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package Net::DNS::RR; # # $Id: RR.pm 758 2008-12-23 21:22:02Z olaf $ # use strict; BEGIN { eval { require bytes; } } use vars qw($VERSION $AUTOLOAD %rrsortfunct ); use Carp; use Net::DNS qw (wire2presentation name2labels stripdot); use Net::DNS::RR::Unknown; $VERSION = (qw$LastChangedRevision: 758 $)[1]; =head1 NAME Net::DNS::RR - DNS Resource Record class =head1 SYNOPSIS C<use Net::DNS::RR> =head1 DESCRIPTION C<Net::DNS::RR> is the base class for DNS Resource Record (RR) objects. See also the manual pages for each RR type. =head1 METHODS B<WARNING!!!> Don't assume the RR objects you receive from a query are of a particular type -- always check an object's type before calling any of its methods. If you call an unknown method, you'll get a nasty warning message and C<Net::DNS::RR> will return C<undef> to the caller. =cut #' Stupid Emacs (I Don't even USE emacs!) ' # %RR needs to be available within the scope of the BEGIN block. # $RR_REGEX is a global just to be on the safe side. # %_LOADED is used internally for autoloading the RR subclasses. use vars qw(%RR %_LOADED $RR_REGEX); BEGIN { %RR = map { $_ => 1 } qw( A AAAA AFSDB CNAME CERT DNAME EID HINFO ISDN LOC MB MG MINFO MR MX NAPTR NIMLOC NS NSAP NULL PTR PX RP RT SOA SRV TKEY TSIG TXT X25 OPT APL SSHFP SPF IPSECKEY ); # Only load DNSSEC if available eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::SIG; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'SIG'} = 1; eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::NXT; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'NXT'} = 1; } else { die $@; } eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::KEY; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'KEY'} = 1; } else { die $@; } eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::DS; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'DS'} = 1; } else { die $@; } eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::RRSIG; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'RRSIG'} = 1; # If RRSIG is available so should the other DNSSEC types eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::NSEC; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'NSEC'} = 1; } else { die $@; } eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::DNSKEY; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'DNSKEY'} = 1; } else { die $@; } } eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::DLV; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'DLV'} =1; } else { # Die only if we are dealing with a version for which DLV is # available die $@ if defined ($Net::DNS::SEC::HAS_DLV) ; } eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::NSEC3; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'NSEC3'} =1; } else { # Die only if we are dealing with a version for which NSEC3 is # available die $@ if defined ($Net::DNS::SEC::HAS_NSEC3); } eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::RR::NSEC3PARAM; }; unless ($@) { $RR{'NSEC3PARAM'} =1; } else { # Die only if we are dealing with a version for which NSEC3 is # available die $@ if defined($Net::DNS::SEC::SVNVERSION) && $Net::DNS::SEC::SVNVERSION > 619; # In the code since. (for users of the SVN trunk) } } } sub build_regex { my $classes = join('|', keys %Net::DNS::classesbyname, 'CLASS\\d+'); # Longest ones go first, so the regex engine will match AAAA before A. my $types = join('|', sort { length $b <=> length $a } keys %Net::DNS::typesbyname); $types .= '|TYPE\\d+'; $RR_REGEX = " ^ \\s* (\\S+) # name anything non-space will do \\s* (\\d+)? \\s* ($classes)? \\s* ($types)? \\s* (.