Class: Net::DNS::Resolver

Inherits:
Object
  • Object
show all
Defined in:
lib/net/dns/resolver.rb,
lib/net/dns/resolver/timeouts.rb

Overview

Net::DNS::Resolver - DNS resolver class

The Net::DNS::Resolver class implements a complete DNS resolver written in pure Ruby, without a single C line of code. It has all of the tipical properties of an evoluted resolver, and a bit of OO which comes from having used Ruby.

This project started as a porting of the Net::DNS Perl module, written by Martin Fuhr, but turned out (in the last months) to be an almost complete rewriting. Well, maybe some of the features of the Perl version are still missing, but guys, at least this is readable code!

Environment

The Following Environment variables can also be used to configure the resolver:

  • RES_NAMESERVERS: A space-separated list of nameservers to query.

    # 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"
    
  • RES_SEARCHLIST: A space-separated list of domains to put in the search list.

    # 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"
    
  • LOCALDOMAIN: The default domain.

    # Bourne Shell
    $ LOCALDOMAIN=example.com
    $ export LOCALDOMAIN
    
    # C Shell
    % setenv LOCALDOMAIN example.com
    
  • RES_OPTIONS: A space-separated list of resolver options to set. Options that take values are specified as option:value.

    # Bourne Shell
    $ RES_OPTIONS="retrans:3 retry:2 debug"
    $ export RES_OPTIONS
    
    # C Shell
    % setenv RES_OPTIONS "retrans:3 retry:2 debug"
    

Defined Under Namespace

Classes: DnsTimeout, Error, NoResponseError, TcpTimeout, UdpTimeout

Constant Summary collapse

Defaults =

An hash with the defaults values of almost all the configuration parameters of a resolver object. See the description for each parameter to have an explanation of its usage.

{
  config_file: "/etc/resolv.conf",
  log_file: $stdout,
  port: 53,
  searchlist: [],
  nameservers: [IPAddr.new("127.0.0.1")],
  domain: "",
  source_port: 0,
  source_address: IPAddr.new("0.0.0.0"),
  source_address_inet6: IPAddr.new('::'),
  retry_interval: 5,
  retry_number: 4,
  recursive: true,
  defname: true,
  dns_search: true,
  use_tcp: false,
  ignore_truncated: false,
  packet_size: 512,
  tcp_timeout: TcpTimeout.new(5),
  udp_timeout: UdpTimeout.new(5),
}.freeze
C =
Object.const_get(defined?(RbConfig) ? :RbConfig : :Config)::CONFIG

Class Method Summary collapse

Instance Method Summary collapse

Constructor Details

#initialize(config = {}) ⇒ Resolver

Creates a new resolver object.

Argument config can either be empty or be an hash with some configuration parameters. To know what each parameter do, look at the description of each. Some example:

# Use the sistem defaults
res = Net::DNS::Resolver.new

# Specify a configuration file
res = Net::DNS::Resolver.new(:config_file => '/my/dns.conf')

# Set some option
res = Net::DNS::Resolver.new(:nameservers => "172.16.1.1",
                             :recursive => false,
                             :retry => 10)

Config file

Net::DNS::Resolver uses a config file to read the usual values a resolver needs, such as nameserver list and domain names. 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 in the main description for Resolver class.

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 Resolver::new.

Explicit arguments to Resolver::new override both the system’s defaults and the values of the custom configuration file, if any.

Parameters

The following arguments to Resolver::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

  • usevc

  • 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.

Disclaimer

Part of the above documentation is taken from the one in the Net::DNS::Resolver Perl module.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 233

def initialize(config = {})
  config.is_a?(Hash) or
      raise(ArgumentError, "Expected `config' to be a Hash")

  @config = Defaults.merge config
  @raw = false

  # New logger facility
  @logger = Logger.new(@config[:log_file])
  @logger.level = $DEBUG ? Logger::DEBUG : Logger::WARN

  #------------------------------------------------------------
  # Resolver configuration will be set in order from:
  # 1) initialize arguments
  # 2) ENV variables
  # 3) config file
  # 4) defaults (and /etc/resolv.conf for config)
  #------------------------------------------------------------

  #------------------------------------------------------------
  # Parsing config file
  #------------------------------------------------------------
  parse_config_file

  #------------------------------------------------------------
  # Parsing ENV variables
  #------------------------------------------------------------
  parse_environment_variables

  #------------------------------------------------------------
  # Parsing arguments
  #------------------------------------------------------------
  config.each do |key, val|
    next if (key == :log_file) || (key == :config_file)

    begin
      eval "self.#{key} = val"
    rescue NoMethodError
      raise ArgumentError, "Option #{key} not valid"
    end
  end
end

Class Method Details

.platform_windows?Boolean

Returns true if running on a Windows platform.

