ipv4 quadonly, make test program compile
[adns] / src / adns.h
1 /*
2 * adns.h
3 * - adns user-visible API
4 */
5 /*
6 *
7 * This file is
8 * Copyright (C) 1997-2000,2003,2006 Ian Jackson
9 *
10 * It is part of adns, which is
11 * Copyright (C) 1997-2000,2003,2006 Ian Jackson
12 * Copyright (C) 1999-2000,2003,2006 Tony Finch
13 * Copyright (C) 1991 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
14 *
15 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
16 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
17 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
18 * any later version.
19 *
20 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
21 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
22 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
23 * GNU General Public License for more details.
24 *
25 *
26 * For the benefit of certain LGPL'd `omnibus' software which
27 * provides a uniform interface to various things including adns, I
28 * make the following additional licence. I do this because the GPL
29 * would otherwise force either the omnibus software to be GPL'd or
30 * the adns-using part to be distributed separately.
31 *
32 * So: you may also redistribute and/or modify adns.h (but only the
33 * public header file adns.h and not any other part of adns) under the
34 * terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the
35 * Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
36 * your option) any later version.
37 *
38 * Note that adns itself is GPL'd. Authors of adns-using applications
39 * with GPL-incompatible licences, and people who distribute adns with
40 * applications where the whole distribution is not GPL'd, are still
41 * likely to be in violation of the GPL. Anyone who wants to do this
42 * should contact Ian Jackson. Please note that to avoid encouraging
43 * people to infringe the GPL as it applies to the body of adns, Ian
44 * thinks that if you take advantage of the special exception to
45 * redistribute just adns.h under the LGPL, you should retain this
46 * paragraph in its place in the appropriate copyright statements.
47 *
48 *
49 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License,
50 * or the GNU Library General Public License, as appropriate, along
51 * with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
52 * Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
53 *
54 *
55 * $Id: adns.h,v 1.96 2006/08/09 11:16:59 ian Exp $
56 */
57
58 #ifndef ADNS_H_INCLUDED
59 #define ADNS_H_INCLUDED
60
61 #include <stdio.h>
62 #include <stdarg.h>
63
64 #include <sys/types.h>
65 #include <sys/socket.h>
66 #include <netinet/in.h>
67 #include <sys/time.h>
68 #include <unistd.h>
69 #include <net/if.h>
70
71 #ifdef __cplusplus
72 extern "C" { /* I really dislike this - iwj. */
73 #endif
74
75 /* Whether to support address families other than IPv4 in responses which use
76 * the `adns_rr_addr' structure. This is a source-compatibility issue: old
77 * clients may not expect to find address families other than AF_INET in
78 * their query results. There's a separate binary compatibility issue to do
79 * with the size of the `adns_rr_addr' structure, but we'll assume you can
80 * cope with that because you have this header file. Define
81 * `ADNS_FEATURE_IPV4ONLY' if you only want to see AF_INET addresses, or
82 * `ADNS_FEATURE_MANYAF' to allow multiple address families; the default is
83 * currently to stick with AF_INET only, but this is likely to change in a
84 * later release of ADNS.
85 */
86 #if !defined(ADNS_FEATURE_IPV4ONLY) && !defined(ADNS_FEATURE_MANYAF)
87 # define ADNS_FEATURE_IPV4ONLY
88 #elif defined(ADNS_FEATURE_IPV4ONLY) && defined(ADNS_FEATURE_MANYAF)
89 # error "Feature flags ADNS_FEATURE_IPV4ONLY and ..._MANYAF are incompatible"
90 #endif
91
92 /* All struct in_addr anywhere in adns are in NETWORK byte order. */
93
94 typedef struct adns__state *adns_state;
95 typedef struct adns__query *adns_query;
96
97 typedef enum { /* In general, or together the desired flags: */
98 adns_if_none= 0x0000,/* no flags. nicer than 0 for some compilers */
99 adns_if_noenv= 0x0001,/* do not look at environment */
100 adns_if_noerrprint= 0x0002,/* never print to stderr (_debug overrides) */
101 adns_if_noserverwarn=0x0004,/* do not warn to stderr about duff servers etc */
102 adns_if_debug= 0x0008,/* enable all output to stderr plus debug msgs */
103 adns_if_logpid= 0x0080,/* include pid in diagnostic output */
104 adns_if_noautosys= 0x0010,/* do not make syscalls at every opportunity */
105 adns_if_eintr= 0x0020,/* allow _wait and _synchronous to return EINTR */
106 adns_if_nosigpipe= 0x0040,/* applic has SIGPIPE ignored, do not protect */
107 adns_if_checkc_entex=0x0100,/* consistency checks on entry/exit to adns fns */
108 adns_if_checkc_freq= 0x0300,/* consistency checks very frequently (slow!) */
109
110 adns_if_af_v4only= 0x0400,/* only return IPv4 addresses, given the choice */
111 adns_if_af_v6only= 0x0800,/* only return IPv6 addresses, ... */
112 adns_if_afmask= adns_if_af_v4only|adns_if_af_v6only
113 /* Only set one of these. They are policy flags, and overridden by the
114 * adns_af:... options in resolv.conf. If the adns_qf_ipv... query
115 * flags are incompatible with these settings (in the sense that no
116 * address families are permitted at all) then the query flags take
117 * precedence; otherwise only records which satisfy all of the stated
118 * requirements are allowed.