*) \$"; # print STDERR "Regex: $RR_REGEX\n"; } =head2 new (from string) $a = Net::DNS::RR->new("foo.example.com. 86400 A 10.1.2.3"); $mx = Net::DNS::RR->new("example.com. 7200 MX 10 mailhost.example.com."); $cname = Net::DNS::RR->new("www.example.com 300 IN CNAME www1.example.com"); $txt = Net::DNS::RR->new('baz.example.com 3600 HS TXT "text record"'); Returns a C<Net::DNS::RR> object of the appropriate type and initialized from the string passed by the user. The format of the string is that used in zone files, and is compatible with the string returned by C<< Net::DNS::RR->string >>. The name and RR type are required; all other information is optional. If omitted, the TTL defaults to 0 and the RR class defaults to IN. Omitting the optional fields is useful for creating the empty RDATA sections required for certain dynamic update operations. See the C<Net::DNS::Update> manual page for additional examples. All names must be fully qualified. The trailing dot (.) is optional. =head2 new (from hash) $rr = Net::DNS::RR->new( name => "foo.example.com", ttl => 86400, class => "IN", type => "A", address => "10.1.2.3", ); $rr = Net::DNS::RR->new( name => "foo.example.com", type => "A", ); Returns an RR object of the appropriate type, or a C<Net::DNS::RR> object if the type isn't implemented. See the manual pages for each RR type to see what fields the type requires. The C<Name> and C<Type> fields are required; all others are optional. If omitted, C<TTL> defaults to 0 and C<Class> defaults to IN. Omitting the optional fields is useful for creating the empty RDATA sections required for certain dynamic update operations. The fields are case-insensitive, but starting each with uppercase is recommended. =cut #' Stupid Emacs sub new { return new_from_string(@_) if @_ == 2; return new_from_string(@_) if @_ == 3; return new_from_hash(@_); } sub new_from_data { my $class = shift; my ($name, $rrtype, $rrclass, $ttl, $rdlength, $data, $offset) = @_; my $self = { name => $name, type => $rrtype, class => $rrclass, ttl => $ttl, rdlength => $rdlength, rdata => substr($$data, $offset, $rdlength) }; if ($RR{$rrtype}) { my $subclass = $class->_get_subclass($rrtype); return $subclass->new($self, $data, $offset); } else { return Net::DNS::RR::Unknown->new($self, $data, $offset); } } sub new_from_string { my ($class, $rrstring, $update_type) = @_; build_regex() unless $RR_REGEX; # strip out comments # Test for non escaped ";" by means of the look-behind assertion # (the backslash is escaped) $rrstring =~ s/(?<!\\);.*//og; ($rrstring =~ m/$RR_REGEX/xso) || confess qq|qInternal Error: "$rrstring" did not match RR pat.\nPlease report this to the author!\n|; my $name = $1; my $ttl = $2 || 0; my $rrclass = $3 || ''; my $rrtype = $4 || ''; my $rdata = $5 || ''; $rdata =~ s/\s+$//o if $rdata; $name = stripdot($name) if $name; # RFC3597 tweaks # This converts to known class and type if specified as TYPE### $rrtype = Net::DNS::typesbyval(Net::DNS::typesbyname($rrtype)) if $rrtype =~ m/^TYPE\d+/o; $rrclass = Net::DNS::classesbyval(Net::DNS::classesbyname($rrclass)) if $rrclass =~ m/^CLASS\d+/o; if (!$rrtype && $rrclass && $rrclass eq 'ANY') { $rrtype = 'ANY'; $rrclass = 'IN'; } elsif (!$rrclass) { $rrclass = 'IN'; } $rrtype ||= 'ANY'; if ($update_type) { $update_type = lc $update_type; if ($update_type eq 'yxrrset') { $ttl = 0; $rrclass = 'ANY' unless $rdata; } elsif ($update_type eq 'nxrrset') { $ttl = 0; $rrclass = 'NONE'; $rdata = ''; } elsif ($update_type eq 'yxdomain') { $ttl = 0; $rrclass = 'ANY'; $rrtype = 'ANY'; $rdata = ''; } elsif ($update_type eq 'nxdomain') { $ttl = 0; $rrclass = 'NONE'; $rrtype = 'ANY'; $rdata = ''; } elsif ($update_type =~ /^(rr_)?add$/o) { $ttl = 86400 unless $ttl; } elsif ($update_type =~ /^(rr_)?del(ete)?$/o) { $ttl = 0; $rrclass = $rdata ? 