Note. This method doesn’t rely on the RUBY_PLATFORM constant because the comparison will fail when running on JRuby. On JRuby RUBY_PLATFORM == ‘java’.

Returns:

  • (Boolean)


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 138

def platform_windows?
  !!(C["host_os"] =~ /msdos|mswin|djgpp|mingw/i)
end

.start(*params) ⇒ Object

Quick resolver method. Bypass the configuration using the defaults.

Net::DNS::Resolver.start "www.google.com"


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 129

def start(*params)
  new.search(*params)
end

Instance Method Details

#axfr(name, cls = Net::DNS::IN) ⇒ Object

Performs a zone transfer for the zone passed as a parameter.

It is actually only a wrapper to a send with type set as Net::DNS::AXFR, since it is using the same infrastucture.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 1016

def axfr(name, cls = Net::DNS::IN)
  @logger.info "Requested AXFR transfer, zone #{name} class #{cls}"
  query(name, Net::DNS::AXFR, cls)
end

#defname=(bool) ⇒ Object

Set the flag defname in a boolean state. if defname is true, calls to Resolver#query will append the default domain to names that contain no dots. Example:

# Domain example.com
res.defname = true
res.query("machine1")
  #=> This will perform a query for machine1.example.com

Default is true.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 622

def defname=(bool)
  case bool
  when TrueClass, FalseClass
    @config[:defname] = bool
    @logger.info("Defname state changed to #{bool}")
  else
    raise ArgumentError, "Argument must be boolean"
  end
end

#defname?Boolean Also known as: defname

Checks whether the defname flag has been activate.

Returns:

  • (Boolean)


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 605

def defname?
  @config[:defname]
end

#dns_searchObject Also known as: dnsrch

Get the state of the dns_search flag.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 633

def dns_search
  @config[:dns_search]
end

#dns_search=(bool) ⇒ Object Also known as: dnsrch=

Set the flag dns_search in a boolean state. If dns_search is true, when using the Resolver#search method will be applied the search list. Default is true.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 641

def dns_search=(bool)
  case bool
  when TrueClass, FalseClass
    @config[:dns_search] = bool
    @logger.info("DNS search state changed to #{bool}")
  else
    raise ArgumentError, "Argument must be boolean"
  end
end

#domainObject

Return a string with the default domain.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 375

def domain
  @config[:domain].inspect
end

#domain=(name) ⇒ Object

Set the domain for the query.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 380

def domain=(name)
  @config[:domain] = name if valid? name
end

#ignore_truncated=(bool) ⇒ Object



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 686

def ignore_truncated=(bool)
  case bool
  when TrueClass, FalseClass
    @config[:ignore_truncated] = bool
    @logger.info("Ignore truncated flag changed to #{bool}")
  else
    raise ArgumentError, "Argument must be boolean"
  end
end

#ignore_truncated?Boolean Also known as: ignore_truncated

Returns:

  • (Boolean)


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 681

def ignore_truncated?
  @config[:ignore_truncated]
end

#log_file=(log) ⇒ Object

Set a new log file for the logger facility of the resolver class. Could be a file descriptor too:

res.log_file = $stderr

Note that a new logging facility will be create, destroing the old one, which will then be impossibile to recover.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 773

def log_file=(log)
  @config[:log_file] = log
  @logger = Logger.new(@config[:log_file])
  @logger.level = $DEBUG ? Logger::DEBUG : Logger::WARN
end

#log_level=(level) ⇒ Object

Set the log level for the built-in logging facility.

