20092015 Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. inet_res raimo@erix.ericsson.se 2009-09-11 A
inet_res A rudimentary DNS client.

This module performs DNS name resolving to recursive name servers.

See also ERTS User's Guide: Inet Configuration for more information about how to configure an Erlang runtime system for IP communication, and how to enable this DNS client by defining as a lookup method. The DNS client then acts as a backend for the resolving functions in inet.

This DNS client can resolve DNS records even if it is not used for normal name resolving in the node.

This is not a full-fledged resolver, only a DNS client that relies on asking trusted recursive name servers.

Name Resolving

UDP queries are used unless resolver option usevc is true, which forces TCP queries. If the query is too large for UDP, TCP is used instead. For regular DNS queries, 512 bytes is the size limit.

When EDNS is enabled (resolver option edns is set to the EDNS version (that is, 0 instead of false), resolver option udp_payload_size sets the limit. If a name server replies with the TC bit set (truncation), indicating that the answer is incomplete, the query is retried to that name server using TCP. Resolver option udp_payload_size also sets the advertised size for the maximum allowed reply size, if EDNS is enabled, otherwise the name server uses the limit 512 bytes. If the reply is larger, it gets truncated, forcing a TCP requery.

For UDP queries, resolver options timeout and retry control retransmission. Each name server in the nameservers list is tried with a time-out of timeout/retry. Then all name servers are tried again, doubling the time-out, for a total of retry times.

For queries not using the search list, if the query to all nameservers results in {error,nxdomain} or an empty answer, the same query is tried for alt_nameservers.

Resolver Types

The following data types concern the resolver:

DNS Types

The following data types concern the DNS client:

A string with no adjacent dots.

This is the start of a hiearchy of opaque data structures that can be examined with access functions in inet_dns, which return lists of {Field,Value} tuples. The arity 2 functions only return the value for a specified field.

dns_msg() = DnsMsg
    inet_dns:msg(DnsMsg) ->
        [ {header, dns_header()}
        | {qdlist, dns_query()}
        | {anlist, dns_rr()}
        | {nslist, dns_rr()}
        | {arlist, dns_rr()} ]
    inet_dns:msg(DnsMsg, header) -> dns_header() % for example
    inet_dns:msg(DnsMsg, Field) -> Value

dns_header() = DnsHeader
    inet_dns:header(DnsHeader) ->
        [ {id, integer()}
        | {qr, boolean()}
        | {opcode, query | iquery | status | integer()}
        | {aa, boolean()}
        | {tc, boolean()}
        | {rd, boolean()}
        | {ra, boolean()}
        | {pr, boolean()}
        | {rcode, integer(0..16)} ]
    inet_dns:header(DnsHeader, Field) -> Value

query_type() = axfr | mailb | maila | any | rr_type()

dns_query() = DnsQuery
    inet_dns:dns_query(DnsQuery) ->
        [ {domain, dns_name()}
        | {type, query_type()}
        | {class, dns_class()} ]
    inet_dns:dns_query(DnsQuery, Field) -> Value

dns_rr() = DnsRr
    inet_dns:rr(DnsRr) -> DnsRrFields | DnsRrOptFields
    DnsRrFields = [ {domain, dns_name()}
                  | {type, rr_type()}
                  | {class, dns_class()}
                  | {ttl, integer()}
                  | {data, dns_data()} ]
    DnsRrOptFields = [ {domain, dns_name()}
                     | {type, opt}
                     | {udp_payload_size, integer()}
                     | {ext_rcode, integer()}
                     | {version, integer()}
                     | {z, integer()}
                     | {data, dns_data()} ]
    inet_dns:rr(DnsRr, Field) -> Value

There is an information function for the types above:

inet_dns:record_type(dns_msg()) -> msg;
inet_dns:record_type(dns_header()) -> header;
inet_dns:record_type(dns_query()) -> dns_query;
inet_dns:record_type(dns_rr()) -> rr;
inet_dns:record_type(_) -> undefined.

So, inet_dns:(inet_dns:record_type(X))(X) converts any of these data structures into a {Field,Value} list.

Regexp is a string with characters encoded in the UTF-8 coding standard.

Resolve a DNS record of the specified type for the specified host.

Resolves a DNS record of the specified type for the specified host, of class in. Returns, on success, a hostent() record with dns_data() elements in the address list field.

This function uses resolver option search that is a list of domain names. If the name to resolve contains no dots, it is prepended to each domain name in the search list, and they are tried in order. If the name contains dots, it is first tried as an absolute name and if that fails, the search list is used. If the name has a trailing dot, it is supposed to be an absolute name and the search list is not used.

Return a hostent record for the host with the specified address.

Backend functions used by inet:gethostbyaddr/1.

Return a hostent record for the host with the specified name.

Backend functions used by inet:gethostbyname/1,2.

This function uses resolver option search just like getbyname/2,3.

If resolver option inet6 is true, an IPv6 address is looked up. If that fails, the IPv4 address is looked up and returned on IPv6-mapped IPv4 format.

Resolve the DNS data for the record of the specified type and class for the specified name.

Resolves the DNS data for the record of the specified type and class for the specified name. On success, filters out the answer records with the correct Class and Type, and returns a list of their data fields. So, a lookup for type any gives an empty answer, as the answer records have specific types that are not any. An empty answer or a failed lookup returns an empty list.

Calls resolve/* with the same arguments and filters the result, so Opts is described for those functions.

Resolve a DNS record of the specified type and class for the specified name.

Resolves a DNS record of the specified type and class for the specified name. The returned dns_msg() can be examined using access functions in inet_db, as described in section in DNS Types.

If Name is an ip_address(), the domain name to query for is generated as the standard reverse ".IN-ADDR.ARPA." name for an IPv4 address, or the ".IP6.ARPA." name for an IPv6 address. In this case, you most probably want to use Class = in and Type = ptr, but it is not done automatically.

Opts overrides the corresponding resolver options. If option nameservers is specified, it is assumed that it is the complete list of name serves, so resolver option alt_nameserves is ignored. However, if option alt_nameserves is also specified to this function, it is used.

Option verbose (or rather {verbose,true}) causes diagnostics printout through io:format/2 of queries, replies retransmissions, and so on, similar to from utilities, such as dig and nslookup.

If Opt is any atom, it is interpreted as {Opt,true} unless the atom string starts with "no", making the interpretation {Opt,false}. For example, usevc is an alias for {usevc,true} and nousevc is an alias for {usevc,false}.

Option inet6 has no effect on this function. You probably want to use Type = a | aaaa instead.

Example

This access functions example shows how lookup/3 can be implemented using resolve/3 from outside the module:

example_lookup(Name, Class, Type) -> case inet_res:resolve(Name, Class, Type) of {ok,Msg} -> [inet_dns:rr(RR, data) || RR <- inet_dns:msg(Msg, anlist), inet_dns:rr(RR, type) =:= Type, inet_dns:rr(RR, class) =:= Class]; {error,_} -> [] end.
Legacy Functions

These are deprecated because the annoying double meaning of the name servers/time-out argument, and because they have no decent place for a resolver options list.

Resolve a DNS record of the specified type and class for the specified name.

Resolves a DNS record of the specified type and class for the specified name.

Resolve a DNS record of the specified type and class for the specified name.

Resolves a DNS record of the specified type and class for the specified name.