'NONE' : 'ANY'; } } # We used to check if $rrtype was defined at this point. However, # we just defaulted it to ANY earlier.... my $self = { 'name' => $name, 'type' => $rrtype, 'class' => $rrclass, 'ttl' => $ttl, 'rdlength' => 0, 'rdata' => '', }; if ($RR{$rrtype} && $rdata !~ m/^\s*\\#/o ) { my $subclass = $class->_get_subclass($rrtype); return $subclass->new_from_string($self, $rdata); } elsif ($RR{$rrtype}) { # A RR type known to Net::DNS starting with \# $rdata =~ m/\\\#\s+(\d+)\s+(.*)$/o; my $rdlength = $1; my $hexdump = $2; $hexdump =~ s/\s*//og; die "$rdata is inconsistent; length does not match content" if length($hexdump) != $rdlength*2; $rdata = pack('H*', $hexdump); return Net::DNS::RR->new_from_data( $name, $rrtype, $rrclass, $ttl, $rdlength, \$rdata, length($rdata) - $rdlength ); } elsif ($rdata=~/\s*\\\#\s+\d+\s+/o) { #We are now dealing with the truly unknown. die 'Expected RFC3597 representation of RDATA' unless $rdata =~ m/\\\#\s+(\d+)\s+(.*)$/o; my $rdlength = $1; my $hexdump = $2; $hexdump =~ s/\s*//og; die "$rdata is inconsistent; length does not match content" if length($hexdump) != $rdlength*2; $rdata = pack('H*', $hexdump); return Net::DNS::RR->new_from_data( $name, $rrtype, $rrclass, $ttl, $rdlength, \$rdata, length($rdata) - $rdlength ); } else { #God knows how to handle these... bless them in the RR class. bless $self, $class; return $self } } sub new_from_hash { my $class = shift; my %keyval = @_; my $self = {}; while ( my ($key, $val) = each %keyval ) { $self->{lc $key} = $val ; } croak('RR name not specified') unless defined $self->{name}; croak('RR type not specified') unless defined $self->{type}; $self->{'ttl'} ||= 0; $self->{'class'} ||= 'IN'; $self->{'rdlength'} = length $self->{'rdata'} if $self->{'rdata'}; if ($RR{$self->{'type'}}) { my $subclass = $class->_get_subclass($self->{'type'}); if (uc $self->{'type'} ne 'OPT') { bless $self, $subclass; $self->_normalize_dnames(); return _normalize_rdata($self); } else { # Special processing of OPT. Since TTL and CLASS are # set by other variables. See Net::DNS::RR::OPT # documentation return $subclass->new_from_hash($self); } } elsif ($self->{'type'} =~ /TYPE\d+/o) { bless $self, 'Net::DNS::RR::Unknown'; return $self; } else { bless $self, $class; return $self; } } # Normalizes the content of the rdata so that comparing can be done between # RRs created via various methods. # Based on first creating packet format and then parsing it. sub _normalize_rdata { my $self = shift; # There are a bunch of META RR types we do not want to mess with return $self if ( ( uc $self ->{'type'} eq "TSIG" )|| ( uc $self ->{'type'} eq "TKEY" ) ); my $pkt = { header => Net::DNS::Header->new, question => [], answer => [], authority => [], additional => [] }; bless $pkt, "Net::DNS::Packet"; $pkt->push( answer => $self ); my $pkt2 = Net::DNS::Packet->new( \$pkt->data ); undef ($self); return ($pkt2->answer)[0]; } # When new_from_hash is used to generate the objects then it may be # that the names passed are not consistently FQDN or not. Note that # the internal storage is without trailing dot. this function # normalizes the domain names and is implemented in the records # themselves if more specific handling is needed sub _normalize_dnames { my $self=shift; $self->_normalize_ownername(); } sub _normalize_ownername { my $self=shift; return $self->{'name'}=stripdot($self->{'name'}); } =head2 parse ($rrobj, $offset) = Net::DNS::RR->parse(\$data, $offset); Parses a DNS resource record at the specified location within a DNS packet. The first argument is a reference to the packet data. The second argument is the offset within the packet where the resource record begins. Returns a Net::DNS::RR object and the offset of the next location in the packet. Parsing is aborted if the object could not be created (e.g., corrupt or insufficient