The log level can be one of the following:

  • Net::DNS::DEBUG

  • Net::DNS::INFO

  • Net::DNS::WARN

  • Net::DNS::ERROR

  • Net::DNS::FATAL

Note that if the global variable $DEBUG is set (like when the -d switch is used at the command line) the logger level is automatically set at DEGUB.

For further informations, see Logger documentation in the Ruby standard library.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 820

def log_level=(level)
  @logger.level = level
end

#logger=(logger) ⇒ Object

This one permits to have a personal logger facility to handle resolver messages, instead of new built-in one, which is set up for a $stdout (or $stderr) use.

If you want your own logging facility you can create a new instance of the Logger class:

log = Logger.new("/tmp/resolver.log","weekly",2*1024*1024)
log.level = Logger::DEBUG
log.progname = "ruby_resolver"

and then pass it to the resolver:

res.logger = log

Note that this will destroy the precedent logger.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 796

def logger=(logger)
  logger.is_a?(Logger) or
      raise(ArgumentError, "Argument must be an instance of Logger class")

  @logger = logger
end

#mx(name, cls = Net::DNS::IN) ⇒ Object

Performs an MX query for the domain name passed as parameter.

It actually uses the same methods a normal Resolver query would use, but automatically sort the results based on preferences and returns an ordered array.

res = Net::DNS::Resolver.new
res.mx("google.com")


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 1030

def mx(name, cls = Net::DNS::IN)
  arr = []
  query(name, Net::DNS::MX, cls).answer.each do |entry|
    arr << entry if entry.type == 'MX'
  end
  arr.sort_by(&:preference)
end

#nameserversObject Also known as: nameserver

Get the list of resolver nameservers, in a dotted decimal format-

res.nameservers
  #=> ["192.168.0.1","192.168.0.2"]


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 317

def nameservers
  @config[:nameservers].map(&:to_s)
end

#nameservers=(arg) ⇒ Object Also known as: nameserver=

Set the list of resolver nameservers. arg can be a single ip address or an array of addresses.

res.nameservers = "192.168.0.1"
res.nameservers = ["192.168.0.1","192.168.0.2"]

If you want you can specify the addresses as IPAddr instances.

ip = IPAddr.new("192.168.0.3")
res.nameservers << ip
#=> ["192.168.0.1","192.168.0.2","192.168.0.3"]

The default is 127.0.0.1 (localhost)



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 337

def nameservers=(arg)
  case arg
  when String
    begin
      @config[:nameservers] = [IPAddr.new(arg)]
      @logger.info "Nameservers list changed to value #{@config[:nameservers].inspect}"
    rescue ArgumentError # arg is in the name form, not IP
      nameservers_from_name(arg)
    end
  when IPAddr
    @config[:nameservers] = [arg]
    @logger.info "Nameservers list changed to value #{@config[:nameservers].inspect}"
  when Array
    @config[:nameservers] = []
    arg.each do |x|
      val = case x
      when String
        begin
          IPAddr.new(x)
        rescue ArgumentError
          nameservers_from_name(arg)
          return
        end
      when IPAddr
        x
      else
        raise ArgumentError, "Wrong argument format"
      end
      @config[:nameservers] << val
    end
    @logger.info "Nameservers list changed to value #{@config[:nameservers].inspect}"
  else
    raise ArgumentError, "Wrong argument format, neither String, Array nor IPAddr"
  end
end

#packet_sizeObject

Return the defined size of the packet.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 385

def packet_size
  @config[:packet_size]
end

#portObject

Get the port number to which the resolver sends queries.

puts "Sending queries to port #{res.port}"


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 393

def port
  @config[:port]
end

#port=(num) ⇒ Object

Set the port number to which the resolver sends queries. This can be useful for testing a nameserver running on a non-standard port.

res.port = 10053

The default is port 53.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 404

def port=(num)
  (0..65_535).cover?(num) or
      raise(ArgumentError, "Wrong port number #{num}")

  @config[:port] = num
  @logger.info "Port number changed to #{num}"
end

#query(argument, type = Net::DNS::A, cls = Net::DNS::IN) ⇒ Object

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 name string plus optional type and class, which if omitted default to A and IN.

Returns a Net::DNS::Packet object.