119 */
120 } adns_initflags;
121
122 typedef enum { /* In general, or together the desired flags: */
123 adns_qf_none= 0x00000000,/* no flags */
124 adns_qf_search= 0x00000001,/* use the searchlist */
125 adns_qf_usevc= 0x00000002,/* use a virtual circuit (TCP conn) */
126 adns_qf_owner= 0x00000004,/* fill in the owner field in the answer */
127 adns_qf_quoteok_query= 0x00000010,/* allow special chars in query domain */
128 adns_qf_quoteok_cname= 0x00000000,/* ... in CNAME we go via (now default) */
129 adns_qf_quoteok_anshost=0x00000040,/* ... in things supposedly hostnames */
130 adns_qf_quotefail_cname=0x00000080,/* refuse if quote-req chars in CNAME we go via */
131 adns_qf_cname_loose= 0x00000100,/* allow refs to CNAMEs - without, get _s_cname */
132 adns_qf_cname_forbid= 0x00000200,/* don't follow CNAMEs, instead give _s_cname */
133 adns_qf_ipv4_only= 0x00000400,/* only ever return IPv4 addresses */
134 adns_qf_ipv6_only= 0x00000800,/* ... and don't bother looking for IPv4 */
135 adns_qf_ipv6_ok= 0x00000c00,/* returning IPv6 addresses is acceptable */
136 adns_qf_domapv4= 0x00001000,/* ... any IPv4 addresses should be v6-mapped */
137 adns_qf_ipv6_mapv4= adns_qf_ipv6_ok|adns_qf_domapv4,
138 adns__qf_afmask= 0x00001c00,/* all the above flag bits */
139 adns_qf_addrlit_scope_forbid=0x00002000,/* forbid %<scope> in IPv6 literals */
140 adns_qf_addrlit_scope_numeric=0x00004000,/* %<scope> may only be numeric */
141 adns_qf_addrlit_ipv4_quadonly=0x00008000,/* reject non-dotted-quad ipv4 */
142 adns__qf_internalmask= 0x0ff00000
143 } adns_queryflags;
144
145 typedef enum {
146 adns_rrt_typemask= 0x0ffff,
147 adns_rrt_reprmask= 0xffffff,
148 adns__qtf_deref_bit=0x10000,/* internal version of ..._deref below */
149 adns__qtf_mail822= 0x20000,/* return mailboxes in RFC822 rcpt field fmt */
150
151 adns_r_unknown= 0x40000,
152 /* To use this, ask for records of type <rr-type-code>|adns_r_unknown.
153 * adns will not process the RDATA - you'll get adns_rr_byteblocks,
154 * where the int is the length and the unsigned char* points to the
155 * data. String representation of the RR data (by adns_rrinfo) is as in
156 * RFC3597. adns_rr_info will not return the type name in *rrtname_r
157 * (due to memory management problems); *fmtname_r will be set to
158 * "unknown".
159 *
160 * Do not specify adns_r_unknown along with a known RR type which
161 * requires domain name uncompression (see RFC3597 s4); domain names
162 * will not be uncompressed and the resulting data would be useless.
163 * Asking for meta-RR types via adns_r_unknown will not work properly
164 * either and may make adns complain about server misbehaviour, so don't
165 * do that.
166 *
167 * Don't forget adns_qf_quoteok if that's what you want. */
168
169 adns__qtf_bigaddr=0x1000000,/* use the new larger sockaddr union */
170 adns__qtf_manyaf= 0x2000000,/* permitted to return multiple address families */
171
172 adns__qtf_deref= adns__qtf_deref_bit|adns__qtf_bigaddr
173 #ifdef ADNS_FEATURE_MANYAF
174 |adns__qtf_manyaf
175 #endif
176 ,/* dereference domains; perhaps get extra data */
177
178 adns_r_none= 0,
179
180 adns_r_a= 1,
181
182 adns_r_ns_raw= 2,
183 adns_r_ns= adns_r_ns_raw|adns__qtf_deref,
184
185 adns_r_cname= 5,
186
187 adns_r_soa_raw= 6,
188 adns_r_soa= adns_r_soa_raw|adns__qtf_mail822,
189
190 adns_r_ptr_raw= 12, /* do not mind PTR with wrong or missing A */
191 adns_r_ptr= adns_r_ptr_raw|adns__qtf_deref,
192
193 adns_r_hinfo= 13,
194
195 adns_r_mx_raw= 15,
196 adns_r_mx= adns_r_mx_raw|adns__qtf_deref,
197
198 adns_r_txt= 16,
199
200 adns_r_rp_raw= 17,
201 adns_r_rp= adns_r_rp_raw|adns__qtf_mail822,
202
203 adns_r_aaaa= 28,
204
205 /* For SRV records, query domain without _qf_quoteok_query must look
206 * as expected from SRV RFC with hostname-like Name. _With_
207 * _quoteok_query, any query domain is allowed. */
208 adns_r_srv_raw= 33,
209 adns_r_srv= adns_r_srv_raw|adns__qtf_deref,
210
211 adns_r_addr= adns_r_a|adns__qtf_deref
212
213 } adns_rrtype;
214
215 /*
216 * In queries without qf_quoteok_*, all domains must have standard
217 * legal syntax, or you get adns_s_querydomainvalid (if the query
218 * domain contains bad characters) or adns_s_answerdomaininvalid (if
219 * the answer contains bad characters).
220 *
221 * In queries _with_ qf_quoteok_*, domains in the query or response
222 * may contain any characters, quoted according to RFC1035 5.1. On
223 * input to adns, the char* is a pointer to the interior of a "
224 * delimited string, except that " may appear in it unquoted. On
225 * output, the char* is a pointer to a string which would be legal
226 * either inside or outside " delimiters; any character which isn't
227 * legal in a hostname (ie alphanumeric or hyphen) or one of _ / +
228 * (the three other punctuation characters commonly abused in domain
229 * names) will be quoted, as \X if it is a printing ASCII character or
230 * \DDD otherwise.
