nor the default domain will be appended.

    The argument list can be either a "Net::DNS::Packet" object or a list of strings. The record type and class can be omitted; they default to A and IN. If the name looks like an IP address (Ipv4 or IPv6), then an appropriate PTR query will be performed.

    Returns a "Net::DNS::Packet" object whether there were any answers or not. Use "$packet->header->ancount" or "$packet->answer" to find out if there were any records in the answer section. Returns "undef" if there was an error.  

    axfr

        @zone = $res->axfr;
        @zone = $res->axfr('example.com');
        @zone = $res->axfr('passwd.example.com', 'HS');
    
    

    Performs a zone transfer from the first nameserver listed in "nameservers". If the zone is omitted, it defaults to the first zone listed in the resolver's search list. If the class is omitted, it defaults to IN.

    Returns a list of "Net::DNS::RR" objects, or "undef" if the zone transfer failed.

    The redundant SOA record that terminates the zone transfer is not returned to the caller.

    See also ``axfr_start'' and ``axfr_next''.

    Here's an example that uses a timeout:

        $res->tcp_timeout(10);
        my @zone = $res->axfr('example.com');
    
    

        if (@zone) {
            foreach my $rr (@zone) {
                $rr->print;
            }
        } else {
            print 'Zone transfer failed: ', $res->errorstring, "\n";
        }
    
    
     

    axfr_start

        $res->axfr_start;
        $res->axfr_start('example.com');
        $res->axfr_start('example.com', 'HS');
    
    

    Starts a zone transfer from the first nameserver listed in "nameservers". If the zone is omitted, it defaults to the first zone listed in the resolver's search list. If the class is omitted, it defaults to IN.

    IMPORTANT:

    This method currently returns the "IO::Socket::INET" object that will be used for reading, or "undef" on error. DO NOT DEPEND ON "axfr_next()" returning a socket object. THIS WILL CHANGE in future releases.

    Use "axfr_next" to read the zone records one at a time.  

    axfr_next

        $res->axfr_start('example.com');
    
    

        while (my $rr = $res->axfr_next) {
                $rr->print;
        }
    
    

    Reads records from a zone transfer one at a time.

    Returns "undef" at the end of the zone transfer. The redundant SOA record that terminates the zone transfer is not returned.

    See also ``axfr''.  

    nameservers

        @nameservers = $res->nameservers;
        $res->nameservers('192.168.1.1', '192.168.2.2', '192.168.3.3');
    
    

    Gets or sets the nameservers to be queried.  

    print

        $res->print;
    
    

    Prints the resolver state on the standard output.  

    string

        print $res->string;
    
    

    Returns a string representation of the resolver state.  

    searchlist

        @searchlist = $res->searchlist;
        $res->searchlist('example.com', 'a.example.com', 'b.example.com');
    
    

    Gets or sets the resolver search list.  

    port

        print 'sending queries to port ', $res->port, "\n";
        $res->port(9732);
    
    

    Gets or sets the port to which we send queries. This can be useful for testing a nameserver running on a non-standard port. The default is port 53.  

    srcport

        print 'sending queries from port ', $res->srcport, "\n";
        $res->srcport(5353);
    
    

    Gets or sets the port from which we send queries. The default is 0, meaning any port.  

    srcaddr

        print 'sending queries from address ', $res->srcaddr, "\n";
        $res->srcaddr('192.168.1.1');
    
    

    Gets or sets the source address from which we send queries. Convenient for forcing queries out a specific interfaces on a multi-homed host. The default is 0.0.0.0, meaning any local address.  

    bgsend

        $socket = $res->bgsend($packet_object);
        $socket = $res->bgsend('mailhost.example.com');
        $socket = $res->bgsend('example.com', 'MX');
        $socket = $res->bgsend('user.passwd.example.com', 'TXT', 'HS');
    
    

    Performs a background DNS query for the given name, i.e., sends a query packet to the first nameserver listed in "$res->nameservers" and returns immediately without waiting for a response. The program can then perform other tasks while waiting for a response from the nameserver.

    The argument list can be either a "Net::DNS::Packet" object or a list of strings. The record type and class can be omitted; they default to A and IN. If the name looks like an IP address (4 dot-separated numbers), then an appropriate PTR query will be performed.

    Returns an "IO::Socket::INET" object. The program must determine when the socket is ready for reading and call "$res->bgread" to get the response packet. You can use "$res->bgisready" or "IO::Select" to find out if the socket is ready before reading it.  

    bgread

        $packet = $res->bgread($socket);
        undef $socket;
    
    

    Reads the answer from a background query (see ``bgsend''). The argument is an "IO::Socket" object returned by "bgsend".

