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package Net::DNS; # # $Id: DNS.pm 796 2009-01-26 17:30:18Z olaf $ # use strict; BEGIN { eval { require bytes; } } use vars qw( $HAVE_XS $VERSION $SVNVERSION $DNSSEC $DN_EXPAND_ESCAPES @ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK %typesbyname %typesbyval %qtypesbyname %qtypesbyval %metatypesbyname %metatypesbyval %classesbyname %classesbyval %opcodesbyname %opcodesbyval %rcodesbyname %rcodesbyval ); BEGIN { require Exporter; @ISA = qw(Exporter ); # these need to live here because of dependencies further on. @EXPORT = qw(mx yxrrset nxrrset yxdomain nxdomain rr_add rr_del); @EXPORT_OK= qw(name2labels wire2presentation rrsort stripdot); $VERSION = '0.65'; $SVNVERSION = (qw$LastChangedRevision: 796 $)[1]; $HAVE_XS = eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; eval { require XSLoader; XSLoader::load('Net::DNS', $VERSION); 1; } or do { require DynaLoader; push @ISA, 'DynaLoader'; bootstrap Net::DNS $VERSION; 1; }; } ? 1 : 0; } BEGIN { $DNSSEC = eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = 'DEFAULT'; require Net::DNS::SEC; 1 } ? 1 : 0; } use Net::DNS::Resolver; use Net::DNS::Packet; use Net::DNS::Update; use Net::DNS::Header; use Net::DNS::Question; use Net::DNS::RR; # use only after $Net::DNS::DNSSEC has been evaluated use Carp; # # If you implement an RR record make sure you also add it to # %Net::DNS::RR::RR hash otherwise it will be treated as unknown type. # # Do not use these tybesby hashes directly. Use the interface # functions, see below. %typesbyname = ( 'SIGZERO' => 0, # RFC2931 consider this a pseudo type 'A' => 1, # RFC 1035, Section 3.4.1 'NS' => 2, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.11 'MD' => 3, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.4 (obsolete) 'MF' => 4, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.5 (obsolete) 'CNAME' => 5, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.1 'SOA' => 6, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.13 'MB' => 7, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.3 'MG' => 8, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.6 'MR' => 9, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.8 'NULL' => 10, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.10 'WKS' => 11, # RFC 1035, Section 3.4.2 (deprecated) 'PTR' => 12, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.12 'HINFO' => 13, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.2 'MINFO' => 14, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.7 'MX' => 15, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.9 'TXT' => 16, # RFC 1035, Section 3.3.14 'RP' => 17, # RFC 1183, Section 2.2 'AFSDB' => 18, # RFC 1183, Section 1 'X25' => 19, # RFC 1183, Section 3.1 'ISDN' => 20, # RFC 1183, Section 3.2 'RT' => 21, # RFC 1183, Section 3.3 'NSAP' => 22, # RFC 1706, Section 5 'NSAP_PTR' => 23, # RFC 1348 (obsolete) # The following 2 RRs are impemented in Net::DNS::SEC 'SIG' => 24, # RFC 2535, Section 4.1 'KEY' => 25, # RFC 2535, Section 3.1 'PX' => 26, # RFC 2163, 'GPOS' => 27, # RFC 1712 (obsolete) 'AAAA' => 28, # RFC 1886, Section 2.1 'LOC' => 29, # RFC 1876 # The following RR is impemented in Net::DNS::SEC 'NXT' => 30, # RFC 2535, Section 5.2 obsoleted by RFC3755 'EID' => 31, # draft-ietf-nimrod-dns-xx.txt 'NIMLOC' => 32, # draft-ietf-nimrod-dns-xx.txt 'SRV' => 33, # RFC 2052 'ATMA' => 34, # ??? 