231 *
232 * If the query goes via a CNAME then the canonical name (ie, the
233 * thing that the CNAME record refers to) is usually allowed to
234 * contain any characters, which will be quoted as above. With
235 * adns_qf_quotefail_cname you get adns_s_answerdomaininvalid when
236 * this happens. (This is a change from version 0.4 and earlier, in
237 * which failing the query was the default, and you had to say
238 * adns_qf_quoteok_cname to avoid this; that flag is now deprecated.)
239 *
240 * In version 0.4 and earlier, asking for _raw records containing
241 * mailboxes without specifying _qf_quoteok_anshost was silly. This
242 * is no longer the case. In this version only parts of responses
243 * that are actually supposed to be hostnames will be refused by
244 * default if quote-requiring characters are found.
245 */
246
247 /*
248 * If you ask for an RR which contains domains which are actually
249 * encoded mailboxes, and don't ask for the _raw version, then adns
250 * returns the mailbox formatted suitably for an RFC822 recipient
251 * header field. The particular format used is that if the mailbox
252 * requires quoting according to the rules in RFC822 then the
253 * local-part is quoted in double quotes, which end at the next
254 * unescaped double quote (\ is the escape char, and is doubled, and
255 * is used to escape only \ and "). If the local-part is legal
256 * without quoting according to RFC822, it is presented as-is. In any
257 * case the local-part is followed by an @ and the domain. The domain
258 * will not contain any characters not legal in hostnames.
259 *
260 * Unquoted local-parts may contain any printing 7-bit ASCII
261 * except the punctuation characters ( ) < > @ , ; : \ " [ ]
262 * I.e. they may contain alphanumerics, and the following
263 * punctuation characters: ! # % ^ & * - _ = + { } .
264 *
265 * adns will reject local parts containing control characters (byte
266 * values 0-31, 127-159, and 255) - these appear to be legal according
267 * to RFC822 (at least 0-127) but are clearly a bad idea. RFC1035
268 * syntax does not make any distinction between a single RFC822
269 * quoted-string containing full stops, and a series of quoted-strings
270 * separated by full stops; adns will return anything that isn't all
271 * valid atoms as a single quoted-string. RFC822 does not allow
272 * high-bit-set characters at all, but adns does allow them in
273 * local-parts, treating them as needing quoting.
274 *
275 * If you ask for the domain with _raw then _no_ checking is done
276 * (even on the host part, regardless of adns_qf_quoteok_anshost), and
277 * you just get the domain name in master file format.
278 *
279 * If no mailbox is supplied the returned string will be `.' in either
280 * case.
281 */
282
283 typedef enum {
284 adns_s_ok,
285
286 /* locally induced errors */
287 adns_s_nomemory,
288 adns_s_unknownrrtype,
289 adns_s_systemfail,
290
291 adns_s_max_localfail= 29,
292
293 /* remotely induced errors, detected locally */
294 adns_s_timeout,
295 adns_s_allservfail,
296 adns_s_norecurse,
297 adns_s_invalidresponse,
298 adns_s_unknownformat,
299
300 adns_s_max_remotefail= 59,
301
302 /* remotely induced errors, reported by remote server to us */
303 adns_s_rcodeservfail,
304 adns_s_rcodeformaterror,
305 adns_s_rcodenotimplemented,
306 adns_s_rcoderefused,
307 adns_s_rcodeunknown,
308
309 adns_s_max_tempfail= 99,
310
311 /* remote configuration errors */
312 adns_s_inconsistent, /* PTR gives domain whose A does not exist and match */
313 adns_s_prohibitedcname, /* CNAME, but eg A expected (not if _qf_loosecname) */
314 adns_s_answerdomaininvalid,
315 adns_s_answerdomaintoolong,
316 adns_s_invaliddata,
317
318 adns_s_max_misconfig= 199,
319
320 /* permanent problems with the query */
321 adns_s_querydomainwrong,
322 adns_s_querydomaininvalid,
323 adns_s_querydomaintoolong,
324
325 adns_s_max_misquery= 299,
326
327 /* permanent errors */
328 adns_s_nxdomain,
329 adns_s_nodata,
330
331 adns_s_max_permfail= 499
332
333 } adns_status;
334
335 typedef union {
336 struct sockaddr sa;
337 struct sockaddr_in inet;
338 } adns_sockaddr_v4only;
339
340 typedef union {
341 struct sockaddr sa;
342 struct sockaddr_in inet;
343 struct sockaddr_in6 inet6;
344 char adns__padding[240]; /* Good idea? I'm inclined to think not. */
345 } adns_sockaddr;
346
347 typedef struct {
348 int len;
349 adns_sockaddr addr;
350 } adns_rr_addr;
351
352 typedef struct {
353 int len;
354 adns_sockaddr_v4only addr;
355 } adns_rr_addr_v4only;
356
357 typedef struct {
358 char *host;
359 adns_status astatus;
360 int naddrs; /* temp fail => -1, perm fail => 0, s_ok => >0 */
361 adns_rr_addr *addrs;
362 } adns_rr_hostaddr;
363
364 typedef struct {
365 char *(array[2]);
366 } adns_rr_strpair;
367
368 typedef struct {
369 int i;
370 adns_rr_hostaddr ha;
371 } adns_rr_inthostaddr;
372
373 typedef struct {
374 /* Used both for mx_raw, in which case i is the preference and str
375 * the domain, and for txt, in which case each entry has i for the
376 * `text' length, and str for the data (which will have had an extra
377 * nul appended so that if it was plain text it is now a
378 * null-terminated string).
