Scroll to navigation

Mail::SpamAssassin::DnsResolver(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Mail::SpamAssassin::DnsResolver(3pm)
 

NAME

Mail::SpamAssassin::DnsResolver - DNS resolution engine

DESCRIPTION

This is a DNS resolution engine for SpamAssassin, implemented in order to reduce file descriptor usage by Net::DNS and avoid a response collision bug in that module.

METHODS

$res->load_resolver()
Load the "Net::DNS::Resolver" object. Returns 0 if Net::DNS cannot be used, 1 if it is available.
$resolver = $res->get_resolver()
Return the "Net::DNS::Resolver" object.
$res->configured_nameservers()
Get a list of nameservers as configured by dns_server directives or as provided by Net::DNS, typically from /etc/resolv.conf
$res->available_nameservers()
Get or set a list of currently available nameservers, which is typically a known-to-be-good subset of configured nameservers
$res->connect_sock()
Re-connect to the first nameserver listed in "/etc/resolv.conf" or similar platform-dependent source, as provided by "Net::DNS".
$res->get_sock()
Return the "IO::Socket::INET" object used to communicate with the nameserver.
$packet = new_dns_packet ($domain, $type, $class)
A wrapper for "Net::DNS::Packet::new()" which traps a die thrown by it.
To use this, change calls to "Net::DNS::Resolver::bgsend" from:
    $res->bgsend($domain, $type);
    
to:
    $res->bgsend(Mail::SpamAssassin::DnsResolver::new_dns_packet($domain, $type, $class));
    
$id = $res->bgsend($domain, $type, $class, $cb)
Quite similar to "Net::DNS::Resolver::bgsend", except that when a reply packet eventually arrives, and "poll_responses" is called, the callback sub reference $cb will be called.
Note that $type and $class may be "undef", in which case they will default to "A" and "IN", respectively.
The callback sub will be called with three arguments -- the packet that was delivered, and an id string that fingerprints the query packet and the expected reply. The third argument is a timestamp (Unix time, floating point), captured at the time the packet was collected. It is expected that a closure callback be used, like so:
  my $id = $self->{resolver}->bgsend($domain, $type, undef, sub {
        my ($reply, $reply_id, $timestamp) = @_;
        $self->got_a_reply ($reply, $reply_id);
      });
    
The callback can ignore the reply as an invalid packet sent to the listening port if the reply id does not match the return value from bgsend.
$nfound = $res->poll_responses()
See if there are any "bgsend" reply packets ready, and return the number of such packets delivered to their callbacks.
$res->bgabort()
Call this to release pending requests from memory, when aborting backgrounded requests, or when the scan is complete. "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus::check" calls this before returning.
$packet = $res->send($name, $type, $class)
Emulates "Net::DNS::Resolver::send()".
This subroutine is a simple synchronous leftover from SpamAssassin version 3.3 and does not participate in packet query caching and callback grouping as implemented by AsyncLoop::bgsend_and_start_lookup(). As such it should be avoided for mainstream usage.
$res->errorstring()
Little more than a stub for callers expecting this from "Net::DNS::Resolver".
If called immediately after a call to $res->send this will return "query timed out" if the $res->send DNS query timed out. Otherwise "unknown error or no error" will be returned.
No other errors are reported.
$res->finish_socket()
Reset socket when done with it.
$res->finish()
Clean up for destruction.
2017-05-06 perl v5.20.2