    Returns a "Net::DNS::Packet" object or "undef" on error.

    The programmer should close or destroy the socket object after reading it.  

    bgisready

        $socket = $res->bgsend('foo.example.com');
        until ($res->bgisready($socket)) {
            # do some other processing
        }
        $packet = $res->bgread($socket);
        $socket = undef;
    
    

    Determines whether a socket is ready for reading. The argument is an "IO::Socket" object returned by "$res->bgsend".

    Returns true if the socket is ready, false if not.  

    tsig

        my $tsig = $res->tsig;
    
    

        $res->tsig(Net::DNS::RR->new("$key_name TSIG $key"));
    
    

        $tsig = Net::DNS::RR->new("$key_name TSIG $key");
        $tsig->fudge(60);
        $res->tsig($tsig);
    
    

        $res->tsig($key_name, $key);
    
    

        $res->tsig(0);
    
    

    Get or set the TSIG record used to automatically sign outgoing queries and updates. Call with an argument of 0 or '' to turn off automatic signing.

    The default resolver behavior is not to sign any packets. You must call this method to set the key if you'd like the resolver to sign packets automatically.

    You can also sign packets manually --- see the "Net::DNS::Packet" and "Net::DNS::Update" manual pages for examples. TSIG records in manually-signed packets take precedence over those that the resolver would add automatically.  

    retrans

        print 'retrans interval: ', $res->retrans, "\n";
        $res->retrans(3);
    
    

    Get or set the retransmission interval. The default is 5.  

    retry

        print 'number of tries: ', $res->retry, "\n";
        $res->retry(2);
    
    

    Get or set the number of times to try the query. The default is 4.  

    recurse

        print 'recursion flag: ', $res->recurse, "\n";
        $res->recurse(0);
    
    

    Get or set the recursion flag. If this is true, nameservers will be requested to perform a recursive query. The default is true.  

    defnames

        print 'defnames flag: ', $res->defnames, "\n";
        $res->defnames(0);
    
    

    Get or set the defnames flag. If this is true, calls to query will append the default domain to names that contain no dots. The default is true.  

    dnsrch

        print 'dnsrch flag: ', $res->dnsrch, "\n";
        $res->dnsrch(0);
    
    

    Get or set the dnsrch flag. If this is true, calls to search will apply the search list. The default is true.  

    debug

        print 'debug flag: ', $res->debug, "\n";
        $res->debug(1);
    
    

    Get or set the debug flag. If set, calls to search, query, and send will print debugging information on the standard output. The default is false.  

    usevc

        print 'usevc flag: ', $res->usevc, "\n";
        $res->usevc(1);
    
    

    Get or set the usevc flag. If true, then queries will be performed using virtual circuits (TCP) instead of datagrams (UDP). The default is false.  

    tcp_timeout

        print 'TCP timeout: ', $res->tcp_timeout, "\n";
        $res->tcp_timeout(10);
    
    

    Get or set the TCP timeout in seconds. A timeout of "undef" means indefinite. The default is 120 seconds (2 minutes).  

    udp_timeout

        print 'UDP timeout: ', $res->udp_timeout, "\n";
        $res->udp_timeout(10);
    
    

    Get or set the UDP timeout in seconds. A timeout of "undef" means the retry and retrans settings will be just utilized to perform the retries until they are exhausted. The default is "undef".  

    persistent_tcp

        print 'Persistent TCP flag: ', $res->persistent_tcp, "\n";
        $res->persistent_tcp(1);
    
    

    Get or set the persistent TCP setting. If set to true, Net::DNS will keep a TCP socket open for each host:port to which it connects. This is useful if you're using TCP and need to make a lot of queries or updates to the same nameserver.

    This option defaults to false unless you're running under a SOCKSified Perl, in which case it defaults to true.  

    persistent_udp

        print 'Persistent UDP flag: ', $res->persistent_udp, "\n";
        $res->persistent_udp(1);
    
    

    Get or set the persistent UDP setting. If set to true, Net::DNS will keep a single UDP socket open for all queries. This is useful if you're using UDP and need to make a lot of queries or updates.  

    igntc

        print 'igntc flag: ', $res->igntc, "\n";
        $res->igntc(1);
    
    

    Get or set the igntc flag. If true, truncated packets will be ignored. If false, truncated packets will cause the query to be retried using TCP. The default is false.  

    errorstring

        print 'query status: ', $res->errorstring, "\n";
    
    

    Returns a string containing the status of the most recent query.  