379 */
380 int i;
381 char *str;
382 } adns_rr_intstr;
383
384 typedef struct {
385 adns_rr_intstr array[2];
386 } adns_rr_intstrpair;
387
388 typedef struct {
389 char *mname, *rname;
390 unsigned long serial, refresh, retry, expire, minimum;
391 } adns_rr_soa;
392
393 typedef struct {
394 int priority, weight, port;
395 char *host;
396 } adns_rr_srvraw;
397
398 typedef struct {
399 int priority, weight, port;
400 adns_rr_hostaddr ha;
401 } adns_rr_srvha;
402
403 typedef struct {
404 int len;
405 unsigned char *data;
406 } adns_rr_byteblock;
407
408 typedef struct {
409 adns_status status;
410 char *cname; /* always NULL if query was for CNAME records */
411 char *owner; /* only set if req'd in query flags; maybe 0 on error anyway */
412 adns_rrtype type; /* guaranteed to be same as in query */
413 time_t expires;/*abs time. def only if _s_ok, nxdomain or nodata. NOT TTL!*/
414 int nrrs, rrsz; /* nrrs is 0 if an error occurs */
415 union {
416 void *untyped;
417 unsigned char *bytes;
418 char *(*str); /* ns_raw, cname, ptr, ptr_raw */
419 adns_rr_intstr *(*manyistr); /* txt (list strs ends with i=-1, str=0)*/
420 adns_rr_addr *addr; /* addr */
421 struct in_addr *inaddr; /* a */
422 struct in6_addr *in6addr; /* aaaa */
423 adns_rr_hostaddr *hostaddr; /* ns */
424 adns_rr_intstrpair *intstrpair; /* hinfo */
425 adns_rr_strpair *strpair; /* rp, rp_raw */
426 adns_rr_inthostaddr *inthostaddr;/* mx */
427 adns_rr_intstr *intstr; /* mx_raw */
428 adns_rr_soa *soa; /* soa, soa_raw */
429 adns_rr_srvraw *srvraw; /* srv_raw */
430 adns_rr_srvha *srvha;/* srv */
431 adns_rr_byteblock *byteblock; /* ...|unknown */
432 } rrs;
433 } adns_answer;
434
435 /* Memory management:
436 * adns_state and adns_query are actually pointers to malloc'd state;
437 * On submission questions are copied, including the owner domain;
438 * Answers are malloc'd as a single piece of memory; pointers in the
439 * answer struct point into further memory in the answer.
440 * query_io:
441 * Must always be non-null pointer;
442 * If *query_io is 0 to start with then any query may be returned;
443 * If *query_io is !0 adns_query then only that query may be returned.
444 * If the call is successful, *query_io, *answer_r, and *context_r
445 * will all be set.
446 * Errors:
447 * Return values are 0 or an errno value.
448 *
449 * For _init, _init_strcfg, _submit and _synchronous, system errors
450 * (eg, failure to create sockets, malloc failure, etc.) return errno
451 * values. EINVAL from _init et al means the configuration file
452 * is erroneous and cannot be parsed.
453 *
454 * For _wait and _check failures are reported in the answer
455 * structure, and only 0, ESRCH or (for _check) EAGAIN is
456 * returned: if no (appropriate) requests are done adns_check returns
457 * EAGAIN; if no (appropriate) requests are outstanding both
458 * adns_query and adns_wait return ESRCH.
459 *
460 * Additionally, _wait can return EINTR if you set adns_if_eintr.
461 *
462 * All other errors (nameserver failure, timed out connections, &c)
463 * are returned in the status field of the answer. After a
464 * successful _wait or _check, if status is nonzero then nrrs will be
465 * 0, otherwise it will be >0. type will always be the type
466 * requested.
467 */
468
469 /* Threads:
470 * adns does not use any static modifiable state, so it
471 * is safe to call adns_init several times and then use the
472 * resulting adns_states concurrently.
473 * However, it is NOT safe to make simultaneous calls into
474 * adns using the same adns_state; a single adns_state must be used
475 * only by one thread at a time. You can solve this problem by
476 * having one adns_state per thread, or if that isn't feasible, you
477 * could maintain a pool of adns_states. Unfortunately neither of
478 * these approaches has optimal performance.
479 */
480
481 int adns_init(adns_state *newstate_r, adns_initflags flags,
482 FILE *diagfile /*0=>stderr*/);
483
484 int adns_init_strcfg(adns_state *newstate_r, adns_initflags flags,
485 FILE *diagfile /*0=>discard*/, const char *configtext);
486
487 typedef void adns_logcallbackfn(adns_state ads, void *logfndata,
488 const char *fmt, va_list al);
489 /* Will be called perhaps several times for each message; when the
490 * message is complete, the string implied by fmt and al will end in
491 * a newline. Log messages start with `adns debug:' or `adns
492 * warning:' or `adns:' (for errors), or `adns debug [PID]:'
493 * etc. if adns_if_logpid is set. */
494
495 int adns_init_logfn(adns_state *newstate_r, adns_initflags flags,
496 const char *configtext /*0=>use default config files*/,
497 adns_logcallbackfn *logfn /*0=>logfndata is a FILE* */,
498 void *logfndata /*0 with logfn==0 => discard*/);
499
500 /* Configuration:
501 * adns_init reads /etc/resolv.conf, which is expected to be (broadly
502 * speaking) in the format expected by libresolv, and then
503 * /etc/resolv-adns.conf if it exists. adns_init_strcfg is instead
504 * passed a string which is interpreted as if it were the contents of
505 * resolv.conf or resolv-adns.conf. In general, configuration which
506 * is set later overrides any that is set earlier.