'NAPTR' => 35, # RFC 2168 'KX' => 36, # RFC 2230 'CERT' => 37, # RFC 2538 'DNAME' => 39, # RFC 2672 'OPT' => 41, # RFC 2671 'APL' => 42, # RFC 3123 'DS' => 43, # RFC 4034 # in Net::DNS::SEC 'SSHFP' => 44, # RFC 4255 'IPSECKEY' => 45, # RFC 4025 'RRSIG' => 46, # RFC 4034 in Net::DNS::SEC 'NSEC' => 47, # RFC 4034 in Net::DNS::SEC 'DNSKEY' => 48, # RFC 4034 in Net::DNS::SEC 'NSEC3' => 50, # RFC5155 'NSEC3PARAM' => 51, # RFC5155 # 'HIP' => 55, # RFC5205 NOT IMPLEMENTED (yet) 'SPF' => 99, # RFC 4408 'UINFO' => 100, # non-standard 'UID' => 101, # non-standard 'GID' => 102, # non-standard 'UNSPEC' => 103, # non-standard 'TKEY' => 249, # RFC 2930 'TSIG' => 250, # RFC 2931 'IXFR' => 251, # RFC 1995 'AXFR' => 252, # RFC 1035 'MAILB' => 253, # RFC 1035 (MB, MG, MR) 'MAILA' => 254, # RFC 1035 (obsolete - see MX) 'ANY' => 255, # RFC 1035 'DLV' => 32769 # RFC 4431 in Net::DNS::SEC ); %typesbyval = reverse %typesbyname; # # typesbyval and typesbyname functions are wrappers around the similarly named # hashes. They are used for 'unknown' DNS RR types (RFC3597) # typesbyname returns they TYPEcode as a function of the TYPE # mnemonic. If the TYPE mapping is not specified the generic mnemonic # TYPE### is returned. # typesbyval returns they TYPE mnemonic as a function of the TYPE # code. If the TYPE mapping is not specified the generic mnemonic # TYPE### is returned. # sub typesbyname { my $name = uc shift; return $typesbyname{$name} if defined $typesbyname{$name}; confess "Net::DNS::typesbyname() argument ($name) is not TYPE###" unless $name =~ m/^\s*TYPE(\d+)\s*$/o; my $val = $1; confess 'Net::DNS::typesbyname() argument larger than ' . 0xffff if $val > 0xffff; return $val; } sub typesbyval { my $val = shift; confess "Net::DNS::typesbyval() argument is not defined" unless defined $val; confess "Net::DNS::typesbyval() argument ($val) is not numeric" unless $val =~ s/^\s*0*(\d+)\s*$/$1/o; return $typesbyval{$val} if $typesbyval{$val}; confess 'Net::DNS::typesbyval() argument larger than '. 0xffff if $val > 0xffff; return "TYPE$val"; } # # Do not use these classesby hashes directly. See below. # %classesbyname = ( 'IN' => 1, # RFC 1035 'CH' => 3, # RFC 1035 'HS' => 4, # RFC 1035 'NONE' => 254, # RFC 2136 'ANY' => 255, # RFC 1035 ); %classesbyval = reverse %classesbyname; # classesbyval and classesbyname functions are wrappers around the # similarly named hashes. They are used for 'unknown' DNS RR classess # (RFC3597) # See typesbyval and typesbyname, these beasts have the same functionality sub classesbyname { my $name = uc shift; return $classesbyname{$name} if $classesbyname{$name}; confess "Net::DNS::classesbyval() argument is not CLASS### ($name)" unless $name =~ m/^\s*CLASS(\d+)\s*$/o; my $val = $1; confess 'Net::DNS::classesbyval() argument larger than '. 0xffff if $val > 0xffff; return $val; } sub classesbyval { my $val = shift; confess "Net::DNS::classesbyname() argument is not numeric ($val)" unless $val =~ s/^\s*0*([0-9]+)\s*$/$1/o; return $classesbyval{$val} if $classesbyval{$val}; confess 'Net::DNS::classesbyname() argument larger than ' . 0xffff if $val > 0xffff; return "CLASS$val"; } # The qtypesbyval and metatypesbyval specify special typecodes # See rfc2929 and the relevant IANA registry # http://www.iana.org/assignments/dns-parameters %qtypesbyname = ( 'IXFR' => 251, # incremental transfer [RFC1995] 'AXFR' => 252, # transfer of an entire zone [RFC1035] 'MAILB' => 253, # mailbox-related RRs (MB, MG or MR) [RFC1035] 'MAILA' => 254, # mail agent RRs (Obsolete - see MX) [RFC1035] 'ANY' => 255, # all records [RFC1035] ); %qtypesbyval = reverse %qtypesbyname; %metatypesbyname = ( 'TKEY' => 249, # Transaction Key [RFC2930] 'TSIG' => 250, # Transaction Signature [RFC2845] 'OPT' => 41, # RFC 2671 ); %metatypesbyval = reverse %metatypesbyname; %opcodesbyname = ( 'QUERY' => 0, # RFC 1035 'IQUERY' => 1, # RFC 1035 'STATUS' => 2, # RFC 1035 'NS_NOTIFY_OP' => 4, # RFC 1996 'UPDATE' => 5, # RFC 2136 ); %opcodesbyval = reverse %opcodesbyname; %rcodesbyname = ( 'NOERROR' => 0, # RFC 1035 'FORMERR' => 1, # RFC 1035 'SERVFAIL' => 2, # RFC 1035 'NXDOMAIN' => 3, # RFC 1035 'NOTIMP' => 4, # RFC 1035 'REFUSED' => 5, # RFC 1035 'YXDOMAIN' => 6, # RFC 2136 'YXRRSET' => 7, # RFC 2136 'NXRRSET' => 8, # RFC 2136 'NOTAUTH' => 9, # RFC 2136 'NOTZONE' => 