    answerfrom

        print 'last answer was from: ', $res->answerfrom, "\n";
    
    

    Returns the IP address from which we received the last answer in response to a query.  

    answersize

        print 'size of last answer: ', $res->answersize, "\n";
    
    

    Returns the size in bytes of the last answer we received in response to a query.  

    dnssec

        print "dnssec flag: ", $res->dnssec, "\n";
        $res->dnssec(0);
    
    

    Enabled DNSSEC this will set the checking disabled flag in the query header and add EDNS0 data as in RFC2671 and RFC3225

    When set to true the answer and additional section of queries from secured zones will contain KEY, NXT and SIG records.  

    cdflag

        print "checking disabled flag: ", $res->dnssec, "\n";
        $res->dnssec(1);
        $res->cdflag(1);
    
    

    Sets or gets the CD bit for a dnssec query. This bit is always zero for non dnssec queries. When the dnssec is enabled the flag can be set to 1.  

    udppacketsize

        print "udppacketsize: ", $res->udppacketsize, "\n";
        $res->udppacketsize(2048);
    
    

    udppacketsize will set or get the packet size. If set to a value greater than &Net::DNS::PACKETSZ an EDNS extension will be added indicating suppport for MTU path recovery.

    Default udppacketsize is &Net::DNS::PACKETSZ (512)  

    CUSTOMIZING

    Net::DNS::Resolver is actually an empty subclass. At compile time a super class is chosen based on the current platform. A side benefit of this allows for easy modification of the methods in Net::DNS::Resolver. You simply add a method to the namespace!

    For example, if we wanted to cache lookups:

     package Net::DNS::Resolver;
    
    

     my %cache;
    
    

     sub search {
            my ($self, @args) = @_;
    
    

            return $cache{@args} ||= $self->SUPER::search(@args);
     }
    
    
     

    ENVIRONMENT

    The following environment variables can also be used to configure the resolver:  

    RES_NAMESERVERS

        # Bourne Shell
        RES_NAMESERVERS="192.168.1.1 192.168.2.2 192.168.3.3"
        export RES_NAMESERVERS
    
    

        # C Shell
        setenv RES_NAMESERVERS "192.168.1.1 192.168.2.2 192.168.3.3"
    
    

    A space-separated list of nameservers to query.  

    RES_SEARCHLIST

        # Bourne Shell
        RES_SEARCHLIST="example.com sub1.example.com sub2.example.com"
        export RES_SEARCHLIST
    
    

        # C Shell
        setenv RES_SEARCHLIST "example.com sub1.example.com sub2.example.com"
    
    

    A space-separated list of domains to put in the search list.  

    LOCALDOMAIN

        # Bourne Shell
        LOCALDOMAIN=example.com
        export LOCALDOMAIN
    
    

        # C Shell
        setenv LOCALDOMAIN example.com
    
    

    The default domain.  

    RES_OPTIONS

        # Bourne Shell
        RES_OPTIONS="retrans:3 retry:2 debug"
        export RES_OPTIONS
    
    

        # C Shell
        setenv RES_OPTIONS "retrans:3 retry:2 debug"
    
    

    A space-separated list of resolver options to set. Options that take values are specified as option:value.  

    BUGS

    Error reporting and handling needs to be improved.

    The current implementation supports TSIG only on outgoing packets. No validation of server replies is performed.  

    COPYRIGHT

    Copyright (c) 1997-2002 Michael Fuhr.

    Portions Copyright (c) 2002-2003 Chris Reinhardt.

    All rights reserved. This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.  

    SEE ALSO

    perl(1), Net::DNS, Net::DNS::Packet, Net::DNS::Update, Net::DNS::Header, Net::DNS::Question, Net::DNS::RR, resolver(5), RFC 1035, RFC 1034 Section 4.3.5


     

    Index

    NAME
    SYNOPSIS
    DESCRIPTION
    METHODS
    new
    search
    query
    send
    axfr
    axfr_start
    axfr_next
    nameservers
    print
    string
    searchlist
    port
    srcport
    srcaddr
    bgsend
    bgread
    bgisready
    tsig
    retrans
    retry
    recurse
    defnames
    dnsrch
    debug
    usevc
    tcp_timeout
    udp_timeout
    persistent_tcp
    persistent_udp
    igntc
    errorstring
    answerfrom
    answersize
    dnssec
    cdflag
    udppacketsize
    CUSTOMIZING
    ENVIRONMENT
    RES_NAMESERVERS
    RES_SEARCHLIST
    LOCALDOMAIN
    RES_OPTIONS
    BUGS
    COPYRIGHT
    SEE ALSO


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