507 *
508 * Standard directives understood in resolv[-adns].conf:
509 *
510 * nameserver <address>
511 * Must be followed by the IP address of a nameserver. Several
512 * nameservers may be specified, and they will be tried in the order
513 * found. There is a compiled in limit, currently 5, on the number
514 * of nameservers. (libresolv supports only 3 nameservers.)
515 *
516 * search <domain> ...
517 * Specifies the search list for queries which specify
518 * adns_qf_search. This is a list of domains to append to the query
519 * domain. The query domain will be tried as-is either before all
520 * of these or after them, depending on the ndots option setting
521 * (see below).
522 *
523 * domain <domain>
524 * This is present only for backward compatibility with obsolete
525 * versions of libresolv. It should not be used, and is interpreted
526 * by adns as if it were `search' - note that this is subtly
527 * different to libresolv's interpretation of this directive.
528 *
529 * sortlist <addr>/<mask> ...
530 * Should be followed by a sequence of IP-address and netmask pairs,
531 * separated by spaces. They may be specified as
532 * eg. 172.30.206.0/24 or 172.30.206.0/255.255.255.0. Currently up
533 * to 15 pairs may be specified (but note that libresolv only
534 * supports up to 10).
535 *
536 * options
537 * Should followed by one or more options, separated by spaces.
538 * Each option consists of an option name, followed by optionally
539 * a colon and a value. Options are listed below.
540 *
541 * Non-standard directives understood in resolv[-adns].conf:
542 *
543 * clearnameservers
544 * Clears the list of nameservers, so that further nameserver lines
545 * start again from the beginning.
546 *
547 * include <filename>
548 * The specified file will be read.
549 *
550 * Additionally, adns will ignore lines in resolv[-adns].conf which
551 * start with a #.
552 *
553 * Standard options understood:
554 *
555 * debug
556 * Enables debugging output from the resolver, which will be written
557 * to stderr.
558 *
559 * ndots:<count>
560 * Affects whether queries with adns_qf_search will be tried first
561 * without adding domains from the searchlist, or whether the bare
562 * query domain will be tried last. Queries which contain at least
563 * <count> dots will be tried bare first. The default is 1.
564 *
565 * Non-standard options understood:
566 *
567 * adns_checkc:none
568 * adns_checkc:entex
569 * adns_checkc:freq
570 * Changes the consistency checking frequency; this overrides the
571 * setting of adns_if_check_entex, adns_if_check_freq, or neither,
572 * in the flags passed to adns_init.
573 *
574 * adns_af:v4only
575 * adns_af:v6only
576 * adns_af:any
577 * Controls whether ADNS looks for IPv4 (A records) and IPv6 (AAAA
578 * records) addresses when it's trying to build a socket address.
579 * The default is `any' which means to allow both. The `sortlist'
580 * directive can be used to control the relative preference of IPv4
581 * and IPv6 addresses if both are returned for the same query.
582 * These override the corresponding init flags (covered by
583 * adns_if_afmask).
584 *
585 * There are a number of environment variables which can modify the
586 * behaviour of adns. They take effect only if adns_init is used, and
587 * the caller of adns_init can disable them using adns_if_noenv. In
588 * each case there is both a FOO and an ADNS_FOO; the latter is
589 * interpreted later so that it can override the former. Unless
590 * otherwise stated, environment variables are interpreted after
591 * resolv[-adns].conf are read, in the order they are listed here.
592 *
593 * RES_CONF, ADNS_RES_CONF
594 * A filename, whose contets are in the format of resolv.conf.
595 *
596 * RES_CONF_TEXT, ADNS_RES_CONF_TEXT
597 * A string in the format of resolv.conf.
598 *
599 * RES_OPTIONS, ADNS_RES_OPTIONS
600 * These are parsed as if they appeared in the `options' line of a
601 * resolv.conf. In addition to being parsed at this point in the
602 * sequence, they are also parsed at the very beginning before
603 * resolv.conf or any other environment variables are read, so that
604 * any debug option can affect the processing of the configuration.
605 *
606 * LOCALDOMAIN, ADNS_LOCALDOMAIN
607 * These are interpreted as if their contents appeared in a `search'
608 * line in resolv.conf.
609 */
610
611 int adns_synchronous(adns_state ads,
612 const char *owner,
613 adns_rrtype type,
614 adns_queryflags flags,
615 adns_answer **answer_r);
616
617 /* NB: if you set adns_if_noautosys then _submit and _check do not
618 * make any system calls; you must use some of the asynch-io event
619 * processing functions to actually get things to happen.
620 */
621
622 int adns_submit(adns_state ads,
623 const char *owner,
624 adns_rrtype type,
625 adns_queryflags flags,
626 void *context,
627 adns_query *query_r);
628
629 /* The owner should be quoted in master file format. */
630
631 int adns_check(adns_state ads,
632 adns_query *query_io,
633 adns_answer **answer_r,
634 void **context_r);
635
636 int adns_wait(adns_state ads,
637 adns_query *query_io,
638 adns_answer **answer_r,
639 void **context_r);
640
641 /* same as adns_wait but uses poll(2) internally */
642 int adns_wait_poll(adns_state ads,
643 adns_query *query_io,
644 adns_answer **answer_r,
645 void **context_r);
646
647 void adns_cancel(adns_query query);
648
649 /* The adns_query you get back from _submit is valid (ie, can be
650 * legitimately passed into adns functions) until it is returned by
651 * adns_check or adns_wait, or passed to adns_cancel. After that it
652 * must not be used. You can rely on it not being reused until the
653 * first adns_submit or _transact call using the same adns_state after
654 * it became invalid, so you may compare it for equality with other
655 * query handles until you next call _query or _transact.
