Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable(3) |
NAME¶
Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable - programmable DNS resolver class for offline emulation of DNS
VERSION¶
0.003
SYNOPSIS¶
use Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable; use Net::DNS::RR; my $resolver = Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable->new( records => { 'example.com' => [ Net::DNS::RR->new('example.com. NS ns.example.org.'), Net::DNS::RR->new('example.com. A 192.168.0.1') ], 'ns.example.org' => [ Net::DNS::RR->new('ns.example.org. A 192.168.1.1') ] }, resolver_code => sub { my ($domain, $rr_type, $class) = @_; ... return ($result, $aa, @rrs); } );
DESCRIPTION¶
Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable is a Net::DNS::Resolver descendant class that allows a virtual DNS to be emulated instead of querying the real DNS. A set of static DNS records may be supplied, or arbitrary code may be specified as a means for retrieving DNS records, or even generating them on the fly.
Constructor¶
The following constructor is provided:
- new(%options): returns Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable
- Creates a new programmed DNS resolver object.
%options is a list of key/value pairs representing any of the following options:
- records
- A reference to a hash of arrays containing a static set of
Net::DNS::RR objects. The hash entries must be indexed by fully
qualified domain names (lower-case, without any trailing dots), and the
entries themselves must be arrays of the RR objects pertaining to these
domain names. For example:
records => { 'example.com' => [ Net::DNS::RR->new('example.com. NS ns.example.org.'), Net::DNS::RR->new('example.com. A 192.168.0.1') ], 'www.example.com' => [ Net::DNS::RR->new('www.example.com. A 192.168.0.2') ], 'ns.example.org' => [ Net::DNS::RR->new('ns.example.org. A 192.168.1.1') ] }
If this option is specified, the resolver retrieves requested RRs from this data structure.
- resolver_code
- A code reference used as a call-back for dynamically retrieving requested
RRs.
The code must take the following query parameters as arguments: the domain, RR type, and class.
It must return a list composed of: the response's RCODE (by name, as returned by Net::DNS::Header->rcode), the "aa" (authoritative answer) flag (boolean, use undef if you don't care), and the Net::DNS::RR answer objects. If an error string is returned instead of a valid RCODE, a Net::DNS::Packet object is not constructed but an error condition for the resolver is signaled instead.
For example:
resolver_code => sub { my ($domain, $rr_type, $class) = @_; ... return ($result, $aa, @rrs); }
If both this and the "records" option are specified, then statically programmed records are used in addition to any that are returned by the configured resolver code.
- defnames
- dnsrch
- domain
- searchlist
- debug
- These Net::DNS::Resolver options are also meaningful with Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable. See Net::DNS::Resolver for their descriptions.
Instance methods¶
The following instance methods of Net::DNS::Resolver are also supported by Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable:
- search: returns Net::DNS::Packet
- query: returns Net::DNS::Packet
- send: returns Net::DNS::Packet
- Performs an offline DNS query, using the statically programmed DNS RRs and/or the configured dynamic resolver code. See the "new" constructor's "records" and "resolver_code" options. See the descriptions of search, query, and send for details about the calling syntax of these methods.
- string: returns string
- searchlist: returns list of string
- defnames: returns boolean
- dnsrch: returns boolean
- debug: returns boolean
- errorstring: returns string
- answerfrom: returns string
- answersize: returns integer
- See "METHODS" in Net::DNS::Resolver.
Currently the following methods of Net::DNS::Resolver are not supported: axfr, axfr_start, axfr_next, nameservers, port, srcport, srcaddr, bgsend, bgread, bgisready, tsig, retrans, retry, recurse, usevc, tcp_timeout, udp_timeout, persistent_tcp, persistent_udp, igntc, dnssec, cdflag, udppacketsize. The effects of using these on Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable objects are undefined.
SEE ALSO¶
Net::DNS::Resolver
For availability, support, and license information, see the README file included with Net::DNS::Resolver::Programmable.
AUTHORS¶
Julian Mehnle <julian@mehnle.net>
2014-05-02 | perl v5.16.3 |