Net::DNS::Resolver - DNS resolver class
use Net::DNS; $resolver = new Net::DNS::Resolver(); # Perform a lookup, using the searchlist if appropriate. $reply = $resolver->search( 'example.com' ); # Perform a lookup, without the searchlist $reply = $resolver->query( 'example.com', 'MX' ); # Perform a lookup, without pre or post-processing $reply = $resolver->send( 'example.com', 'MX', 'CH' ); # Send a prebuilt query packet $query = new Net::DNS::Packet( ... ); $reply = $resolver->send( $packet );
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.
Net::DNS::Resolver
# Use the default configuration $resolver = new Net::DNS::Resolver(); # Use my own configuration file $resolver = new Net::DNS::Resolver( config_file => '/my/dns.conf' ); # Set options in the constructor $resolver = new Net::DNS::Resolver( nameservers => [ '10.1.1.128', '10.1.2.128' ], recurse => 0, debug => 1 );
Returns a resolver object. If no arguments are supplied, new() returns an object having the default configuration.
On Unix and Linux systems, the default values are read from the following files, in the order indicated:
/etc/resolv.conf $HOME/.resolv.conf ./.resolv.conf
The following keywords are recognised in resolver configuration files:
The default domain.
A space-separated list of domains to put in the search list.
A space-separated list of nameservers to query.
Except for /etc/resolv.conf, files will only be read if owned by the effective userid running the program. In addition, several environment variables may contain configuration information; see "ENVIRONMENT".
On Windows systems, an attempt is made to determine the system defaults using the registry. 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 $resolver = new Net::DNS::Resolver( config_file => '/my/dns.conf' );
This is supported on both Unix and Windows.
If a custom configuration file is specified at first instantiation, both the system configuration and environment variables are ignored.
Explicit arguments to new() override the corresponding configuration variables. The following arguments are supported:
A reference to an array of nameservers to query.
A reference to an array of domains to search for unqualified names.
Domain name suffix to be appended to queries of unqualified names.
For more information on any of these options, please consult the method of the same name.
$packet = $resolver->search( 'mailhost' ); $packet = $resolver->search( 'mailhost.example.com' ); $packet = $resolver->search( '192.0.2.1' ); $packet = $resolver->search( 'example.com', 'MX' ); $packet = $resolver->search( 'annotation.example.com', 'TXT', 'HS' );
Performs a DNS query for the given name, applying the searchlist if appropriate. The search algorithm is as follows:
If the name contains at least one dot, try it as is.
If the name does not end in a dot, try appending each item in the search list to the name. This is only done if dnsrch is true.
dnsrch
If the name does not 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 (IPv4 or IPv6), then an appropriate PTR query will be performed.
Returns a Net::DNS::Packet object, or undef if no answers were found. If you need to examine the response packet, whether it contains any answers or not, use the send() method instead.
Net::DNS::Packet
undef
$packet = $resolver->query( 'mailhost' ); $packet = $resolver->query( 'mailhost.example.com' ); $packet = $resolver->query( '192.0.2.1' ); $packet = $resolver->query( 'example.com', 'MX' ); $packet = $resolver->query( 'annotation.example.com', 'TXT', 'HS' );
Performs a DNS query for the given name; the search list is not applied. If the name does not contain any dots and defnames is true, the default domain will be appended.
defnames
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), an appropriate PTR query will be performed.
$packet = $resolver->send( $packet ); $packet = $resolver->send( 'mailhost.example.com' ); $packet = $resolver->send( 'example.com', 'MX' ); $packet = $resolver->send( 'annotation.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), 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 no response was received.
$packet->header->ancount
$packet->answer
@zone = $resolver->axfr(); @zone = $resolver->axfr( 'example.com' ); @zone = $resolver->axfr( 'example.com', 'HS' ); $iterator = $resolver->axfr(); $iterator = $resolver->axfr( 'example.com' ); $iterator = $resolver->axfr( 'example.com', 'HS' ); $rr = $iterator->();
Performs a zone transfer using the resolver nameservers list, attempted in the order listed.
If the zone is omitted, it defaults to the first zone listed in the resolver search list.
If the class is omitted, it defaults to IN.
When called in list context, axfr() returns a list of Net::DNS::RR objects or an empty list if the zone transfer failed. The redundant SOA record that terminates the zone transfer is not returned to the caller.
Net::DNS::RR
Here is an example that uses a timeout and TSIG verification:
$resolver->tcp_timeout( 10 ); $resolver->tsig( 'Khmac-sha1.example.+161+24053.private' ); @zone = $resolver->axfr( 'example.com' ); die 'Zone transfer failed: ', $resolver->errorstring unless @zone; foreach $rr (@zone) { $rr->print; }
When called in scalar context, axfr() returns an iterator object. Each invocation of the iterator returns a single Net::DNS::RR or undef when the zone is exhausted. The redundant SOA record that terminates the zone transfer is not returned to the caller.
