host.1 revision 40f53fa8d9c6a4fc38c0014495e7a42b08f52481
Copyright (C) 2000 Internet Software Consortium.

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$Id: host.1,v 1.3 2000/08/01 01:18:42 tale Exp $

.Dd Jun 30, 2000 .Dt HOST 1 .Os BIND9 9 .Sh NAME .Nm host .Nd DNS lookup utility .Sh SYNOPSIS .Nm host .Op Fl aCdlrTwv .Op Fl c Ar class .Op Fl N Ar ndots .Op Fl R Ar number .Op Fl t Ar type .Op Fl W Ar wait .Ar name .Op Ar server .Sh DESCRIPTION .Nm host is a simple utility for performing DNS lookups. It is normally used to convert names to IP addresses and vice versa. When no arguments or options are given, .Nm host prints a short summary of its command line arguments and options.

p .Ar name is the domain name that is to be looked up. It can also be a dotted-decimal string representing an IPv4 address, in which case .Nm host will by default perform a reverse lookup for that address. .Ar server is an optional argument which is either the name or IP address of the name server that .Nm host should query instead of the server or servers listed in

a /etc/resolv.conf .

p The .Fl a (all) option is equivalent to setting the .Fl v option and asking .Nm host to make a query of type ANY.

p When the .Fl C option is used, .Nm host will attempt to display the SOA records for zone .Ar name from all the listed authoritative name servers for that zone. The list of name servers is defined by the NS records that are found for the zone.

p The .Fl c option instructs to make a DNS query of class .Ar class . This can be used to lookup Hesiod or Chaosnet class resource records. The default class is IN: Internet.

p Verbose output is generated by .Nm host when the .Fl d or .Fl v option is used. The two options are equivalent. They have been provided for backwards compatibility. In previous versions, the .Fl d option switched on debugging traces and .Fl v enabled verbose output.

p List mode is selected by the .Fl l option. This makes .Nm host perform a zone transfer for zone .Ar name . The argument is provided for compatibility with older implemementations. This option is equivalent to making a query of type AXFR.

p The .Fl N option sets the number of dots that have to be in .Ar name before the root name servers are queried for that name. The default number of dots is zero. Unlike previous versions of .Nm host , the BIND9 implementation does not append domain names from the .Dv domain or .Dv search directives in

a /etc/resolv.conf . Therefore .Ar name should be a fully-qualified domain name.

p The number of UDP retries for a lookup can be changed with the .Fl R option. .Ar number indicates how many times .Nm host will repeat a query that does not get answered. The default number of retries is 1. If .Ar number is negative or zero, the number of retries will default to 1.

p Non-recursive queries can be made via the .Fl r option. Setting this option clears the .Dv RD - recursion desired - bit in the query which .Nm host makes. This should mean that the name server receiving the query will not attemp to resolve .Ar name . The .Fl r option enables .Nm host to mimic the behaviour of a name server by making non-recursive queries and expecting to receive answers to those queries that are usually referrals to other name servers.

p By default .Nm host uses UDP when making queries. The .Fl T option makes it use a TCP connection when querying the name server. TCP queries will be automatically made when the query type requires that a TCP connection: zone transfer (AXFR) requests for example.

p The .Fl t option is used to select the query type. .Ar type can be any recognised query type: CNAME, NS, SOA, SIG, KEY, AXFR, etc. When no query type is specified, .Nm host automatically selects an appropriate query type. By default it looks for A records unless the .Fl C option is supplied or .Ar name is a dotted-decimal IPv4 address. These will make .Nm host look for SOA and PTR records respectively.

p The time to wait for a reply can be controlled through the .Fl W and .Fl w options. The .Fl W option makes .Nm host wait for .Ar wait seconds. If .Ar wait is less than one, the wait interval is set to one second. When the .Fl w option is used, .Nm host will effectively wait forever for a reply. The time to wait for a response will be set to the number of seconds given by the hardware's maximum value for an integer quantity. .Sh FILES

a /etc/resolv.conf .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr dig 1 , .Xr resolver 5 .Xr named 8 . .Sh BUGS .Nm host does not yet know how to handle command line arguments that are IPv6 addresses, even though the record types for those addresses are fully supported by the BIND9 DNS library.

p Apart from this self-contradicting sentence, the .Fl D option is undocumented.