NAME
Socket::GetAddrInfo
- address-family independent name resolving functions
SYNOPSIS
use Socket qw( SOCK_STREAM );
use Socket::GetAddrInfo qw( getaddrinfo getnameinfo );
use IO::Socket;
my %hints = ( socktype => SOCK_STREAM );
my ( $err, @res ) = getaddrinfo( "www.google.com", "www", \%hints );
die "Cannot resolve name - $err" if $err;
my $sock;
foreach my $ai ( @res ) {
my $candidate = IO::Socket->new();
$candidate->socket( $ai->{family}, $ai->{socktype}, $ai->{protocol} )
or next;
$candidate->connect( $ai->{addr} )
or next;
$sock = $candidate;
last;
}
if( $sock ) {
my ( $err, $host, $service ) = getnameinfo( $sock->peername );
print "Connected to $host:$service\n" if !$err;
}
DESCRIPTION
The RFC 2553 functions getaddrinfo
and getnameinfo
provide an abstracted way to convert between a pair of host name/service name and socket addresses, or vice versa. getaddrinfo
converts names into a set of arguments to pass to the socket()
and connect()
syscalls, and getnameinfo
converts a socket address back into its host name/service name pair.
These functions provide a useful interface for performing either of these name resolution operation, without having to deal with IPv4/IPv6 transparency, or whether the underlying host can support IPv6 at all, or other such issues. However, not all platforms can support the underlying calls at the C layer, which means a dilema for authors wishing to write forward-compatible code. Either to support these functions, and cause the code not to work on older platforms, or stick to the older "legacy" resolvers such as gethostbyname()
, which means the code becomes more portable.
This module attempts to solve this problem, by detecting at compiletime whether the underlying OS will support these functions. If it does not, the module will use pure-perl emulations of the functions using the legacy resolver functions instead. The emulations support the same interface as the real functions, and behave as close as is resonably possible to emulate using the legacy resolvers. See Socket::GetAddrInfo::Emul for details on the limits of this emulation.
As of Perl version 5.14.0, Perl already supports getaddrinfo
in core. On such a system, this module simply uses the functions provided by Socket
, and does not need to use its own compiled XS, or pure-perl legacy emulation.
As Socket
in core now provides all the functions also provided by this module, it is likely this may be the last released version of this module. And code currently using this module would be advised to switch to using core Socket
instead.
EXPORT TAGS
The following tags may be imported by use Socket::GetAddrInfo qw( :tag )
:
- AI
-
Imports all of the
AI_*
constants forgetaddrinfo
flags - NI
-
Imports all of the
NI_*
constants forgetnameinfo
flags - EAI
-
Imports all of the
EAI_*
for error values - constants
-
Imports all of the above constants
FUNCTIONS
( $err, @res ) = getaddrinfo( $host, $service, $hints )
getaddrinfo
turns human-readable text strings (containing hostnames, numeric addresses, service names, or port numbers) into sets of binary values containing socket-level representations of these addresses.
When given both host and service, this function attempts to resolve the host name to a set of network addresses, and the service name into a protocol and port number, and then returns a list of address structures suitable to connect() to it.
When given just a host name, this function attempts to resolve it to a set of network addresses, and then returns a list of these addresses in the returned structures.
When given just a service name, this function attempts to resolve it to a protocol and port number, and then returns a list of address structures that represent it suitable to bind() to.
When given neither name, it generates an error.
The optional $hints
parameter can be passed a HASH reference to indicate how the results are generated. It may contain any of the following four fields:
- flags => INT
-
A bitfield containing
AI_*
constants. At least the following flags will be available:AI_PASSIVE
Indicates that this resolution is for a local
bind()
for a passive (i.e. listening) socket, rather than an active (i.e. connecting) socket.AI_CANONNAME
Indicates that the caller wishes the canonical hostname (
canonname
) field of the result to be filled in.AI_NUMERICHOST
Indicates that the caller will pass a numeric address, rather than a hostname, and that
getaddrinfo
must not perform a resolve operation on this name. This flag will prevent a possibly-slow network lookup operation, and instead return an error, if a hostname is passed.
Other flags may be provided by the OS.
- family => INT
-
Restrict to only generating addresses in this address family
- socktype => INT
-
Restrict to only generating addresses of this socket type
- protocol => INT
-
Restrict to only generating addresses for this protocol
Errors are indicated by the $err
value returned; which will be non-zero in numeric context, and contain a string error message as a string. The value can be compared against any of the EAI_*
constants to determine what the error is. Rather than explicitly checking, see also Socket::GetAddrInfo::Strict which provides functions that throw exceptions on errors.
If no error occurs, @res
will contain HASH references, each representing one address. It will contain the following five fields:
- family => INT
-
The address family (e.g. AF_INET)
- socktype => INT
-
The socket type (e.g. SOCK_STREAM)
- protocol => INT
-
The protocol (e.g. IPPROTO_TCP)
- addr => STRING
-
The address in a packed string (such as would be returned by pack_sockaddr_in)
- canonname => STRING
-
The canonical name for the host if the
AI_CANONNAME
flag was provided, orundef
otherwise. This field will only be present on the first returned address.