Here is the example above, implemented using an iterator:
$resolver->tcp_timeout( 10 ); $resolver->tsig( 'Khmac-sha1.example.+161+24053.private' ); $iterator = $resolver->axfr( 'example.com' ); die 'Zone transfer failed: ', $resolver->errorstring unless $iterator; while ( $rr = $iterator->() ) { $rr->print; }
@nameservers = $resolver->nameservers(); $resolver->nameservers( '192.0.2.1', '192.0.2.2', '2001:DB8::3' );
Gets or sets the nameservers to be queried.
Also see the IPv6 transport notes below
$resolver->empty_nameservers();
Empties the list of nameservers.
$resolver->print;
Prints the resolver state on the standard output.
print $resolver->string;
Returns a string representation of the resolver state.
@searchlist = $resolver->searchlist; $resolver->searchlist( 'a.example', 'b.example', 'c.example' );
Gets or sets the resolver search list.
$resolver->empty_searchlist();
Empties the searchlist.
print 'sending queries to port ', $resolver->port, "\n"; $resolver->port(9732);
Gets or sets the port to which queries are sent. Convenient for nameserver testing using a non-standard port. The default is port 53.
print 'sending queries from port ', $resolver->srcport, "\n"; $resolver->srcport(5353);
Gets or sets the port from which queries are sent. The default is 0, meaning any port.
print 'sending queries from address ', $resolver->srcaddr, "\n"; $resolver->srcaddr('192.0.2.1');
Gets or sets the source address from which queries are sent. Convenient for forcing queries from a specific interface on a multi-homed host. The default is 0.0.0.0, meaning any local address.
$socket = $resolver->bgsend( $packet ) || die $resolver->errorstring; $socket = $resolver->bgsend( 'mailhost.example.com' ); $socket = $resolver->bgsend( 'example.com', 'MX' ); $socket = $resolver->bgsend( 'annotation.example.com', 'TXT', 'HS' );
Performs a background DNS query for the given name, i.e., sends a query packet to the first destination in the nameservers list and returns immediately without waiting for a response. The program can then perform other tasks while awaiting the response from the nameserver.
nameservers
Returns an IO::Socket::INET object or undef on error in which case the reason for failure can be found through a call to the errorstring method.
IO::Socket::INET
The program must determine when the socket is ready for reading and call bgread to get the response packet. Either bgisready or IO::Select may be used to find out if the socket is ready.
bgread
bgisready
IO::Select
bgsend does not support persistent sockets.
bgsend
BEWARE: bgsend does not support the usevc option (TCP) and operates on UDP only. Answers may not fit in an UDP packet and might be truncated. Truncated packets will not be retried over TCP automatically and should be handled by the caller.
$packet = $resolver->bgread($socket); if ($packet->header->tc) { # Retry over TCP (blocking). } undef $socket;
Reads the answer from a background query (see "bgsend"). The argument is an IO::Socket object returned by bgsend.
IO::Socket
Returns a Net::DNS::Packet object or undef on error.
The programmer should close or destroy the socket object after reading it.
$socket = $resolver->bgsend( 'foo.example.com' ); until ($resolver->bgisready($socket)) { # do some other processing } $packet = $resolver->bgread($socket); if ($packet->header->tc) { # Retry over TCP (blocking). } $socket = undef;
Determines whether a socket is ready for reading. The argument is an IO::Socket object returned by bgsend.
Returns true if the socket is ready, false if not.
$tsig = $resolver->tsig; $resolver->tsig( $tsig ); $resolver->tsig( 'Khmac-sha1.example.+161+24053.private' ); $resolver->tsig( 'Khmac-sha1.example.+161+24053.key' ); $resolver->tsig( 'Khmac-sha1.example.+161+24053.key', fudge => 60 ); $resolver->tsig( $key_name, $key ); $resolver->tsig( undef );
Get or set the TSIG record used to automatically sign outgoing queries and updates. Call with an undefined argument, 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 would like the resolver to sign packets automatically.
Packets can also be signed 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.
print 'retrans interval: ', $resolver->retrans, "\n"; $resolver->retrans(3);
Get or set the retransmission interval The default is 5 seconds.
print 'number of tries: ', $resolver->retry, "\n"; $resolver->retry(2);
Get or set the number of times to try the query. The default is 4.
print 'recursion flag: ', $resolver->recurse, "\n"; $resolver->recurse(0);
Get or set the recursion flag. If true, this will direct nameservers to perform a recursive query. The default is true.
print 'defnames flag: ', $resolver->defnames, "\n"; $resolver->defnames(0);
Get or set the defnames flag. If true, calls to query will append the default domain to names that contain no dots. The default is true.
query
print 'dnsrch flag: ', $resolver->dnsrch, "\n"; $resolver->dnsrch(0);
Get or set the dnsrch flag. If true, calls to search will apply the search list to resolve names that are not fully qualified. The default is true.
search
print 'debug flag: ', $resolver->debug, "\n"; $resolver->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.
send
print 'usevc flag: ', $resolver->usevc, "\n"; $resolver->usevc(1);
Get or set the usevc flag. If true, queries will be performed using virtual circuits (TCP) instead of datagrams (UDP). The default is false.
print 'TCP timeout: ', $resolver->tcp_timeout, "\n"; $resolver->tcp_timeout(10);
Get or set the TCP timeout in seconds. The default is 120 seconds (2 minutes). A timeout of undef means indefinite.
print 'UDP timeout: ', $resolver->udp_timeout, "\n"; $resolver->udp_timeout(10);
Get or set the UDP timeout in seconds. The default is undef, which means that the retry and retrans settings will be used to perform the retries until they exhausted.
print 'Persistent TCP flag: ', $resolver->persistent_tcp, "\n"; $resolver->persistent_tcp(1);
Get or set the persistent TCP setting. If true, Net::DNS will keep a TCP socket open for each host:port to which it connects. This is useful if you are using TCP and need to make a lot of queries or updates to the same nameserver.
