lwres_string_parse, lwres_addr_parse, lwres_getaddrsbyname, lwres_getnamebyaddr — lightweight resolver utility functions
#include <lwres/lwres.h>
lwres_result_t
lwres_string_parse( |
lwres_buffer_t *b, |
char **c, | |
lwres_uint16_t *len) ; |
lwres_result_t
lwres_addr_parse( |
lwres_buffer_t *b, |
lwres_addr_t *addr) ; |
lwres_result_t
lwres_getaddrsbyname( |
lwres_context_t *ctx, |
const char *name, | |
lwres_uint32_t addrtypes, | |
lwres_gabnresponse_t **structp) ; |
lwres_result_t
lwres_getnamebyaddr( |
lwres_context_t *ctx, |
lwres_uint32_t addrtype, | |
lwres_uint16_t addrlen, | |
const unsigned char *addr, | |
lwres_gnbaresponse_t **structp) ; |
lwres_string_parse()
retrieves a DNS-encoded string starting the current pointer of
lightweight resolver buffer b
: i.e.
b->current
. When the function returns,
the address of the first byte of the encoded string is returned
via *c
and the length of that string is
given by *len
. The buffer's current
pointer is advanced to point at the character following the
string length, the encoded string, and the trailing
NULL character.
lwres_addr_parse()
extracts an address from the buffer b
.
The buffer's current pointer b->current
is presumed to point at an encoded address: the address preceded
by a 32-bit protocol family identifier and a 16-bit length
field. The encoded address is copied to
addr->address
and
addr->length
indicates the size in bytes
of the address that was copied.
b->current
is advanced to point at the
next byte of available data in the buffer following the encoded
address.
lwres_getaddrsbyname()
and lwres_getnamebyaddr()
use the
lwres_gnbaresponse_t structure defined below:
typedef struct { lwres_uint32_t flags; lwres_uint16_t naliases; lwres_uint16_t naddrs; char *realname; char **aliases; lwres_uint16_t realnamelen; lwres_uint16_t *aliaslen; lwres_addrlist_t addrs; void *base; size_t baselen; } lwres_gabnresponse_t;
The contents of this structure are not manipulated directly but they are controlled through the lwres_gabn(3) functions.
The lightweight resolver uses
lwres_getaddrsbyname()
to perform
forward lookups.
Hostname name
is looked up using the
resolver
context ctx
for memory allocation.
addrtypes
is a bitmask indicating
which type of
addresses are to be looked up. Current values for this bitmask are
LWRES_ADDRTYPE_V4 for IPv4 addresses and
LWRES_ADDRTYPE_V6 for IPv6 addresses. Results of the
lookup are returned in *structp
.
lwres_getnamebyaddr()
performs reverse lookups. Resolver context
ctx
is used for memory allocation. The
address type is indicated by addrtype
:
LWRES_ADDRTYPE_V4 or
LWRES_ADDRTYPE_V6. The address to be looked up is
given by addr
and its length is
addrlen
bytes. The result of the
function call is made available through
*structp
.
Successful calls to
lwres_string_parse()
and
lwres_addr_parse()
return
LWRES_R_SUCCESS.
Both functions return
LWRES_R_FAILURE
if the buffer is corrupt or
LWRES_R_UNEXPECTEDEND
if the buffer has less space than expected for the components of the
encoded string or address.
lwres_getaddrsbyname()
returns LWRES_R_SUCCESS on success and it
returns LWRES_R_NOTFOUND if the hostname
name
could not be found.
LWRES_R_SUCCESS
is returned by a successful call to
lwres_getnamebyaddr()
.
Both
lwres_getaddrsbyname()
and
lwres_getnamebyaddr()
return
LWRES_R_NOMEMORY
when memory allocation requests fail and
LWRES_R_UNEXPECTEDEND
if the buffers used for sending queries and receiving replies are too
small.