# Executes the query with a +Packet+ object
send_packet = Net::DNS::Packet.new("host.example.com", Net::DNS::NS, Net::DNS::HS)
packet = res.query(send_packet)

# Executes the query with a host, type and cls
packet = res.query("host.example.com")
packet = res.query("host.example.com", Net::DNS::NS)
packet = res.query("host.example.com", Net::DNS::NS, Net::DNS::HS)

If the name is an IP address (Ipv4 or IPv6), in the form of a string or a IPAddr object, then an appropriate PTR query will be performed:

ip = IPAddr.new("172.16.100.2")
packet = res.query(ip)

packet = res.query("172.16.100.2")

Use packet.header.ancount or packet.answer to find out if there were any records in the answer section.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 898

def query(name, type = Net::DNS::A, cls = Net::DNS::IN)
  return send(name, type, cls) if name.class == IPAddr

  # If the name doesn't contain any dots then append the default domain.
  if name !~ /\./ && name !~ /:/ && @config[:defname]
    name += "." + @config[:domain]
  end

  @logger.debug "Query(#{name},#{Net::DNS::RR::Types.new(type)},#{Net::DNS::RR::Classes.new(cls)})"

  send(name, type, cls)
end

#recursive=(bool) ⇒ Object Also known as: recurse=

Sets whether or not the resolver should perform recursive queries. Default is true.

res.recursive = false # perform non-recursive query


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 570

def recursive=(bool)
  case bool
  when TrueClass, FalseClass
    @config[:recursive] = bool
    @logger.info("Recursive state changed to #{bool}")
  else
    raise ArgumentError, "Argument must be boolean"
  end
end

#recursive?Boolean Also known as: recurse, recursive

This method will return true if the resolver is configured to perform recursive queries.

print "The resolver will perform a "
print res.recursive? ? "" : "not "
puts "recursive query"

Returns:

  • (Boolean)


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 559

def recursive?
  @config[:recursive]
end

#retry_intervalObject Also known as: retrans

Return the retrasmission interval (in seconds) the resolvers has been set on.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 518

def retry_interval
  @config[:retry_interval]
end

#retry_interval=(num) ⇒ Object Also known as: retrans=

Set the retrasmission interval in seconds. Default 5 seconds.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 524

def retry_interval=(num)
  num.positive? or
      raise(ArgumentError, "Interval must be positive")

  @config[:retry_interval] = num
  @logger.info "Retransmission interval changed to #{num} seconds"
end

#retry_numberObject

The number of times the resolver will try a query.

puts "Will try a max of #{res.retry_number} queries"


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 537

def retry_number
  @config[:retry_number]
end

#retry_number=(num) ⇒ Object Also known as: retry=

Set the number of times the resolver will try a query. Default 4 times.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 543

def retry_number=(num)
  (num.is_a?(Integer) && (num > 0)) or
      raise(ArgumentError, "Retry value must be a positive integer")

  @config[:retry_number] = num
  @logger.info "Retrasmissions number changed to #{num}"
end

#search(name, type = Net::DNS::A, cls = Net::DNS::IN) ⇒ Object

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 dns_search 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.

packet = res.search('mailhost')
packet = res.search('mailhost.example.com')
packet = res.search('example.com', Net::DNS::MX)
packet = res.search('user.passwd.example.com', Net::DNS::TXT, Net::DNS::HS)

If the name is an IP address (Ipv4 or IPv6), in the form of a string or a IPAddr object, then an appropriate PTR query will be performed:

ip = IPAddr.new("172.16.100.2")
packet = res.search(ip)
packet = res.search("192.168.10.254")

Returns a Net::DNS::Packet object. If you need to examine the response packet whether it contains any answers or not, use the Resolver#query method instead.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 849

def search(name, type = Net::DNS::A, cls = Net::DNS::IN)
  return query(name, type, cls) if name.class == IPAddr

  # If the name contains at least one dot then try it as is first.
  if name.include? "."
    @logger.debug "Search(#{name},#{Net::DNS::RR::Types.new(type)},#{Net::DNS::RR::Classes.new(cls)})"
    ans = query(name, type, cls)
    return ans if ans.header.anCount > 0
  end