656 *
657 * _submit and _synchronous return ENOSYS if they don't understand the
658 * query type.
659 */
660
661 int adns_submit_reverse(adns_state ads,
662 const struct sockaddr *addr,
663 adns_rrtype type,
664 adns_queryflags flags,
665 void *context,
666 adns_query *query_r);
667 /* type must be _r_ptr or _r_ptr_raw. _qf_search is ignored.
668 * addr->sa_family must be AF_INET or you get ENOSYS.
669 */
670
671 int adns_submit_reverse_any(adns_state ads,
672 const struct sockaddr *addr,
673 const char *rzone,
674 adns_rrtype type,
675 adns_queryflags flags,
676 void *context,
677 adns_query *query_r);
678 /* For RBL-style reverse `zone's; look up
679 * <reversed-address>.<zone>
680 * Any type is allowed. _qf_search is ignored.
681 * addr->sa_family must be AF_INET or you get ENOSYS.
682 */
683
684 void adns_finish(adns_state ads);
685 /* You may call this even if you have queries outstanding;
686 * they will be cancelled.
687 */
688
689 #define ADNS_ADDR2TEXT_BUFLEN \
690 (INET6_ADDRSTRLEN + 1/*%*/ \
691 + ((IF_NAMESIZE-1) > 9 ? (IF_NAMESIZE-1) : 9/*uint32*/) \
692 + 1/* nul; included in IF_NAMESIZE */)
693
694 int adns_text2addr(const char *text, uint16_t port, adns_queryflags flags,
695 struct sockaddr *sa_r,
696 socklen_t *salen_io /* updated iff OK or ENOSPC */);
697 int adns_addr2text(const struct sockaddr *sa, adns_queryflags flags,
698 char *buffer, int *buflen_io /* updated ONLY on ENOSPC */,
699 int *port_r /* may be 0 */);
700 /*
701 * port is always in host byte order and is simply copied to and
702 * from the appropriate sockaddr field (byteswapped as necessary).
703 *
704 * The only flags supported are adns_qf_addrlit_...; others are
705 * ignored.
706 *
707 * Error return values are:
708 *
709 * ENOSPC Output buffer is too small. Can only happen if
710 * *buflen_io < ADNS_ADDR2TEXT_BUFLEN or
711 * *salen_io < sizeof(adns_sockaddr). On return,
712 * *buflen_io or *salen_io has been updated by adns.
713 *
714 * EINVAL text has invalid syntax.
715 *
716 * text represents an address family not supported by
717 * this version of adns.
718 *
719 * Scoped address supplied (text contained "%" or
720 * sin6_scope_id nonzero) but caller specified
721 * adns_qf_addrlit_scope_forbid.
722 *
723 * Scope name (rather than number) supplied in text but
724 * caller specified adns_qf_addrlit_scope_numeric.
725 *
726 * EAFNOSUPPORT sa->sa_family is not supported (addr2text only).
727 *
728 * Only if neither adns_qf_addrlit_scope_forbid nor
729 * adns_qf_addrlit_scope_numeric are set:
730 *
731 * ENOSYS Scope name supplied in text but IPv6 address part of
732 * sockaddr is not a link local address.
733 *
734 * ENXIO Scope name supplied in text but if_nametoindex
735 * said it wasn't a valid local interface name.
736 *
737 * EIO Scoped address supplied but if_nametoindex failed
738 * in an unexpected way; adns has printed a message to
739 * stderr.
740 *
741 * any other if_nametoindex failed in a more-or-less expected way.
742 */
743
744 void adns_forallqueries_begin(adns_state ads);
745 adns_query adns_forallqueries_next(adns_state ads, void **context_r);
746 /* Iterator functions, which you can use to loop over the outstanding
747 * (submitted but not yet successfuly checked/waited) queries.
748 *
749 * You can only have one iteration going at once. You may call _begin
750 * at any time; after that, an iteration will be in progress. You may
751 * only call _next when an iteration is in progress - anything else
752 * may coredump. The iteration remains in progress until _next
753 * returns 0, indicating that all the queries have been walked over,
754 * or ANY other adns function is called with the same adns_state (or a
755 * query in the same adns_state). There is no need to explicitly
756 * finish an iteration.
757 *
758 * context_r may be 0. *context_r may not be set when _next returns 0.
759 */
760
761 void adns_checkconsistency(adns_state ads, adns_query qu);
762 /* Checks the consistency of adns's internal data structures.
763 * If any error is found, the program will abort().
764 * You may pass 0 for qu; if you pass non-null then additional checks
765 * are done to make sure that qu is a valid query.
766 */
767
768 /*
769 * Example expected/legal calling sequence for submit/check/wait:
770 * adns_init
771 * adns_submit 1
772 * adns_submit 2
773 * adns_submit 3
774 * adns_wait 1
775 * adns_check 3 -> EAGAIN
776 * adns_wait 2
777 * adns_wait 3
778 * ....
779 * adns_finish
780 */
781
782 /*
783 * Entrypoints for generic asynch io:
784 * (these entrypoints are not very useful except in combination with *
785 * some of the other I/O model calls which can tell you which fds to
786 * be interested in):
787 *
788 * Note that any adns call may cause adns to open and close fds, so
789 * you must call beforeselect or beforepoll again just before
790 * blocking, or you may not have an up-to-date list of it's fds.
791 */
792
793 int adns_processany(adns_state ads);
794 /* Gives adns flow-of-control for a bit. This will never block, and
795 * can be used with any threading/asynch-io model. If some error
796 * occurred which might cause an event loop to spin then the errno
797 * value is returned.