10, # RFC 2136 ); %rcodesbyval = reverse %rcodesbyname; sub version { $VERSION; } sub PACKETSZ () { 512; } sub HFIXEDSZ () { 12; } sub QFIXEDSZ () { 4; } sub RRFIXEDSZ () { 10; } sub INT32SZ () { 4; } sub INT16SZ () { 2; } # mx() # # Usage: # my @mxes = mx('example.com', 'IN'); # sub mx { my $res = ref $_[0] ? shift : Net::DNS::Resolver->new; my ($name, $class) = @_; $class ||= 'IN'; my $ans = $res->query($name, 'MX', $class) || return; # This construct is best read backwords. # # First we take the answer secion of the packet. # Then we take just the MX records from that list # Then we sort the list by preference # Then we return it. # We do this into an array to force list context. my @ret = sort { $a->preference <=> $b->preference } grep { $_->type eq 'MX'} $ans->answer; return @ret; } sub yxrrset { return Net::DNS::RR->new_from_string(shift, 'yxrrset'); } sub nxrrset { return Net::DNS::RR->new_from_string(shift, 'nxrrset'); } sub yxdomain { return Net::DNS::RR->new_from_string(shift, 'yxdomain'); } sub nxdomain { return Net::DNS::RR->new_from_string(shift, 'nxdomain'); } sub rr_add { return Net::DNS::RR->new_from_string(shift, 'rr_add'); } sub rr_del { return Net::DNS::RR->new_from_string(shift, 'rr_del'); } # Utility function # # name2labels to translate names from presentation format into an # array of "wire-format" labels. # in: $dname a string with a domain name in presentation format (1035 # sect 5.1) # out: an array of labels in wire format. sub name2labels { my $dname=shift; my @names; my $j=0; while ($dname){ ($names[$j],$dname)=presentation2wire($dname); $j++; } return @names; } sub wire2presentation { my $wire=shift; my $presentation=""; my $length=length($wire); # There must be a nice regexp to do this.. but since I failed to # find one I scan the name string until I find a '\', at that time # I start looking forward and do the magic. my $i=0; while ($i < $length ){ my $char=unpack("x".$i."C1",$wire); if ( $char < 33 || $char > 126 ){ $presentation.= sprintf ("\\%03u" ,$char); }elsif ( $char == ord( "\"" )) { $presentation.= "\\\""; }elsif ( $char == ord( "\$" )) { $presentation.= "\\\$"; }elsif ( $char == ord( "(" )) { $presentation.= "\\("; }elsif ( $char == ord( ")" )) { $presentation.= "\\)"; }elsif ( $char == ord( ";" )) { $presentation.= "\\;"; }elsif ( $char == ord( "@" )) { $presentation.= "\\@"; }elsif ( $char == ord( "\\" )) { $presentation.= "\\\\" ; }elsif ( $char==ord (".") ){ $presentation.= "\\." ; }else{ $presentation.=chr($char) ; } $i++; } return $presentation; } sub stripdot { # Strips the final non-escaped dot from a domain name. Note # that one could have a label that looks like "foo\\\\\.\.." # although not likely one wants to deal with that cracefully. # This utilizes 2 functions in the DNS module to deal with # thing cracefully. my @labels=name2labels(shift); my $name; foreach my $label (@labels){ $name .= wire2presentation($label) . "."; } chop($name); return $name; } # ($wire,$leftover)=presentation2wire($leftover); # Will parse the input presentation format and return everything before # the first non-escaped "." in the first element of the return array and # all that has not been parsed yet in the 2nd argument. sub presentation2wire { my $presentation=shift; my $wire=""; my $length=length($presentation); my $i=0; while ($i < $length ){ my $char=unpack("x".$i."C1",$presentation); if ( $char == ord ('.')){ return ($wire,substr($presentation,$i+1)); } if ( $char == ord ('\\')){ #backslash found pos($presentation)=$i+1; if ($presentation=~/\G(\d\d\d)/){ $wire.=pack("C",$1); $i+=3; }elsif($presentation=~/\Gx([0..9a..fA..F][0..9a..fA..F])/){ $wire.=pack("H*",$1); $i+=3; }elsif($presentation=~/\G\./){ $wire.="\."; $i+=1; }elsif($presentation=~/\G@/){ $wire.="@"; $i+=1; }elsif($presentation=~/\G\(/){ $wire.="("; $i+=1; }elsif($presentation=~/\G\)/){ $wire.