  # If the name doesn't end in a dot then apply the search list.
  if name !~ /\.$/ && @config[:dns_search]
    @config[:searchlist].each do |domain|
      newname = name + "." + domain
      @logger.debug "Search(#{newname},#{Net::DNS::RR::Types.new(type)},#{Net::DNS::RR::Classes.new(cls)})"
      ans = query(newname, type, cls)
      return ans if ans.header.anCount > 0
    end
  end

  # Finally, if the name has no dots then try it as is.
  @logger.debug "Search(#{name},#{Net::DNS::RR::Types.new(type)},#{Net::DNS::RR::Classes.new(cls)})"
  query(name + ".", type, cls)
end

#searchlistObject

Get the resolver search list, returned as an array of entries.

res.searchlist
#=> ["example.com","a.example.com","b.example.com"]


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 281

def searchlist
  @config[:searchlist].inspect
end

#searchlist=(arg) ⇒ Object

Set the resolver searchlist. arg can be a single string or an array of strings.

res.searchstring = "example.com"
res.searchstring = ["example.com","a.example.com","b.example.com"]

Note that you can also append a new name to the searchlist.

res.searchlist << "c.example.com"
res.searchlist
#=> ["example.com","a.example.com","b.example.com","c.example.com"]

The default is an empty array.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 299

def searchlist=(arg)
  case arg
  when String
    @config[:searchlist] = [arg] if valid? arg
    @logger.info "Searchlist changed to value #{@config[:searchlist].inspect}"
  when Array
    @config[:searchlist] = arg if arg.all? { |x| valid? x }
    @logger.info "Searchlist changed to value #{@config[:searchlist].inspect}"
  else
    raise ArgumentError, "Wrong argument format, neither String nor Array"
  end
end

#source_addressObject Also known as: srcaddr

Get the local address from which the resolver sends queries

puts "Sending queries using source address #{res.source_address}"


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 446

def source_address
  @config[:source_address].to_s
end

#source_address=(addr) ⇒ Object Also known as: srcaddr=

Set the local source address from which the resolver sends its queries.

res.source_address = "172.16.100.1"
res.source_address = IPAddr.new("172.16.100.1")

You can specify arg as either a string containing the ip address or an instance of IPAddr class.

Normally this can be used to force queries out a specific interface on a multi-homed host. In this case, you should of course need to know the addresses of the interfaces.

Another way to use this option is for some kind of spoofing attacks towards weak nameservers, to probe the security of your network. This includes specifing ranged attacks such as DoS and others. For a paper on DNS security, checks www.marcoceresa.com/security/

Note that if you want to set a non-binded source address you need root priviledges, as raw sockets will be used to generate packets. The class will then generate an exception if you’re not root.

The default is 0.0.0.0, meaning any local address (chosen on routing needs).



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 480

def source_address=(addr)
  addr.respond_to?(:to_s) or
      raise(ArgumentError, "Wrong address argument #{addr}")

  begin
    port = rand(1024..65_023)
    @logger.info "Try to determine state of source address #{addr} with port #{port}"
    a = TCPServer.new(addr.to_s, port)
  rescue SystemCallError => e
    case e.errno
    when 98 # Port already in use!
      @logger.warn "Port already in use"
      retry
    when 99 # Address is not valid: raw socket
      @raw = true
      @logger.warn "Using raw sockets"
    else
      raise SystemCallError, e
    end
  ensure
    a.close
  end

  case addr
  when String
    @config[:source_address] = IPAddr.new(string)
    @logger.info "Using new source address: #{@config[:source_address]}"
  when IPAddr
    @config[:source_address] = addr
    @logger.info "Using new source address: #{@config[:source_address]}"
  else
    raise ArgumentError, "Unknown dest_address format"
  end
end

#source_address_inet6Object

Get the local ipv6 address from which the resolver sends queries



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 453

def source_address_inet6
  @config[:source_address_inet6].to_s
end

#source_portObject Also known as: srcport

Get the value of the source port number.

puts "Sending queries using port #{res.source_port}"


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 416

def source_port
  @config[:source_port]
end

#source_port=(num) ⇒ Object Also known as: srcport=

Set the local source port from which the resolver sends its queries.

res.source_port = 40000

Note that if you want to set a port you need root priviledges, as raw sockets will be used to generate packets. The class will then generate the exception ResolverPermissionError if you’re not root.

