GETIPNODEBYNAME(3SOCKET) Sockets Library Functions GETIPNODEBYNAME(3SOCKET)
NAME
getipnodebyname, getipnodebyaddr, freehostent - get IP node entry
SYNOPSIS
cc [
flag... ]
file...
-lsocket -lnsl [
library... ]
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netdb.h>
struct hostent *getipnodebyname(
const char *name,
int af,
int flags,
int *error_num);
struct hostent *getipnodebyaddr(
const void *src,
size_t len,
int af,
int *error_num);
void freehostent(
struct hostent *ptr);
PARAMETERS
af Address family
flags Various flags
name Name of host
error_num Error storage
src Address for lookup
len Length of address
ptr Pointer to
hostent structure
DESCRIPTION
The
getipnodebyname() function searches the
ipnodes database from the
beginning. The function finds the first
h_name member that matches the
hostname specified by
name. The function takes an
af argument that
specifies the address family. The address family can be
AF_INET for IPv4
addresses or
AF_INET6 for IPv6 addresses. The
flags argument determines
what results are returned based on the value of
flags. If the
flags argument is set to
0 (zero), the default operation of the function is
specified as follows:
o If the
af argument is
AF_INET, a query is made for an IPv4
address. If successful, IPv4 addresses are returned and the
h_length member of the
hostent structure is 4. Otherwise, the
function returns a
NULL pointer.
o If the
af argument is
AF_INET6, a query is made for an IPv6
address. If successful, IPv6 addresses are returned and the
h_length member of the
hostent structure is 16. Otherwise, the
function returns a
NULL pointer.
The
flags argument changes the default actions of the function. Set the
flags argument with a logical
OR operation on any of combination of the
following values:
o
AI_V4MAPPED o
AI_ALL o
AI_ADDRCONFIG The special flags value,
AI_DEFAULT, should handle most applications.
Porting simple applications to use IPv6 replaces the call
hptr = gethostbyname(name);
with
hptr = getipnodebyname(name, AF_INET6, AI_DEFAULT, &error_num);
The
flags value
0 (zero) implies a strict interpretation of the
af argument:
o If
flags is
0 and
af is
AF_INET, the caller wants only IPv4
addresses. A query is made for
A records. If successful, IPv4
addresses are returned and the
h_length member of the
hostent structure is 4. Otherwise, the function returns a
NULL pointer.
o If
flags is
0 and
af is
AF_INET6, the caller wants only IPv6
addresses. A query is made for
AAAA records. If successful,
IPv6 addresses are returned and the
h_length member of the
hostent structure is 16. Otherwise, the function returns a
NULL pointer.
Logically
OR other constants into the
flags argument to modify the
behavior of the
getipnodebyname() function.
o If the
AI_V4MAPPED flag is specified with
af set to
AF_INET6,
the caller can accept IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses. If no
AAAA records are found, a query is made for
A records. Any
A records found are returned as IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses and
the
h_length is 16. The
AI_V4MAPPED flag is ignored unless
af equals
AF_INET6.
o The
AI_ALL flag is used in conjunction with the
AI_V4MAPPED flag, exclusively with the IPv6 address family. When
AI_ALL is
logically
ORed with
AI_V4MAPPED flag, the caller wants all
addresses: IPv6 and IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses. A query is
first made for
AAAA records and, if successful, IPv6 addresses
are returned. Another query is then made for
A records. Any
A records found are returned as IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses and
the
h_length is 16. Only when both queries fail does the
function return a
NULL pointer. The
AI_ALL flag is ignored
unless
af is set to
AF_INET6.
o The
AI_ADDRCONFIG flag specifies that a query for
AAAA records
should occur only when the node is configured with at least
one IPv6 source address. A query for
A records should occur
only when the node is configured with at least one IPv4 source
address. For example, if a node is configured with no IPv6
source addresses,
af equals
AF_INET6, and the node name
queried has both
AAAA and
A records, then:
o A
NULL pointer is returned when only the
AI_ADDRCONFIG value is specified.
o The
A records are returned as IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses
when the
AI_ADDRCONFIG and
AI_V4MAPPED values are
specified.
The special flags value,
AI_DEFAULT, is defined as
#define AI_DEFAULT (AI_V4MAPPED | AI_ADDRCONFIG)
The
getipnodebyname() function allows the
name argument to be a node name
or a literal address string: a dotted-decimal IPv4 address or an IPv6 hex
address. Applications do not have to call
inet_pton(3C) to handle literal
address strings.
Four scenarios arise based on the type of literal address string and the
value of the
af argument. The two simple cases occur when
name is a
dotted-decimal IPv4 address and
af equals
AF_INET and when
name is an
IPv6 hex address and
af equals
AF_INET6. The members of the returned
hostent structure are:
h_name Pointer to a copy of the name argument
h_aliases NULL pointer.
h_addrtype Copy of the
af argument.
h_length 4 for
AF_INET or 16 for
AF_INET6.
h_addr_list Array of pointers to 4-byte or 16-byte binary addresses.
The array is terminated by a
NULL pointer.
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion,
getipnodebyname() and
getipnodebyaddr() return a
hostent structure. Otherwise they return
NULL.
