DOC HOME SITE MAP MAN PAGES GNU INFO SEARCH PRINT BOOK
 

lwres_endhostent_r(3)





NAME

       lwres_gethostbyname, lwres_gethostbyname2, lwres_gethostbyaddr,
       lwres_gethostent, lwres_sethostent, lwres_endhostent,
       lwres_gethostbyname_r, lwres_gethostbyaddr_r, lwres_gethostent_r,
       lwres_sethostent_r, lwres_endhostent_r - lightweight resolver get
       network host entry


SYNOPSIS

       #include <lwres/netdb.h>

       struct hostent * lwres_gethostbyname(const char *name);

       struct hostent * lwres_gethostbyname2(const char *name, int af);

       struct hostent * lwres_gethostbyaddr(const char *addr, int len,
                                            int type);

       struct hostent * lwres_gethostent(void);

       void lwres_sethostent(int stayopen);

       void lwres_endhostent(void);

       struct hostent * lwres_gethostbyname_r(const char *name,
                                              struct hostent *resbuf,
                                              char *buf, int buflen,
                                              int *error);

       struct hostent * lwres_gethostbyaddr_r(const char *addr, int len,
                                              int type,
                                              struct hostent *resbuf,
                                              char *buf, int buflen,
                                              int *error);

       struct hostent * lwres_gethostent_r(struct hostent *resbuf, char *buf,
                                           int buflen, int *error);

       void lwres_sethostent_r(int stayopen);

       void lwres_endhostent_r(void);


DESCRIPTION

       These functions provide hostname-to-address and address-to-hostname
       lookups by means of the lightweight resolver. They are similar to the
       standard gethostent(3) functions provided by most operating systems.
       They use a struct hostent which is usually defined in <namedb.h>.

           struct  hostent {
                   char    *h_name;        /* official 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 from name server */
           };
           #define h_addr  h_addr_list[0]  /* address, for backward compatibility */

       The members of this structure are:

       h_name
           The official (canonical) name of the host.

       h_aliases
           A NULL-terminated array of alternate names (nicknames) for the
           host.

       h_addrtype
           The type of address being returned -- PF_INET or PF_INET6.

       h_length
           The length of the address in bytes.

       h_addr_list
           A NULL terminated array of network addresses for the host. Host
           addresses are returned in network byte order.

       For backward compatibility with very old software, h_addr is the first
       address in h_addr_list.

       lwres_gethostent(), lwres_sethostent(), lwres_endhostent(),
       lwres_gethostent_r(), lwres_sethostent_r() and lwres_endhostent_r()
       provide iteration over the known host entries on systems that provide
       such functionality through facilities like /etc/hosts or NIS. The
       lightweight resolver does not currently implement these functions; it
       only provides them as stub functions that always return failure.

       lwres_gethostbyname() and lwres_gethostbyname2() look up the hostname
       name.  lwres_gethostbyname() always looks for an IPv4 address while
       lwres_gethostbyname2() looks for an address of protocol family af:
       either PF_INET or PF_INET6 -- IPv4 or IPV6 addresses respectively.
       Successful calls of the functions return a struct hostentfor the name
       that was looked up.  NULL is returned if the lookups by
       lwres_gethostbyname() or lwres_gethostbyname2() fail.

       Reverse lookups of addresses are performed by lwres_gethostbyaddr().
       addr is an address of length len bytes and protocol family type --
       PF_INET or PF_INET6.  lwres_gethostbyname_r() is a thread-safe function
       for forward lookups. If an error occurs, an error code is returned in
       *error.  resbuf is a pointer to a struct hostent which is initialised
       by a successful call to lwres_gethostbyname_r().  buf is a buffer of
       length len bytes which is used to store the h_name, h_aliases, and
       h_addr_list elements of the struct hostent returned in resbuf.
       Successful calls to lwres_gethostbyname_r() return resbuf, which is a
       pointer to the struct hostent it created.

       lwres_gethostbyaddr_r() is a thread-safe function that performs a
       reverse lookup of address addr which is len bytes long and is of
       protocol family type -- PF_INET or PF_INET6. If an error occurs, the
       error code is returned in *error. The other function parameters are
       identical to those in lwres_gethostbyname_r().  resbuf is a pointer to
       a struct hostent which is initialised by a successful call to
       lwres_gethostbyaddr_r().  buf is a buffer of length len bytes which is
       used to store the h_name, h_aliases, and h_addr_list elements of the
       struct hostent returned in resbuf. Successful calls to
       lwres_gethostbyaddr_r() return resbuf, which is a pointer to the struct
       hostent() it created.


RETURN VALUES

       The functions lwres_gethostbyname(), lwres_gethostbyname2(),
       lwres_gethostbyaddr(), and lwres_gethostent() return NULL to indicate
       an error. In this case the global variable lwres_h_errno will contain
       one of the following error codes defined in <lwres/netdb.h>:

       HOST_NOT_FOUND
           The host or address was not found.

       TRY_AGAIN
           A recoverable error occurred, e.g., a timeout. Retrying the lookup
           may succeed.

       NO_RECOVERY
           A non-recoverable error occurred.

       NO_DATA
           The name exists, but has no address information associated with it
           (or vice versa in the case of a reverse lookup). The code
           NO_ADDRESS is accepted as a synonym for NO_DATA for backwards
           compatibility.

       lwres_hstrerror(3) translates these error codes to suitable error
       messages.

       lwres_gethostent() and lwres_gethostent_r() always return NULL.

       Successful calls to lwres_gethostbyname_r() and lwres_gethostbyaddr_r()
       return resbuf, a pointer to the struct hostent that was initialised by
       these functions. They return NULL if the lookups fail or if buf was too
       small to hold the list of addresses and names referenced by the h_name,
       h_aliases, and h_addr_list elements of the struct hostent. If buf was
       too small, both lwres_gethostbyname_r() and lwres_gethostbyaddr_r() set
       the global variable errno to ERANGE.


SEE ALSO

       gethostent(3), lwres_getipnode(3), lwres_hstrerror(3)


BUGS

       lwres_gethostbyname(), lwres_gethostbyname2(), lwres_gethostbyaddr()
       and lwres_endhostent() are not thread safe; they return pointers to
       static data and provide error codes through a global variable.
       Thread-safe versions for name and address lookup are provided by
       lwres_gethostbyname_r(), and lwres_gethostbyaddr_r() respectively.

       The resolver daemon does not currently support any non-DNS name
       services such as /etc/hosts or NIS, consequently the above functions
       don't, either.


AUTHOR

       Internet Systems Consortium, Inc.


COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2004, 2005, 2007, 2014-2016 Internet Systems Consortium,
       Inc. ("ISC")
       Copyright (C) 2001 Internet Software Consortium.

ISC                               2007-06-18               LWRES_GETHOSTENT(3)

Man(1) output converted with man2html