data). =cut use constant PACKED_LENGTH => length pack 'n2 N n', (0)x4; sub parse { my ($objclass, $data, $offset) = @_; my ($name, $index) = Net::DNS::Packet::dn_expand($data, $offset); die 'Exception: corrupt or incomplete data' unless $index; my $rdindex = $index + PACKED_LENGTH; die 'Exception: incomplete data' if length $$data < $rdindex; my ($type, $class, $ttl, $rdlength) = unpack("\@$index n2 N n", $$data); my $next = $rdindex + $rdlength; die 'Exception: incomplete data' if length $$data < $next; $type = Net::DNS::typesbyval($type) || $type; # Special case for OPT RR where CLASS should be # interpreted as 16 bit unsigned (RFC2671, 4.3) if ($type ne 'OPT') { $class = Net::DNS::classesbyval($class) || $class; } # else just retain numerical value my $self = $objclass->new_from_data($name, $type, $class, $ttl, $rdlength, $data, $rdindex); die 'Exception: corrupt or incomplete RR subtype data' unless defined $self; return wantarray ? ($self, $next) : $self; } # # Some people have reported that Net::DNS dies because AUTOLOAD picks up # calls to DESTROY. # sub DESTROY {} =head2 print $rr->print; Prints the record to the standard output. Calls the B<string> method to get the RR's string representation. =cut #' someone said that emacs gets screwy here. Who am I to claim otherwise... sub print { print &string, "\n"; } =head2 string print $rr->string, "\n"; Returns a string representation of the RR. Calls the B<rdatastr> method to get the RR-specific data. Domain names are returned in RFC1035 format, i.e. all non letter, digit, hyphen characters are represented as \DDD. =cut sub string { my $self = shift; my $data = $self->rdatastr || '; no data'; join "\t", "$self->{name}.", $self->{ttl}, $self->{class}, $self->{type}, $data; } =head2 rdatastr $s = $rr->rdatastr; Returns a string containing RR-specific data. Subclasses will need to implement this method. =cut sub rdatastr { my $self = shift; return exists $self->{'rdlength'} ? "; rdlength = $self->{'rdlength'}" : ''; } =head2 name $name = $rr->name; Returns the record's domain name. =head2 type $type = $rr->type; Returns the record's type. =head2 class $class = $rr->class; Returns the record's class. =cut # Used to AUTOLOAD this, but apparently some versions of Perl (specifically # 5.003_07, included with some Linux distributions) would return the # class the object was blessed into, instead of the RR's class. sub class { my $self = shift; if (@_) { $self->{'class'} = shift; } elsif (!exists $self->{'class'}) { Carp::carp('class: no such method'); return undef; } return $self->{'class'}; } =head2 ttl $ttl = $rr->ttl; Returns the record's time-to-live (TTL). =head2 rdlength $rdlength = $rr->rdlength; Returns the length of the record's data section. =head2 rdata $rdata = $rr->rdata Returns the record's data section as binary data. =cut #' sub rdata { my $self = shift; my $retval = undef; if (@_ == 2) { my ($packet, $offset) = @_; $retval = $self->rr_rdata($packet, $offset); } elsif (exists $self->{'rdata'}) { $retval = $self->{'rdata'}; } return $retval; } sub rr_rdata { my $self = shift; return exists $self->{'rdata'} ? $self->{'rdata'} : ''; } #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # sub data # # This method is called by Net::DNS::Packet->data to get the binary # representation of an RR. #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ sub data { my ($self, $packet, $offset) = @_; my $data; # Don't compress TSIG or TKEY names and don't mess with EDNS0 packets if (uc($self->{'type'}) eq 'TSIG' || uc($self->{'type'}) eq 'TKEY') { my $tmp_packet = Net::DNS::Packet->new(); $data = $tmp_packet->dn_comp($self->{'name'}, 0); return undef unless defined $data; } elsif (uc($self->{'type'}) eq 'OPT') { my $tmp_packet = Net::DNS::Packet->new(); $data = $tmp_packet->dn_comp('', 0); } else { $data = $packet->dn_comp($self->{'name'}, $offset); return undef unless defined $data; } my $qtype = uc($self->{'type'}); my $qtype_val = ($qtype =~ m/^\d+$/o) ? $qtype : Net::DNS::typesbyname($qtype); $qtype_val = 0 if !defined($qtype_val); my $qclass = uc($self->{'class'}); my $qclass_val = ($qclass =~ m/^\d+$/o) ? $qclass : Net::DNS::classesbyname($qclass); $qclass_val = 0 if !defined($qclass_val); $data .