The
hostent structure does not change from the existing definition when
used with
gethostbyname(3NSL). For example, host entries are represented
by the
struct hostent structure defined in <
netdb.h>:
struct hostent {
char *h_name; /* canonical name of host */
char **h_aliases; /* alias list */
int h_addrtype; /* host address type */
int h_length; /* length of address */
char **h_addr_list; /* list of addresses */
};
An error occurs when
name is an IPv6 hex address and
af equals
AF_INET.
The return value of the function is a
NULL pointer and
error_num equals
HOST_NOT_FOUND.
The
getipnodebyaddr() function has the same arguments as the existing
gethostbyaddr(3NSL) function, but adds an error number. As with
getipnodebyname(),
getipnodebyaddr() is thread-safe. The
error_num value
is returned to the caller with the appropriate error code to support
thread-safe error code returns. The following error conditions can be
returned for
error_num:
HOST_NOT_FOUND Host is unknown.
NO_DATA No address is available for the
name specified in the
server request. This error is not a soft error.
Another type of
name server request might be
successful.
NO_RECOVERY An unexpected server failure occurred, which is a non-
recoverable error.
TRY_AGAIN This error is a soft error that indicates that the
local server did not receive a response from an
authoritative server. A retry at some later time might
be successful.
One possible source of confusion is the handling of IPv4-mapped IPv6
addresses and IPv4-compatible IPv6 addresses, but the following logic
should apply:
1. If
af is
AF_INET6, and if
len equals 16, and if the IPv6
address is an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address or an IPv4-compatible
IPv6 address, then skip over the first 12 bytes of the IPv6
address, set
af to
AF_INET, and set
len to 4.
2. If
af is
AF_INET, lookup the
name for the given IPv4 address.
3. If
af is
AF_INET6, lookup the
name for the given IPv6 address.
4. If the function is returning success, then the single address
that is returned in the
hostent structure is a copy of the
first argument to the function with the same address family
that was passed as an argument to this function.
All four steps listed are performed in order.
This structure, and the information pointed to by this structure, are
dynamically allocated by
getipnodebyname() and
getipnodebyaddr(). The
freehostent() function frees this memory.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Getting the Canonical Name, Aliases, and Internet IP Addresses
for a Given Hostname
The following is a sample program that retrieves the canonical name,
aliases, and all Internet IP addresses, both version 6 and version 4, for
a given hostname.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <netdb.h>
main(int argc, const char **argv)
{
char abuf[INET6_ADDRSTRLEN];
int error_num;
struct hostent *hp;
char **p;
if (argc != 2) {
(void) printf("usage: %s hostname\n", argv[0]);
exit (1);
}
/* argv[1] can be a pointer to a hostname or literal IP address */
hp = getipnodebyname(argv[1], AF_INET6, AI_ALL | AI_ADDRCONFIG |
AI_V4MAPPED, &error_num);
if (hp == NULL) {
if (error_num == TRY_AGAIN) {
printf("%s: unknown host or invalid literal address "
"(try again later)\n", argv[1]);
} else {
printf("%s: unknown host or invalid literal address\n",
argv[1]);
}
exit (1);
}
for (p = hp->h_addr_list; *p != 0; p++) {
struct in6_addr in6;
char **q;
bcopy(*p, (caddr_t)&in6, hp->h_length);
(void) printf("%s\t%s", inet_ntop(AF_INET6, (void *)&in6,
abuf, sizeof(abuf)), hp->h_name);
for (q = hp->h_aliases; *q != 0; q++)
(void) printf(" %s", *q);
(void) putchar('\n');
}
freehostent(hp);
exit (0);
}
ATTRIBUTES
See
attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+--------------------+-----------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+--------------------+-----------------+
|Interface Stability | Committed |
+--------------------+-----------------+
|MT-Level | Safe |
+--------------------+-----------------+
SEE ALSO
htonl(3C),
netdb.h(3HEAD),
gethostbyname(3NSL),
getaddrinfo(3SOCKET),
inet(3SOCKET),
hosts(5),
nsswitch.conf(5),
attributes(7)NOTES
No enumeration functions are provided for IPv6. Existing enumeration
functions such as
sethostent(3NSL) do not work in combination with the
getipnodebyname() and
getipnodebyaddr() functions.
All the functions that return a
struct hostent must always return the
canonical in the
h_name field. This name, by definition, is the well-
known and official hostname shared between all aliases and all addresses.
The underlying source that satisfies the request determines the mapping
of the input name or address into the set of names and addresses in
hostent. Different sources might make such as determination in different
ways. If more than one alias and more than one address in
hostent exist,
no pairing is implied between the alias and address.
The current implementations of these functions return or accept only
addresses for the Internet address family (type
AF_INET) or the Internet
address family Version 6 (type
AF_INET6).
IPv4-mapped addresses are not recommended. The
getaddrinfo(3SOCKET) function is preferred over
getipnodebyaddr() because it allows
applications to lookup IPv4 and IPv6 addresses without relying on
IPv4-mapped addresses.
The form for an address of type
AF_INET is a
struct in_addr defined in
<
netinet/in.h>. The form for an address of type
AF_INET6 is a
struct in6_addr, also defined in <
netinet/in.h>. The functions described in
inet_ntop(3C) and
inet_pton(3C) that are illustrated in the EXAMPLES
section are helpful in constructing and manipulating addresses in either
of these forms.
September 10, 2013
GETIPNODEBYNAME(3SOCKET)