The default is false unless you are running a SOCKSified Perl, in which case the default is true.
print 'Persistent UDP flag: ', $resolver->persistent_udp, "\n"; $resolver->persistent_udp(1);
Get or set the persistent UDP setting. If true, Net::DNS will keep a single UDP socket open for all queries. This is useful if you are using UDP and need to make a lot of queries or updates.
print 'igntc flag: ', $resolver->igntc, "\n"; $resolver->igntc(1);
Get or set the igntc flag. If true, truncated packets will be ignored. If false, the query will be retried using TCP. The default is false.
print 'query status: ', $resolver->errorstring, "\n";
Returns a string containing the status of the most recent query.
print 'last answer was from: ', $resolver->answerfrom, "\n";
Returns the IP address from which the most recent packet was received in response to a query.
print 'size of last answer: ', $resolver->answersize, "\n";
Returns the size in bytes of the most recent packet received in response to a query.
print "dnssec flag: ", $resolver->dnssec, "\n"; $resolver->dnssec(0);
The dnssec flag causes the resolver to transmit DNSSEC queries and to add a EDNS0 record as required by RFC2671 and RFC3225. The actions of, and response from, the remote nameserver is determined by the settings of the AD and CD flags.
Calling the dnssec() method with a non-zero value will also set the UDP packet size to the default value of 2048. If that is too small or too big for your environment, you should call the udppacketsize() method immediately after.
$resolver->dnssec(1); # DNSSEC using default packetsize $resolver->udppacketsize(1250); # lower the UDP packet size
A fatal exception will be raised if the dnssec() method is called but the Net::DNS::SEC library has not been installed.
$resolver->dnssec(1); $resolver->adflag(1); print "authentication desired flag: ", $resolver->adflag, "\n";
Gets or sets the AD bit for dnssec queries. This bit indicates that the caller is interested in the returned AD (authentic data) bit but does not require any dnssec RRs to be included in the response. The default value is 0.
$resolver->dnssec(1); $resolver->cdflag(1); print "checking disabled flag: ", $resolver->cdflag, "\n";
Gets or sets the CD bit for dnssec queries. This bit indicates that authentication by upstream nameservers should be suppressed. Any dnssec RRs required to execute the authentication procedure should be included in the response. The default value is 0.
print "udppacketsize: ", $resolver->udppacketsize, "\n"; $resolver->udppacketsize(2048);
udppacketsize will set or get the packet size. If set to a value greater than the default DNS packet size, an EDNS extension will be added indicating support for UDP fragment reassembly.
The following environment variables can also be used to configure the resolver:
# Bourne Shell RES_NAMESERVERS="192.0.2.1 192.0.2.2 2001:DB8::3" export RES_NAMESERVERS # C Shell setenv RES_NAMESERVERS "192.0.2.1 192.0.2.2 2001:DB8::3"
# Bourne Shell RES_SEARCHLIST="a.example.com b.example.com c.example.com" export RES_SEARCHLIST # C Shell setenv RES_SEARCHLIST "a.example.com b.example.com c.example.com"
# Bourne Shell LOCALDOMAIN=example.com export LOCALDOMAIN # C Shell setenv LOCALDOMAIN example.com
# 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.
option:value
The Net::DNS::Resolver library will enable IPv6 transport if the appropriate libraries (Socket6 and IO::Socket::INET6) are available and the destination nameserver has at least one IPv6 address.
The force_v4(), force_v6() and prefer_v6() methods with a non-zero argument may be used to configure transport selection.
The behaviour of the nameserver() method illustrates the transport selection mechanism. If, for example, IPv6 is not available or IPv4 transport has been forced, the nameserver() method will only return IPv4 addresses:
$resolver->nameservers( '192.0.2.1', '192.0.2.2', '2001:DB8::3' ); $resolver->force_v4(1); print join ' ', $resolver->nameservers();
will print
192.0.2.1 192.0.2.2
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 can simply add a method to the namespace!
For example, if we wanted to cache lookups:
package Net::DNS::Resolver; my %cache; sub search { $self = shift; $cache{"@_"} ||= $self->SUPER::search(@_); }
bgsend() does not honour the usevc flag and only uses UDP for transport.
Copyright (c)1997-2002 Michael Fuhr.
Portions Copyright (c)2002-2004 Chris Reinhardt.
Portions Copyright (c)2005 Olaf M. Kolkman, NLnet Labs.
Portions Copyright (c)2014 Dick Franks.
All rights reserved. This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl, 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
To install Net::DNS, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Net::DNS
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Net::DNS
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.