= pack('n', $qtype_val); # If the type is OPT then class will need to contain a decimal number # containing the UDP payload size. (RFC2671 section 4.3) if (uc($self->{'type'}) ne 'OPT') { $data .= pack('n', $qclass_val); } else { $data .= pack('n', $self->{'class'}); } $data .= pack('N', $self->{'ttl'}); $offset += length($data) + &Net::DNS::INT16SZ; # allow for rdlength my $rdata = $self->rdata($packet, $offset); $data .= pack('n', length $rdata); $data.=$rdata; return $data; } #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # This method is called by SIG objects verify method. # It is almost the same as data but needed to get an representation of the # packets in wire format withoud domain name compression. # It is essential to DNSSEC RFC 2535 section 8 #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ sub _canonicaldata { my $self = shift; my $data=''; { my $name=$self->{'name'}; my @dname=Net::DNS::name2labels($name); for (my $i=0;$i<@dname;$i++){ $data .= pack ('C',length $dname[$i] ); $data .= lc($dname[$i] ); } $data .= pack ('C','0'); } $data .= pack('n', Net::DNS::typesbyname(uc($self->{'type'}))); $data .= pack('n', Net::DNS::classesbyname(uc($self->{'class'}))); $data .= pack('N', $self->{'ttl'}); my $rdata = $self->_canonicalRdata; $data .= pack('n', length $rdata); $data .= $rdata; return $data; } # These are methods that are used in the DNSSEC context... Some RR # have domain names in them. Verification works only on RRs with # uncompressed domain names. (Canonical format as in sect 8 of # RFC2535) _canonicalRdata is overwritten in those RR objects that # have domain names in the RDATA and _name2wire is used to convert a # domain name to "wire format" sub _canonicalRdata { my $self=shift; my $packet=Net::DNS::Packet->new(); my $rdata = $self->rr_rdata($packet,0); return $rdata; } sub _name2wire { my ($self, $name) = @_; my $rdata=""; my $compname = ""; my @dname = Net::DNS::name2labels($name); for (@dname) { $rdata .= pack('C', length $_); $rdata .= $_ ; } $rdata .= pack('C', '0'); return $rdata; } sub AUTOLOAD { my ($self) = @_; # If we do shift here, it will mess up the goto below. my ($name) = $AUTOLOAD =~ m/^.*::(.*)$/o; if ($name =~ /set_rrsort_func/){ return Net::DNS::RR::set_rrsort_func(@_); } if ($name =~ /get_rrsort_func/){ return Net::DNS::RR::get_rrsort_func(@_); } # XXX -- We should test that we do in fact carp on unknown methods. unless (exists $self->{$name}) { my $rr_string = $self->string; Carp::carp(<<"AMEN"); *** *** WARNING!!! The program has attempted to call the method *** "$name" for the following RR object: *** *** $rr_string *** *** This object does not have a method "$name". THIS IS A BUG *** IN THE CALLING SOFTWARE, which has incorrectly assumed that *** the object would be of a particular type. The calling *** software should check the type of each RR object before *** calling any of its methods. *** *** Net::DNS has returned undef to the caller. *** AMEN return; } no strict q/refs/; # Build a method in the class. *{$AUTOLOAD} = sub { my ($self, $new_val) = @_; if (defined $new_val) { $self->{$name} = $new_val; } return $self->{$name}; }; # And jump over to it. goto &{$AUTOLOAD}; } # # Net::DNS::RR->_get_subclass($type) # # Return a subclass, after loading a subclass (if needed) # sub _get_subclass { my ($class, $type) = @_; return unless $type and $RR{$type}; my $subclass = join('::', $class, $type); unless ($_LOADED{$subclass}) { eval "require $subclass"; die $@ if $@; $_LOADED{$subclass}++; } return $subclass; } =head1 Sorting of RR arrays As of version 0.55 there is functionality to help you sort RR arrays. The sorting is done by Net::DNS::rrsort(), see the L<Net::DNS> documentation. This package provides class methods to set the sorting functions used for a particular RR based on a particular attribute. =head2 set_rrsort_func Net::DNS::RR::SRV->set_rrsort_func("priority", sub { my ($a,$b)=($Net::DNS::a,$Net::DNS::b); $a->priority <=> $b->priority || $b->weight <=> $a->weight } Net::DNS::RR::SRV->set_rrsort_func("default_sort", sub { my ($a,$b)=($Net::DNS::a,$Net::DNS::b); $a->priority <=> $b->priority || $b->weight <=> $a->weight } set_rrsort_func needs to be called as a class method. The first argument is the attribute name on which the sorting will need to take place. If you specify "default_sort" than that is the sort algorithm that will be used in the case that rrsort() is called without an RR attribute as argument. The second argument is a reference to a function that uses the variables $a and $b global to the C<from Net::DNS>(!!)package for the sorting. During the sorting $a and $b will contain references to objects from the class you called the set_prop_sort from. In other words, you can rest assured that the above sorting function will only get Net::DNS::RR::SRV objects. The above example is the sorting function that actually is implemented in SRV. =cut sub set_rrsort_func{ my $class=shift; my $attribute=shift; my $funct=shift; # print "Using ".__PACKAGE__."set_rrsort: $class\n"; my ($type) = $class =~ m/^.*::(.*)$/o; $Net::DNS::RR::rrsortfunct{$type}{$attribute}=$funct; } sub get_rrsort_func { my $class=shift; my $attribute=shift; #can be undefined. my $sortsub; my ($type) = $class =~ m/^.*::(.*)$/o; # print "Using ".__PACKAGE__." get_rrsort: $class ($type,$attribute)\n"; # use Data::Dumper; # print Dumper %Net::DNS::rrsortfunct; if (defined($attribute) && exists($Net::DNS::RR::rrsortfunct{$type}) && exists($Net::DNS::RR::rrsortfunct{$type}{$attribute}) ){ # The default overwritten by the class variable in Net::DNS return $Net::DNS::RR::rrsortfunct{$type}{$attribute}; }elsif( ! defined($attribute) && exists($Net::DNS::RR::rrsortfunct{$type}) && exists($Net::DNS::RR::rrsortfunct{$type}{'default_sort'}) ){ # The default overwritten by the class variable in Net::DNS return $Net::DNS::RR::rrsortfunct{$type}{'default_sort'}; } elsif( defined($attribute) ){ return sub{ my ($a,$b)=($Net::DNS::a,$Net::DNS::b); ( exists($a->{$attribute}) && $a->{$attribute} <=> $b->{$attribute}) || $a->_canonicaldata() cmp $b->_canonicaldata() }; }else{ return sub{ my ($a,$b)=($Net::DNS::a,$Net::DNS::b); $a->_canonicaldata() cmp $b->_canonicaldata() }; } return $sortsub; } sub STORABLE_freeze { my ($self, $cloning) = @_; return if $cloning; return ('', {%$self}); } sub STORABLE_thaw { my ($self, $cloning, undef, $data) = @_; %{$self} = %{$data}; __PACKAGE__->_get_subclass($self->{'type'}); return $self; } =head1 BUGS This version of C<Net::DNS::RR> does little sanity checking on user-created RR objects. =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 1997-2002 Michael Fuhr. Portions Copyright (c) 2002-2004 Chris Reinhardt. Portions Copyright (c) 2005-2007 Olaf Kolkman Portions Copyright (c) 2007 Dick Franks All rights reserved. This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. EDNS0 extensions by Olaf Kolkman. =head1 SEE ALSO L<perl(1)>, L<Net::DNS>, L<Net::DNS::Resolver>, L<Net::DNS::Packet>, L<Net::DNS::Update>, L<Net::DNS::Header>, L<Net::DNS::Question>, RFC 1035 Section 4.1.3 =cut 1;