=")"; $i+=1; }elsif($presentation=~/\G\\/){ $wire.="\\"; $i+=1; } }else{ $wire .= pack("C",$char); } $i++; } return $wire; } sub rrsort { my ($rrtype,$attribute,@rr_array)=@_; unless (exists($Net::DNS::typesbyname{uc($rrtype)})){ # unvalid error type return(); } unless (defined($attribute)){ # no second argument... hence no array. return(); } # attribute is empty or not specified. if( ref($attribute)=~/^Net::DNS::RR::.*/){ # push the attribute back on the array. push @rr_array,$attribute; undef($attribute); } my @extracted_rr; foreach my $rr (@rr_array){ push( @extracted_rr, $rr )if (uc($rr->type) eq uc($rrtype)); } return () unless @extracted_rr; my $func=("Net::DNS::RR::".$rrtype)->get_rrsort_func($attribute); my @sorted=sort $func @extracted_rr; return @sorted; } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Net::DNS - Perl interface to the DNS resolver =head1 SYNOPSIS C<use Net::DNS;> =head1 DESCRIPTION Net::DNS is a collection of Perl modules that act as a Domain Name System (DNS) resolver. It allows the programmer to perform DNS queries that are beyond the capabilities of C<gethostbyname> and C<gethostbyaddr>. The programmer should be somewhat familiar with the format of a DNS packet and its various sections. See RFC 1035 or I<DNS and BIND> (Albitz & Liu) for details. =head2 Resolver Objects A resolver object is an instance of the L<Net::DNS::Resolver|Net::DNS::Resolver> class. A program can have multiple resolver objects, each maintaining its own state information such as the nameservers to be queried, whether recursion is desired, etc. =head2 Packet Objects L<Net::DNS::Resolver|Net::DNS::Resolver> queries return L<Net::DNS::Packet|Net::DNS::Packet> objects. Packet objects have five sections: =over 3 =item * The header section, a L<Net::DNS::Header|Net::DNS::Header> object. =item * The question section, a list of L<Net::DNS::Question|Net::DNS::Question> objects. =item * The answer section, a list of L<Net::DNS::RR|Net::DNS::RR> objects. =item * The authority section, a list of L<Net::DNS::RR|Net::DNS::RR> objects. =item * The additional section, a list of L<Net::DNS::RR|Net::DNS::RR> objects. =back =head2 Update Objects The L<Net::DNS::Update|Net::DNS::Update> package is a subclass of L<Net::DNS::Packet|Net::DNS::Packet> for creating packet objects to be used in dynamic updates. =head2 Header Objects L<Net::DNS::Header|Net::DNS::Header> objects represent the header section of a DNS packet. =head2 Question Objects L<Net::DNS::Question|Net::DNS::Question> objects represent the question section of a DNS packet. =head2 RR Objects L<Net::DNS::RR|Net::DNS::RR> is the base class for DNS resource record (RR) objects in the answer, authority, and additional sections of a DNS packet. Don't assume that RR objects will be of the type you requested -- always check an RR object's type before calling any of its methods. =head1 METHODS See the manual pages listed above for other class-specific methods. =head2 version print Net::DNS->version, "\n"; Returns the version of Net::DNS. =head2 mx # Use a default resolver -- can't get an error string this way. use Net::DNS; my @mx = mx("example.com"); # Use your own resolver object. use Net::DNS; my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new; my @mx = mx($res, "example.com"); Returns a list of L<Net::DNS::RR::MX|Net::DNS::RR::MX> objects representing the MX records for the specified name; the list will be sorted by preference. Returns an empty list if the query failed or no MX records were found. This method does not look up A records -- it only performs MX queries. See L</EXAMPLES> for a more complete example. =head2 yxrrset Use this method to add an "RRset exists" prerequisite to a dynamic update packet. There are two forms, value-independent and value-dependent: # RRset exists (value-independent) $update->push(pre => yxrrset("host.example.com A")); Meaning: At least one RR with the specified name and type must exist. # RRset exists (value-dependent) $packet->push(pre => yxrrset("host.example.com A 10.1.2.3")); Meaning: At least one RR with the specified name and type must exist and must have matching data. Returns a C<Net::DNS::RR> object or C<undef> if the object couldn't be created. =head2 nxrrset Use this method to add an "RRset does not exist" prerequisite to a dynamic update packet. $packet->push(pre => nxrrset("host.example.com A")); Meaning: No RRs with the specified name and type can exist. Returns a C<Net::DNS::RR> object or C<undef> if the object couldn't be created. =head2 yxdomain Use this method to add a "name is in use" prerequisite to a dynamic update packet. $packet->push(pre => yxdomain("host.example.com")); Meaning: At least one RR with the specified name must exist. Returns a C<Net::DNS::RR> object or C<undef> if the object couldn't be created. =head2 nxdomain Use this method to add a "name is not in use" prerequisite to a dynamic update packet. $packet->push(pre => nxdomain("host.example.com")); Meaning: No RR with the specified name can exist. Returns a C<Net::DNS::RR> object or C<undef> if the object couldn't be created. =head2 rr_add Use this method to add RRs to a zone. $packet->push(update => rr_add("host.example.com A 10.1.2.3")); Meaning: Add this RR to the zone. RR objects created by this method should be added to the "update" section of a dynamic update packet. The TTL defaults to 86400 seconds (24 hours) if not specified. Returns a C<Net::DNS::RR> object or C<undef> if the object couldn't be created. =head2 rr_del Use this method to delete RRs from a zone. There are three forms: delete an RRset, delete all RRsets, and delete an RR. # Delete an RRset. $packet->push(update => rr_del("host.example.com A")); Meaning: Delete all RRs having the specified name and type. # Delete all RRsets. $packet->push(update => rr_del("host.example.com")); Meaning: Delete all RRs having the specified name. # Delete an RR. $packet->push(update => rr_del("host.example.com A 10.1.2.3")); Meaning: Delete all RRs having the specified name, type, and data. RR objects created by this method should be added to the "update" section of a dynamic update packet. Returns a C<Net::DNS::RR> object or C<undef> if the object couldn't be created. =head2 Sorting of RR arrays As of version 0.55 there is functionality to help you sort RR arrays. 'rrsort()' is the function that is available to do the sorting. In most cases rrsort will give you the answer that you want but you can specify your own sorting method by using the Net::DNS::RR::FOO->set_rrsort_func() class method. See L<Net::DNS::RR> for details. =head3 rrsort() use Net::DNS qw(rrsort); my @prioritysorted=rrsort("SRV","priority",@rr_array); rrsort() selects all RRs from the input array that are of the type that are defined in the first argument. Those RRs are sorted based on the attribute that is specified as second argument. There are a number of RRs for which the sorting function is specifically defined for certain attributes. If such sorting function is defined in the code (it can be set or overwritten using the set_rrsort_func() class method) that function is used. For instance: my @prioritysorted=rrsort("SRV","priority",@rr_array); returns the SRV records sorted from lowest to heighest priority and for equal priorities from heighes to lowes weight. If the function does not exist then a numerical sort on the attribute value is performed. my @portsorted=rrsort("SRV","port",@rr_array); If the attribute does not exist for a certain RR than the RRs are sorted on string comparrisson of the rdata. If the attribute is not defined than either the default_sort function will be defined or "Canonical sorting" (as defined by DNSSEC) will be