(PHP 5, PHP 7)
dns_get_record — Fetch DNS Resource Records associated with a hostname
$hostname
[, int $type
= DNS_ANY
[, array &$authns
[, array &$addtl
[, bool $raw
= FALSE
]]]] ) : array
Fetch DNS Resource Records associated with the given
hostname
.
hostname
hostname
should be a valid DNS hostname such
as "www.example.com
". Reverse lookups can be generated
using in-addr.arpa
notation, but
gethostbyaddr() is more suitable for
the majority of reverse lookups.
Note:
Per DNS standards, email addresses are given in
user.host
format (for example:hostmaster.example.com
as opposed tohostmaster@example.com
), be sure to check this value and modify if necessary before using it with a functions such as mail().
type
By default, dns_get_record() will search for any
resource records associated with hostname
.
To limit the query, specify the optional type
parameter. May be any one of the following:
DNS_A
, DNS_CNAME
,
DNS_HINFO
, DNS_CAA
,
DNS_MX
, DNS_NS
,
DNS_PTR
, DNS_SOA
,
DNS_TXT
, DNS_AAAA
,
DNS_SRV
, DNS_NAPTR
,
DNS_A6
, DNS_ALL
or DNS_ANY
.
Note:
Because of eccentricities in the performance of libresolv between platforms,
DNS_ANY
will not always return every record, the slowerDNS_ALL
will collect all records more reliably.
Note:
DNS_CAA
is not supported on Windows.
authns
Passed by reference and, if given, will be populated with Resource Records for the Authoritative Name Servers.
addtl
Passed by reference and, if given, will be populated with any Additional Records.
raw
The type
will be interpreted as a raw DNS type ID
(the DNS_*
constants cannot be used).
The return value will contain a data
key, which needs
to be manually parsed.
This function returns an array of associative arrays,
or FALSE
on failure. Each associative array contains
at minimum the following keys:
Attribute | Meaning |
---|---|
host | The record in the DNS namespace to which the rest of the associated data refers. |
class |
dns_get_record() only returns Internet class records and as
such this parameter will always return IN .
|
type | String containing the record type. Additional attributes will also be contained in the resulting array dependant on the value of type. See table below. |
ttl |
"Time To Live" remaining for this record. This will not equal
the record's original ttl, but will rather equal the original ttl minus whatever
length of time has passed since the authoritative name server was queried.
|
Type | Extra Columns |
---|---|
A |
ip : An IPv4 addresses in dotted decimal notation.
|
MX |
pri : Priority of mail exchanger.
Lower numbers indicate greater priority.
target : FQDN of the mail exchanger.
See also dns_get_mx().
|
CNAME |
target : FQDN of location in DNS namespace to which
the record is aliased.
|
NS |
target : FQDN of the name server which is authoritative
for this hostname.
|
PTR |
target : Location within the DNS namespace to which
this record points.
|
TXT |
txt : Arbitrary string data associated with this record.
|
HINFO |
cpu : IANA number designating the CPU of the machine
referenced by this record.
os : IANA number designating the Operating System on
the machine referenced by this record.
See IANA's » Operating System
Names for the meaning of these values.
|
CAA |
flags : A one-byte bitfield; currently only bit 0 is defined,
meaning 'critical'; other bits are reserved and should be ignored.
tag : The CAA tag name (alphanumeric ASCII string).
value : The CAA tag value (binary string, may use subformats).
For additional information see: » RFC 6844
|
SOA |
mname : FQDN of the machine from which the resource
records originated.
rname : Email address of the administrative contact
for this domain.
serial : Serial # of this revision of the requested
domain.
refresh : Refresh interval (seconds) secondary name
servers should use when updating remote copies of this domain.
retry : Length of time (seconds) to wait after a
failed refresh before making a second attempt.
expire : Maximum length of time (seconds) a secondary
DNS server should retain remote copies of the zone data without a
successful refresh before discarding.
minimum-ttl : Minimum length of time (seconds) a
client can continue to use a DNS resolution before it should request
a new resolution from the server. Can be overridden by individual
resource records.
|
AAAA |
ipv6 : IPv6 address
|
A6 (PHP >= 5.1.0) |
masklen : Length (in bits) to inherit from the target
specified by chain .
ipv6 : Address for this specific record to merge with
chain .
chain : Parent record to merge with
ipv6 data.
|
SRV |
pri : (Priority) lowest priorities should be used first.
weight : Ranking to weight which of commonly prioritized
targets should be chosen at random.
target and port : hostname and port
where the requested service can be found.
For additional information see: » RFC 2782
|
NAPTR |
order and pref : Equivalent to
pri and weight above.
flags , services , regex ,
and replacement : Parameters as defined by
» RFC 2915.
|
Version | Description |
---|---|
7.0.16, 7.1.2 | Added support for CAA record type. |
5.4.0 |
Added raw parameter.
|
5.3.0 | This function is now available on Windows platforms. |
5.3.0 |
Prior to this release, if the authns parameter
was given, the addtl parameter was also
required.
|
Example #1 Using dns_get_record()
<?php
$result = dns_get_record("php.net");
print_r($result);
?>
The above example will output something similar to:
Array ( [0] => Array ( [host] => php.net [type] => MX [pri] => 5 [target] => pair2.php.net [class] => IN [ttl] => 6765 ) [1] => Array ( [host] => php.net [type] => A [ip] => 64.246.30.37 [class] => IN [ttl] => 8125 ) )
Example #2 Using dns_get_record() and DNS_ANY
Since it's very common to want the IP address of a mail server
once the MX record has been resolved, dns_get_record()
also returns an array in addtl
which
contains associate records. authns
is returned as well containing a list of authoritative name
servers.
<?php
/* Request "ANY" record for php.net,
and create $authns and $addtl arrays
containing list of name servers and
any additional records which go with
them */
$result = dns_get_record("php.net", DNS_ANY, $authns, $addtl);
echo "Result = ";
print_r($result);
echo "Auth NS = ";
print_r($authns);
echo "Additional = ";
print_r($addtl);
?>
The above example will output something similar to:
Result = Array ( [0] => Array ( [host] => php.net [type] => MX [pri] => 5 [target] => pair2.php.net [class] => IN [ttl] => 6765 ) [1] => Array ( [host] => php.net [type] => A [ip] => 64.246.30.37 [class] => IN [ttl] => 8125 ) ) Auth NS = Array ( [0] => Array ( [host] => php.net [type] => NS [target] => remote1.easydns.com [class] => IN [ttl] => 10722 ) [1] => Array ( [host] => php.net [type] => NS [target] => remote2.easydns.com [class] => IN [ttl] => 10722 ) [2] => Array ( [host] => php.net [type] => NS [target] => ns1.easydns.com [class] => IN [ttl] => 10722 ) [3] => Array ( [host] => php.net [type] => NS [target] => ns2.easydns.com [class] => IN [ttl] => 10722 ) ) Additional = Array ( [0] => Array ( [host] => pair2.php.net [type] => A [ip] => 216.92.131.5 [class] => IN [ttl] => 6766 ) [1] => Array ( [host] => remote1.easydns.com [type] => A [ip] => 64.39.29.212 [class] => IN [ttl] => 100384 ) [2] => Array ( [host] => remote2.easydns.com [type] => A [ip] => 212.100.224.80 [class] => IN [ttl] => 81241 ) [3] => Array ( [host] => ns1.easydns.com [type] => A [ip] => 216.220.40.243 [class] => IN [ttl] => 81241 ) [4] => Array ( [host] => ns2.easydns.com [type] => A [ip] => 216.220.40.244 [class] => IN [ttl] => 81241 ) )