NAME

Net::DNSServer::SharedCache - IPC::SharedCache DNS Cache resolver

SYNOPSIS

#!/usr/bin/perl -w -T
use strict;
use Net::DNSServer;
use Net::DNSServer::SharedCache;

my $resolver1 = new Net::DNSServer::SharedCache {
  ipc_key  => "DNSk",
  max_size => 0,
  fresh    => 1,
};
my $resolver2 = ... another resolver object ...;
run Net::DNSServer {
  priority => [$resolver1,$resolver2],
};

DESCRIPTION

A Net::DNSServer::Base which uses IPC::SharedCache to implement a DNS Cache in shared memory to allow the cache to be shared across processes. This is useful if the server forks (Net::Server::PreFork).

This resolver will cache responses that another module resolves complying with the corresponding TTL of the response. It cannot provide resolution for a request unless it already exists within its cache. This resolver is useful for servers that may fork, because all processes will be able to access the same cache in shared memory.

new

The new() method takes a hash ref of properties.

ipc_key (required)

ipc_key is required by IPC::SharedCache to tie a portion of shared memory. It can be specified as either a four-character string or an integer value. (Passed to the tie call.)

max_size (optional)

This value is specified in bytes. It defaults to 0, which specifies no limit on the size of the cache. Turning this feature on costs a fair ammount of performance. (Passed to the tie call.)

fresh (optional)

Whether or not to use a fresh cache at server startup. 0 means to reuse the cache under the ipc_key specified if one exists. 1 means to start fresh and to release the shared memory at server startup and shutdown and restart. It defaults to 0 meaning it will not cleanup the shared memory segments it creates.

Use ipcs and ipcrm to manually manage the shared memory segments if necessary.

AUTHOR

Rob Brown, rob@roobik.com

SEE ALSO

See IPC::SharedCache for more details on ipc_key and max_size.

Net::Server::PreFork

ipcs(8), ipcrm(8)

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2001, Rob Brown. All rights reserved. Net::DNSServer is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

$Id: SharedCache.pm,v 1.4 2002/04/08 07:01:17 rob Exp $