798 */
799
800 int adns_processreadable(adns_state ads, int fd, const struct timeval *now);
801 int adns_processwriteable(adns_state ads, int fd, const struct timeval *now);
802 int adns_processexceptional(adns_state ads, int fd, const struct timeval *now);
803 /* Gives adns flow-of-control so that it can process incoming data
804 * from, or send outgoing data via, fd. Very like _processany. If it
805 * returns zero then fd will no longer be readable or writeable
806 * (unless of course more data has arrived since). adns will _only_
807 * use that fd and only in the manner specified, regardless of whether
808 * adns_if_noautosys was specified.
809 *
810 * adns_processexceptional should be called when select(2) reports an
811 * exceptional condition, or poll(2) reports POLLPRI.
812 *
813 * It is fine to call _processreabable or _processwriteable when the
814 * fd is not ready, or with an fd that doesn't belong to adns; it will
815 * then just return 0.
816 *
817 * If some error occurred which might prevent an event loop to spin
818 * then the errno value is returned.
819 */
820
821 void adns_processtimeouts(adns_state ads, const struct timeval *now);
822 /* Gives adns flow-of-control so that it can process any timeouts
823 * which might have happened. Very like _processreadable/writeable.
824 *
825 * now may be 0; if it isn't, *now must be the current time, recently
826 * obtained from gettimeofday.
827 */
828
829 void adns_firsttimeout(adns_state ads,
830 struct timeval **tv_mod, struct timeval *tv_buf,
831 struct timeval now);
832 /* Asks adns when it would first like the opportunity to time
833 * something out. now must be the current time, from gettimeofday.
834 *
835 * If tv_mod points to 0 then tv_buf must be non-null, and
836 * _firsttimeout will fill in *tv_buf with the time until the first
837 * timeout, and make *tv_mod point to tv_buf. If adns doesn't have
838 * anything that might need timing out it will leave *tv_mod as 0.
839 *
840 * If *tv_mod is not 0 then tv_buf is not used. adns will update
841 * *tv_mod if it has any earlier timeout, and leave it alone if it
842 * doesn't.
843 *
844 * This call will not actually do any I/O, or change the fds that adns
845 * is using. It always succeeds and never blocks.
846 */
847
848 void adns_globalsystemfailure(adns_state ads);
849 /* If serious problem(s) happen which globally affect your ability to
850 * interact properly with adns, or adns's ability to function
851 * properly, you or adns can call this function.
852 *
853 * All currently outstanding queries will be made to fail with
854 * adns_s_systemfail, and adns will close any stream sockets it has
855 * open.
856 *
857 * This is used by adns, for example, if gettimeofday() fails.
858 * Without this the program's event loop might start to spin !
859 *
860 * This call will never block.
861 */
862
863 /*
864 * Entrypoints for select-loop based asynch io:
865 */
866
867 void adns_beforeselect(adns_state ads, int *maxfd, fd_set *readfds,
868 fd_set *writefds, fd_set *exceptfds,
869 struct timeval **tv_mod, struct timeval *tv_buf,
870 const struct timeval *now);
871 /* Find out file descriptors adns is interested in, and when it would
872 * like the opportunity to time something out. If you do not plan to
873 * block then tv_mod may be 0. Otherwise, tv_mod and tv_buf are as
874 * for adns_firsttimeout. readfds, writefds, exceptfds and maxfd_io may
875 * not be 0.
876 *
877 * If tv_mod is 0 on entry then this will never actually do any I/O,
878 * or change the fds that adns is using or the timeouts it wants. In
879 * any case it won't block, and it will set the timeout to zero if a
880 * query finishes in _beforeselect.
881 */
882
883 void adns_afterselect(adns_state ads, int maxfd, const fd_set *readfds,
884 const fd_set *writefds, const fd_set *exceptfds,
885 const struct timeval *now);
886 /* Gives adns flow-of-control for a bit; intended for use after
887 * select. This is just a fancy way of calling adns_processreadable/
888 * writeable/timeouts as appropriate, as if select had returned the
889 * data being passed. Always succeeds.
890 */
891
892 /*
893 * Example calling sequence:
894 *
895 * adns_init _noautosys
896 * loop {
897 * adns_beforeselect
898 * select
899 * adns_afterselect
900 * ...
901 * adns_submit / adns_check
902 * ...
903 * }
904 */
905
906 /*
907 * Entrypoints for poll-loop based asynch io:
908 */
909
910 struct pollfd;
911 /* In case your system doesn't have it or you forgot to include
912 * <sys/poll.h>, to stop the following declarations from causing
913 * problems. If your system doesn't have poll then the following
914 * entrypoints will not be defined in libadns. Sorry !
915 */
916
917 int adns_beforepoll(adns_state ads, struct pollfd *fds,
918 int *nfds_io, int *timeout_io,
919 const struct timeval *now);
920 /* Finds out which fd's adns is interested in, and when it would like
921 * to be able to time things out. This is in a form suitable for use
922 * with poll(2).
923 *
924 * On entry, usually fds should point to at least *nfds_io structs.
925 * adns will fill up to that many structs will information for poll,
926 * and record in *nfds_io how many structs it filled. If it wants to
927 * listen for more structs then *nfds_io will be set to the number
928 * required and _beforepoll will return ERANGE.
929 *
930 * You may call _beforepoll with fds==0 and *nfds_io 0, in which case
931 * adns will fill in the number of fds that it might be interested in
932 * in *nfds_io, and always return either 0 (if it is not interested in
933 * any fds) or ERANGE (if it is).