The default is 0, which means that the port will be chosen by the underlaying layers.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 432

def source_port=(num)
  root? or
      raise(ResolverPermissionError, "Are you root?")
  (0..65_535).cover?(num) or
      raise(ArgumentError, "Wrong port number #{num}")

  @config[:source_port] = num
end

#stateObject Also known as: print, inspect

Return a string representing the resolver state, suitable for printing on the screen.

puts "Resolver state:"
puts res.state


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 587

def state
  str = ";; RESOLVER state:\n;; "
  i = 1
  @config.each do |key, val|
    str << if (key == :log_file) || (key == :config_file)
      "#{key}: #{val} \t"
    else
      "#{key}: #{eval(key.to_s)} \t"
    end
    str << "\n;; " if i.even?
    i += 1
  end
  str
end

#tcp_timeoutObject

Return an object representing the value of the stored TCP timeout the resolver will use in is queries. This object is an instance of the class TcpTimeout, and two methods are available for printing informations: TcpTimeout#to_s and TcpTimeout#pretty_to_s.

Here’s some example:

puts "Timeout of #{res.tcp_timeout} seconds" # implicit to_s
  #=> Timeout of 150 seconds

puts "You set a timeout of " + res.tcp_timeout.pretty_to_s
  #=> You set a timeout of 2 minutes and 30 seconds

If the timeout is infinite, a string “infinite” will be returned.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 712

def tcp_timeout
  @config[:tcp_timeout].to_s
end

#tcp_timeout=(secs) ⇒ Object

Set the value of TCP timeout for resolver queries that will be performed using TCP. A value of 0 means that the timeout will be infinite. The value is stored internally as a TcpTimeout object, see the description for Resolver#tcp_timeout

Default is 5 seconds.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 724

def tcp_timeout=(secs)
  @config[:tcp_timeout] = TcpTimeout.new(secs)
  @logger.info("New TCP timeout value: #{@config[:tcp_timeout]} seconds")
end

#udp_timeoutObject

Return an object representing the value of the stored UDP timeout the resolver will use in is queries. This object is an instance of the class UdpTimeout, and two methods are available for printing information: UdpTimeout#to_s and UdpTimeout#pretty_to_s.

Here’s some example:

puts "Timeout of #{res.udp_timeout} seconds" # implicit to_s
  #=> Timeout of 150 seconds

puts "You set a timeout of " + res.udp_timeout.pretty_to_s
  #=> You set a timeout of 2 minutes and 30 seconds

If the timeout is zero, a string “not defined” will be returned.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 746

def udp_timeout
  @config[:udp_timeout].to_s
end

#udp_timeout=(secs) ⇒ Object

Set the value of UDP timeout for resolver queries that will be performed using UDP. A value of 0 means that the timeout will not be used, and the resolver will use only retry_number and retry_interval parameters.

Default is 5 seconds.

The value is stored internally as a UdpTimeout object, see the description for Resolver#udp_timeout.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 760

def udp_timeout=(secs)
  @config[:udp_timeout] = UdpTimeout.new(secs)
  @logger.info("New UDP timeout value: #{@config[:udp_timeout]} seconds")
end

#use_tcp=(bool) ⇒ Object Also known as: usevc=

If use_tcp is true, the resolver will perform all queries using TCP virtual circuits instead of UDP datagrams, which is the default for the DNS protocol.

res.use_tcp = true
res.query "host.example.com"
  #=> Sending TCP segments...

Default is false.



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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 670

def use_tcp=(bool)
  case bool
  when TrueClass, FalseClass
    @config[:use_tcp] = bool
    @logger.info("Use tcp flag changed to #{bool}")
  else
    raise ArgumentError, "Argument must be boolean"
  end
end

#use_tcp?Boolean Also known as: usevc, use_tcp

Get the state of the use_tcp flag.

Returns:

  • (Boolean)


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# File 'lib/net/dns/resolver.rb', line 654

def use_tcp?
  @config[:use_tcp]
end