NAME POE::Component::Client::DNS - non-blocking, parallel DNS client SYNOPSIS use POE qw(Component::Client::DNS); my $named = POE::Component::Client::DNS->spawn( Alias => "named" ); POE::Session->create( inline_states => { _start => \&start_tests, response => \&got_response, } ); POE::Kernel->run(); exit; sub start_tests { my $response = $named->resolve( event => "response", host => "localhost", context => { }, ); if ($response) { $_[KERNEL]->yield(response => $response); } } sub got_response { my $response = $_[ARG0]; my @answers = $response->{response}->answer(); foreach my $answer (@answers) { print( "$response->{host} = ", $answer->type(), " ", $answer->rdatastr(), "\n" ); } } DESCRIPTION POE::Component::Client::DNS provides non-blocking, parallel DNS requests via Net::DNS. Using POE, it allows other tasks to run while waiting for name servers to respond. For simple name resolution, including smart handling of IPv6 names, please see POE::Component::Resolver instead. PUBLIC METHODS spawn A program must spawn at least one POE::Component::Client::DNS instance before it can perform background DNS requests. Each instance represents a connection to one or more name servers. If a program only needs to request DNS requests from one server, then you only need one POE::Component::Client::DNS instance. As of version 0.98 you can override the default timeout per request. From this point forward there is no need to spawn multiple instances to affect different timeouts for each request. PoCo::Client::DNS's spawn method takes a few named parameters: Alias sets the component's alias. Requests will be posted to this alias. The component's alias defaults to "resolver" if one is not provided. Programs spawning more than one DNS client component must specify aliases for N-1 of them, otherwise alias collisions will occur. Alias => $session_alias, # defaults to "resolver" Timeout sets the component's default timeout. The timeout may be overridden per request. See the "request" event, later on. If no Timeout is set, the component will wait 90 seconds per request by default. Timeouts may be set to real numbers. Timeouts are more accurate if you have Time::HiRes installed. POE (and thus this component) will use Time::HiRes automatically if it's available. Timeout => $seconds_to_wait, # defaults to 90 Nameservers holds a reference to a list of name servers to try. The list is passed directly to Net::DNS::Resolver's nameservers() method. By default, POE::Component::Client::DNS will query the name servers that appear in /etc/resolv.conf or its equivalent. Nameservers => \@name_servers, # defaults to /etc/resolv.conf's HostsFile (optional) holds the name of a specific hosts file to use for resolving hardcoded addresses. By default, it looks for a file named /etc/hosts. On Windows systems, it may look in the following other places: $ENV{SystemRoot}\System32\Drivers\Etc\hosts $ENV{SystemRoot}\System\Drivers\Etc\hosts $ENV{SystemRoot}\hosts resolve resolve() requests the component to resolve a host name. It will return a hash reference (described in RESPONSE MESSAGES, below) if it can honor the request immediately (perhaps from a cache). Otherwise it returns undef if a resolver must be consulted asynchronously. Requests are passed as a list of named fields. $resolver->resolve( class => $dns_record_class, # defaults to "IN" type => $dns_record_type, # defaults to "A" host => $request_host, # required context => $request_context, # required event => $response_event, # required timeout => $request_timeout, # defaults to spawn()'s Timeout nameservers => $nameservers, # defaults to $resolver's Nameservers ); The "class" and "type" fields specify what kind of information to return about a host. Most of the time internet addresses are requested for host names, so the class and type default to "IN" (internet) and "A" (address), respectively. The "host" field designates the host to look up. It is required. The "event" field tells the component which event to send back when a response is available. It is required, but it will not be used if resolve() can immediately return a cached response. "timeout" tells the component how long to wait for a response to this request. It defaults to the "Timeout" given at spawn() time. "context" includes some external data that links responses back to their requests. The context data is provided by the program that uses POE::Component::Client::DNS. The component will pass the context back to the program without modification. The "context" parameter is required, and may contain anything that fits in a scalar. shutdown shutdown() causes the component to terminate gracefully. It will finish serving pending requests then close down. get_resolver POE::Component::Client::DNS uses a Net::DNS::Resolver object internally. get_resolver() returns that object so it may be interrogated or modified. See Net::DNS::Resolver for options. Set the resolver to check on nonstandard port 1153: $poco_client_dns->get_resolver()->port(1153); RESPONSE MESSAGES POE::Component::Client::DNS responds in one of two ways. Its resolve() method will return a response immediately if it can be found in the component's cache. Otherwise the component posts the response back in $_[ARG0]. In either case, the response is a hash reference containing the same fields: host => $request_host, type => $request_type, class => $request_class, context => $request_context, response => $net_dns_packet, error => $net_dns_error, The "host", "type", "class", and "context" response fields are identical to those given in the request message. "response" contains a Net::DNS::Packet object on success or undef if the lookup failed. The Net::DNS::Packet object describes the response to the program's request. It may contain several DNS records. Please consult Net::DNS and Net::DNS::Packet for more information. "error" contains a description of any error that has occurred. It is only valid if "response" is undefined. SEE ALSO POE - POE::Component::Client::DNS builds heavily on POE. POE::Component::Resolver - A system name resolver, including IPv6 support and whatever else your system supports. Net::DNS - This module uses Net::DNS internally. Net::DNS::Packet - Responses are returned as Net::DNS::Packet objects. DEPRECATIONS The older, list-based interfaces are no longer documented as of version 0.98. They are being phased out. The method-based interface, first implementedin version 0.98, will replace the deprecated interfaces after a six-month phase-out period. Version 0.98 was released in October of 2004. The deprecated interfaces will continue to work without warnings until January 2005. As of January 2005, programs that use the deprecated interfaces will continue to work, but they will generate mandatory warnings. Those warnings will persist until April 2005. As of April 2005 the mandatory warnings will be upgraded to mandatory errors. Support for the deprecated interfaces will be removed entirely. As of late January 2011, POE::Component::Resolver provides basic system resolver support, including IPv6 and mDNS if your resolver's configured ot use it. The use of POE::Component::Client::DNS for basic resolution is deprecated, however it's still the best option for actual DNS server requests. BUG TRACKER https://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=POE-Component-Client-DNS REPOSITORY http://github.com/rcaputo/poe-component-client-dns OTHER RESOURCES http://search.cpan.org/dist/POE-Component-Client-DNS/ AUTHOR & COPYRIGHTS POE::Component::Client::DNS is Copyright 1999-2009 by Rocco Caputo. All rights are reserved. POE::Component::Client::DNS is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. Postback arguments were contributed by tag.