( $err, $host, $service ) = getnameinfo( $addr, $flags, $xflags )
getnameinfo
turns a binary socket address into a pair of human-readable strings, containing the host name, numeric address, service name, or port number.
The optional $flags
parameter is a bitfield containing NI_*
constants. At least the following flags will be available:
NI_NUMERICHOST
Requests that a human-readable string representation of the numeric address is returned directly, rather than performing a name resolve operation that may convert it into a hostname.
NI_NUMERICSERV
Requests that the port number be returned directly as a number representation rather than performing a name resolve operation that may convert it into a service name.
NI_NAMEREQD
If a name resolve operation fails to provide a name, then this flag will cause
getnameinfo
to indicate an error, rather than returning the numeric representation as a human-readable string.NI_DGRAM
Indicates that the socket address relates to a
SOCK_DGRAM
socket, for the services whose name differs betweenTCP
andUDP
protocols.
Other flags may be provided by the OS.
The optional $xflags
parameter is a bitfield containing NIx_*
constants. These are a Perl-level extension to the API, to indicate extra information.
NIx_NOHOST
Indicates that the caller is not interested in the hostname of the result, so it does not have to be converted;
undef
will be returned as the hostname.NIx_NOSERV
Indicates that the caller is not interested in the service name of the result, so it does not have to be converted;
undef
will be returned as the service name.
Errors are indicated by the $err
value returned; which will be non-zero in numeric context, and contain a string error message as a string. The value can be compared against any of the EAI_*
constants to determine what the error is. Rather than explicitly checking, see also Socket::GetAddrInfo::Strict which provides functions that throw exceptions on errors.
EXAMPLES
Lookup for connect
The getaddrinfo
function converts a hostname and a service name into a list of structures, each containing a potential way to connect()
to the named service on the named host.
my %hints = ( socktype => SOCK_STREAM );
my ( $err, @res ) = getaddrinfo( $hostname, $servicename, \%hints );
die "Cannot getaddrinfo - $err" if $err;
my $sock;
foreach my $ai ( @res ) {
my $candidate = IO::Socket->new();
$candidate->socket( $ai->{family}, $ai->{socktype}, $ai->{protocol} )
or next;
$candidate->connect( $ai->{addr} )
or next;
$sock = $candidate;
last;
}
Because a list of potential candidates is returned, the while
loop tries each in turn until it it finds one that succeeds both the socket()
and connect()
calls.
This function performs the work of the legacy functions gethostbyname
, getservbyname
, inet_aton
and pack_sockaddr_in
.
Making a human-readable string out of an address
The getnameinfo
function converts a socket address, such as returned by getsockname
or getpeername
, into a pair of human-readable strings representing the address and service name.
my ( $err, $hostname, $servicename ) = getnameinfo( $socket->peername );
die "Cannot getnameinfo - $err" if $err;
print "The peer is connected from $hostname\n";
Since in this example only the hostname was used, the redundant conversion of the port number into a service name may be omitted by passing the NIx_NOSERV
flag.
my ( $err, $hostname ) = getnameinfo( $socket->peername, 0, NIx_NOSERV );
This function performs the work of the legacy functions unpack_sockaddr_in
, inet_ntoa
, gethostbyaddr
and getservbyport
.
Resolving hostnames into IP addresses
To turn a hostname into a human-readable plain IP address use getaddrinfo
to turn the hostname into a list of socket structures, then getnameinfo
on each one to make it a readable IP address again.
my ( $err, @res ) = getaddrinfo( $hostname, "", { socktype => SOCK_RAW } );
die "Cannot getaddrinfo - $err" if $err;
while( my $ai = shift @res ) {
my ( $err, $ipaddr ) = getnameinfo( $ai->{addr}, NI_NUMERICHOST, NIx_NOSERV );
die "Cannot getnameinfo - $err" if $err;
print "$ipaddr\n";
}
The socktype
hint to getaddrinfo
filters the results to only include one socket type and protocol. Without this most OSes return three combinations, for SOCK_STREAM
, SOCK_DGRAM
and SOCK_RAW
, resulting in triplicate output of addresses. The NI_NUMERICHOST
flag to getnameinfo
causes it to return a string-formatted plain IP address, rather than reverse resolving it back into a hostname.
This combination performs the work of the legacy functions gethostbyname
and inet_ntoa
.
BUILDING WITHOUT XS CODE
In some environments it may be preferred not to build the XS implementation, leaving a choice only of the core or pure-perl emulation implementations.
$ perl Build.PL --pp
or
$ PERL_SOCKET_GETADDRINFO_NO_BUILD_XS=1 perl Build.PL
BUGS
Appears to FAIL on older Darwin machines (e.g.
osvers=8.11.1
). The failure mode occurs in t/02getnameinfo.t and appears to relate to an endian bug; expecting to receive80
and instead receiving20480
(which is a 16-bit80
byte-swapped).
SEE ALSO
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2553 - Basic Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Christian Hansen <chansen@cpan.org> - for help with some XS features and Win32 build fixes.
Zefram <zefram@fysh.org> - for help with fixing some bugs in the XS code.
Reini Urban <rurban@cpan.org> - for help with older perls and more Win32 build fixes.
AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>