used. rrsort() returns a sorted array with only elements of the specified RR type or undef. rrsort() returns undef when arguments are incorrect. =head1 EXAMPLES The following examples show how to use the C<Net::DNS> modules. See the other manual pages and the demo scripts included with the source code for additional examples. See the C<Net::DNS::Update> manual page for an example of performing dynamic updates. =head2 Look up a host's addresses. use Net::DNS; my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new; my $query = $res->search("host.example.com"); if ($query) { foreach my $rr ($query->answer) { next unless $rr->type eq "A"; print $rr->address, "\n"; } } else { warn "query failed: ", $res->errorstring, "\n"; } =head2 Find the nameservers for a domain. use Net::DNS; my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new; my $query = $res->query("example.com", "NS"); if ($query) { foreach $rr (grep { $_->type eq 'NS' } $query->answer) { print $rr->nsdname, "\n"; } } else { warn "query failed: ", $res->errorstring, "\n"; } =head2 Find the MX records for a domain. use Net::DNS; my $name = "example.com"; my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new; my @mx = mx($res, $name); if (@mx) { foreach $rr (@mx) { print $rr->preference, " ", $rr->exchange, "\n"; } } else { warn "Can't find MX records for $name: ", $res->errorstring, "\n"; } =head2 Print a domain's SOA record in zone file format. use Net::DNS; my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new; my $query = $res->query("example.com", "SOA"); if ($query) { ($query->answer)[0]->print; } else { print "query failed: ", $res->errorstring, "\n"; } =head2 Perform a zone transfer and print all the records. use Net::DNS; my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new; $res->nameservers("ns.example.com"); my @zone = $res->axfr("example.com"); foreach $rr (@zone) { $rr->print; } =head2 Perform a background query and do some other work while waiting for the answer. use Net::DNS; my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new; my $socket = $res->bgsend("host.example.com"); until ($res->bgisready($socket)) { # do some work here while waiting for the answer # ...and some more here } my $packet = $res->bgread($socket); $packet->print; =head2 Send a background query and use select to determine when the answer has arrived. use Net::DNS; use IO::Select; my $timeout = 5; my $res = Net::DNS::Resolver->new; my $bgsock = $res->bgsend("host.example.com"); my $sel = IO::Select->new($bgsock); # Add more sockets to $sel if desired. my @ready = $sel->can_read($timeout); if (@ready) { foreach my $sock (@ready) { if ($sock == $bgsock) { my $packet = $res->bgread($bgsock); $packet->print; $bgsock = undef; } # Check for the other sockets. $sel->remove($sock); $sock = undef; } } else { warn "timed out after $timeout seconds\n"; } =head1 BUGS C<Net::DNS> is slow. For other items to be fixed, please see the TODO file included with the source distribution. =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 1997-2002 Michael Fuhr. Portions Copyright (c) 2002-2004 Chris Reinhardt. Portions Copyright (c) 2005 Olaf Kolkman (RIPE NCC) Portions Copyright (c) 2006 Olaf Kolkman (NLnet Labs) All rights reserved. This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 AUTHOR INFORMATION Net::DNS is currently maintained at NLnet Labs (www.nlnetlabs.nl) by: Olaf Kolkman olaf@net-dns.org Between 2002 and 2004 Net::DNS was maintained by: Chris Reinhardt Net::DNS was created by: Michael Fuhr mike@fuhr.org For more information see: http://www.net-dns.org/ Stay tuned and syncicate: http://www.net-dns.org/blog/ =head1 SEE ALSO L<perl(1)>, L<Net::DNS::Resolver>, L<Net::DNS::Packet>, L<Net::DNS::Update>, L<Net::DNS::Header>, L<Net::DNS::Question>, L<Net::DNS::RR>, RFC 1035, I<DNS and BIND> by Paul Albitz & Cricket Liu =cut