934 *
935 * NOTE that (unless now is 0) adns may acquire additional fds
936 * from one call to the next, so you must put adns_beforepoll in a
937 * loop, rather than assuming that the second call (with the buffer
938 * size requested by the first) will not return ERANGE.
939 *
940 * adns only ever sets POLLIN, POLLOUT and POLLPRI in its pollfd
941 * structs, and only ever looks at those bits. POLLPRI is required to
942 * detect TCP Urgent Data (which should not be used by a DNS server)
943 * so that adns can know that the TCP stream is now useless.
944 *
945 * In any case, *timeout_io should be a timeout value as for poll(2),
946 * which adns will modify downwards as required. If the caller does
947 * not plan to block then *timeout_io should be 0 on entry, or
948 * alternatively, timeout_io may be 0. (Alternatively, the caller may
949 * use _beforeselect with timeout_io==0 to find out about file
950 * descriptors, and use _firsttimeout is used to find out when adns
951 * might want to time something out.)
952 *
953 * adns_beforepoll will return 0 on success, and will not fail for any
954 * reason other than the fds buffer being too small (ERANGE).
955 *
956 * This call will never actually do any I/O. If you supply the
957 * current time it will not change the fds that adns is using or the
958 * timeouts it wants.
959 *
960 * In any case this call won't block.
961 */
962
963 #define ADNS_POLLFDS_RECOMMENDED 3
964 /* If you allocate an fds buf with at least RECOMMENDED entries then
965 * you are unlikely to need to enlarge it. You are recommended to do
966 * so if it's convenient. However, you must be prepared for adns to
967 * require more space than this.
968 */
969
970 void adns_afterpoll(adns_state ads, const struct pollfd *fds, int nfds,
971 const struct timeval *now);
972 /* Gives adns flow-of-control for a bit; intended for use after
973 * poll(2). fds and nfds should be the results from poll(). pollfd
974 * structs mentioning fds not belonging to adns will be ignored.
975 */
976
977
978 adns_status adns_rr_info(adns_rrtype type,
979 const char **rrtname_r, const char **fmtname_r,
980 int *len_r,
981 const void *datap, char **data_r);
982 /*
983 * Get information about a query type, or convert reply data to a
984 * textual form. type must be specified, and the official name of the
985 * corresponding RR type will be returned in *rrtname_r, and
986 * information about the processing style in *fmtname_r. The length
987 * of the table entry in an answer for that type will be returned in
988 * in *len_r. Any or all of rrtname_r, fmtname_r and len_r may be 0.
989 * If fmtname_r is non-null then *fmtname_r may be null on return,
990 * indicating that no special processing is involved.
991 *
992 * data_r be must be non-null iff datap is. In this case *data_r will
993 * be set to point to a string pointing to a representation of the RR
994 * data in master file format. (The owner name, timeout, class and
995 * type will not be present - only the data part of the RR.) The
996 * memory will have been obtained from malloc() and must be freed by
997 * the caller.
998 *
999 * Usually this routine will succeed. Possible errors include:
1000 * adns_s_nomemory
1001 * adns_s_rrtypeunknown
1002 * adns_s_invaliddata (*datap contained garbage)
1003 * If an error occurs then no memory has been allocated,
1004 * and *rrtname_r, *fmtname_r, *len_r and *data_r are undefined.
1005 *
1006 * There are some adns-invented data formats which are not official
1007 * master file formats. These include:
1008 *
1009 * Mailboxes if __qtf_mail822: these are just included as-is.
1010 *
1011 * Addresses (adns_rr_addr): these may be of pretty much any type.
1012 * The representation is in two parts: first, a word for the address
1013 * family (ie, in AF_XXX, the XXX), and then one or more items for the
1014 * address itself, depending on the format. For an IPv4 address the
1015 * syntax is INET followed by the dotted quad (from inet_ntoa).
1016 * Currently only IPv4 is supported.
1017 *
1018 * Text strings (as in adns_rr_txt) appear inside double quotes, and
1019 * use \" and \\ to represent " and \, and \xHH to represent
1020 * characters not in the range 32-126.
1021 *
1022 * Hostname with addresses (adns_rr_hostaddr): this consists of the
1023 * hostname, as usual, followed by the adns_status value, as an
1024 * abbreviation, and then a descriptive string (encoded as if it were
1025 * a piece of text), for the address lookup, followed by zero or more
1026 * addresses enclosed in ( and ). If the result was a temporary
1027 * failure, then a single ? appears instead of the ( ). If the
1028 * result was a permanent failure then an empty pair of parentheses
1029 * appears (which a space in between). For example, one of the NS
1030 * records for greenend.org.uk comes out like
1031 * ns.chiark.greenend.org.uk ok "OK" ( INET 195.224.76.132 )
1032 * an MX referring to a nonexistent host might come out like:
1033 * 50 sun2.nsfnet-relay.ac.uk nxdomain "No such domain" ( )
1034 * and if nameserver information is not available you might get:
1035 * dns2.spong.dyn.ml.org timeout "DNS query timed out" ?
1036 */
1037
1038 const char *adns_strerror(adns_status st);
1039 const char *adns_errabbrev(adns_status st);
1040 const char *adns_errtypeabbrev(adns_status st);
1041 /* Like strerror but for adns_status values. adns_errabbrev returns
1042 * the abbreviation of the error - eg, for adns_s_timeout it returns
1043 * "timeout". adns_errtypeabbrev returns the abbreviation of the
1044 * error class: ie, for values up to adns_s_max_XXX it will return the
1045 * string XXX. You MUST NOT call these functions with status values
1046 * not returned by the same adns library.
1047 */
1048
1049 #ifdef __cplusplus
1050 } /* end of extern "C" */
1051 #endif
1052 #endif