libs6dns
s6-dns
Software
skarnet.org
The following functions are declared in the s6-dns/hosts.h header, and implemented in the libs6dns.a or libs6dns.so library.
s6dns_hosts provides functions and macros - mostly macros - to perform name-to-IP or IP-to-name resolution according to the local /etc/hosts file.
Most of the functions declared here are variations of another, more generic function. Typically, a foobar_r function is the generic one, and will take additional arguments such as: a pointer to a local hosts database (compiled to an efficient format), and/or a list and number of rules for qualification. The corresponding foobar function is the same, except that it uses global variables to fill these additional arguments: for instance, the hosts database made from /etc/hosts, or the qualification rules computed from /etc/resolv.conf. We document the simpler functions — even though they're macros, we pretend they're functions; please refer to the s6-dns/hosts.h file for the exact prototypes or if you want to use the generic functions.
cdb s6dns_hosts_here
s6dns_hosts_here is the global cdb database containing
the compiled data from /etc/hosts. You normally do not need to
use it manually because it is implicitly supplied to functions when you
use the macros without a _r suffix.
int s6dns_hosts_compile (int fdr, int fdw)
Compiles the text file data from file descriptor fdr,
which should be in /etc/hosts format, into a cdb file
written to file descriptor fdw. fdr must be
open for reading, and fdw must be open for writing and
seekable. The function returns 1 on success and 0 (and sets errno)
on failure.
You normally don't need to use this function yourself. To compile the hosts database prior to use, you can call the s6-dns-hosts-compile program (which uses this function). Alternatively, at initialization time, the hosts database will be compiled automatically if there isn't a more recent compiled version.
int s6dns_hosts_init (cdb *c, char const *txtfile, char const *cdbfile, char const *prefix)
Initializes the compiled hosts database in *c.
If there's a pre-compiled cdbfile file that
is more recent than /etc/hosts, then it is used;
else, the txtfile file is compiled into a
temporary file starting with prefix, which is used and
immediately unlinked. The function returns -1 (and sets errno)
on failure, 1 on success, and 0 if it can find neither a
suitable cdbfile nor a suitable txtfile.
void s6dns_hosts_free (cdb *c)
Frees the compiled hosts database in c.
You probably don't need to use these functions yourself: instead, the higher-level s6dns_init() and s6dns_finish() functions perform all the necessary initialization and cleanup, including the hosts database one.
int s6dns_hosts_name (char const *ip, stralloc *storage, genalloc *indices, int is6)
Gets the list of names for IP address ip from the hosts database.
The names are stored in the stralloc *storage; for each name,
its index in storage→s is appended, as a size_t,
to the genalloc *indices. If is6 is nonzero, ip
is interpreted as an IPv6 address, i.e. a network byte order sequence of
16 bytes; otherwise it is interpreted as an IPv4 address, i.e. a network
byte order sequence of 4 bytes. The function returns -1 (and sets errno)
in case of failure, 0 if no match could be found (which includes no
existing hosts database), or the number of names it found. Names listed
as the first name on a line in /etc/hosts are always given as
fully qualified, i.e. with a terminating dot; other names are given as
they were input in /etc/hosts.
int s6dns_hosts_name4 (char const *ip, stralloc *storage, genalloc *indices)
Same, but ip is assumed to be an IPv4.
int s6dns_hosts_name6 (char const *ip, stralloc *storage, genalloc *indices)
Same, but ip is assumed to be an IPv6.
extern int s6dns_hosts_a_noq (char const *name, stralloc *ip4s)
Gets the list of IPv4 addresses for name name from the hosts database.
The addresses are stored in the stralloc *ip4s, in network byte order,
4 bytes per item. name is assumed to be fully qualified: skarnet.org
will yield the same results as skarnet.org., and blah will yield
the same results as blah. with the ending dot. The function returns -1
(and sets errno) in case of failure, 0 if no match (including no valid hosts
database), or the number of IP addresses appended to *ip4s (i.e. the
length increase divided by 4).
extern int s6dns_hosts_aaaa_noq (char const *name, stralloc *ip6s)
Same as above, but gets the list of IPv6 addresses for name; there are
16 bytes per address instead of 4.
extern int s6dns_hosts_aaaaa_noq (char const *name, genalloc *ips)
Same as above, but gets the list of all IP addresses for name, v4 or v6
indiscriminately. Every address is stored in the genalloc *ips as an
ip46full structure.
extern int s6dns_hosts_a_unq (char const *name, stralloc *ip4s)
Gets the list of IPv4 addresses for name name from the hosts database.
The addresses are stored in the stralloc *ip4s, in network byte order,
4 bytes per item. name is assumed to be unqualified: blah
is interpreted as a local alias that will only match a blah
entry in /etc/hosts that does not appear as a first
entry. The function returns -1
(and sets errno) in case of failure, 0 if no match (including no valid hosts
database), or the number of IP addresses appended to *ip4s (i.e. the
length increase divided by 4).
extern int s6dns_hosts_aaaa_unq (char const *name, stralloc *ip6s)
Same as above, but gets the list of IPv6 addresses for name; there are
16 bytes per address instead of 4.
extern int s6dns_hosts_aaaaa_unq (char const *name, genalloc *ips)
Same as above, but gets the list of all IP addresses for name, v4 or v6
indiscriminately. Every address is stored in the genalloc *ips as an
ip46full structure.
extern int s6dns_hosts_a_q (char const *name, stralloc *ip4s)
Gets the list of IPv4 addresses, from the hosts database, for all possible
qualifications for name name.
The addresses are stored in the stralloc *ip4s, in network byte order,
4 bytes per item. The function returns -1
(and sets errno) in case of failure, 0 if no match (including no valid hosts
database), or the number of IP addresses appended to *ip4s (i.e. the
length increase divided by 4).
First, name is looked up in the hosts database as a simple unqualified names. Then, name is qualified with all the suffixes read from /etc/resolv.conf, and all of the resulting FQDNs are looked up in the hosts database. All the results are concatenated and appended to the *ip4s stralloc.
extern int s6dns_hosts_aaaa_q (char const *name, stralloc *ip6s)
Same as above, but gets the list of IPv6 addresses for name; there are
16 bytes per address instead of 4.
extern int s6dns_hosts_aaaaa_q (char const *name, genalloc *ips)
Same as above, but gets the list of all IP addresses for name, v4 or v6
indiscriminately. Every address is stored in the genalloc *ips as an
ip46full structure.