Mail::SpamAssassin::DnsResolver - DNS resolution engine
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.
Load the Net::DNS::Resolver
object. Returns 0 if Net::DNS cannot be used,
1 if it is available.
Return the Net::DNS::Resolver
object.
Wrapper for Net::DNS::Resolver->nameservers to get or set list of nameservers
Re-connect to the first nameserver listed in /etc/resolv.conf
or similar
platform-dependent source, as provided by Net::DNS
.
Return the IO::Socket::INET
object used to communicate with
the nameserver.
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:
$res->bgsend($hostname, $type);
to:
$res->bgsend(Mail::SpamAssassin::DnsResolver::new_dns_packet($hostname, $type, $class));
Quite similar to Net::DNS::Resolver::bgsend
, except that when a response
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 = $self->{resolver}->bgsend($host, $type, undef, sub { my ($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.
See if there are any bgsend
response packets ready, and return
the number of such packets delivered to their callbacks.
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.
Emulates Net::DNS::Resolver::send()
.
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.
Reset socket when done with it.
Clean up for destruction.