ARES_SEND

Section: C Library Functions (3)
Updated: 25 July 1998
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NAME

ares_send - Initiate a DNS query  

SYNOPSIS

#include <ares.h>

typedef void (*ares_callback)(void *arg, int status,

void ares_send(ares_channel channel, const unsigned char *qbuf,
int qlen, ares_callback callback, void *arg)
 

DESCRIPTION

The ares_send function initiates a DNS query on the name service channel identified by channel. The parameters qbuf and qlen give the DNS query, which should already have been formatted according to the DNS protocol. When the query is complete or has failed, the ares library will invoke callback. Completion or failure of the query may happen immediately, or may happen during a later call to ares_process(3) or ares_destroy(3).

The callback argument arg is copied from the ares_send argument arg. The callback argument status indicates whether the query succeeded and, if not, how it failed. It may have any of the following values:

ARES_SUCCESS
The query completed.
ARES_EBADQUERY
The query buffer was poorly formed (was not long enough for a DNS header or was too long for TCP transmission).
ARES_ETIMEOUT
No name servers responded within the timeout period.
ARES_ECONNREFUSED
No name servers could be contacted.
ARES_ENOMEM
Memory was exhausted.
ARES_ECANCELLED
The query was cancelled.
ARES_EDESTRUCTION
The name service channel channel is being destroyed; the query will not be completed.

The callback argument timeouts reports how many times a query timed out during the execution of the given request.

If the query completed, the callback argument abuf points to a result buffer of length alen. If the query did not complete, abuf will be NULL and alen will be 0.

Unless the flag ARES_FLAG_NOCHECKRESP was set at channel initialization time, ares_send will normally ignore responses whose questions do not match the questions in qbuf, as well as responses with reply codes of SERVFAIL, NOTIMP, and REFUSED. Unlike other query functions in the ares library, however, ares_send does not inspect the header of the reply packet to determine the error status, so a callback status of ARES_SUCCESS does not reflect as much about the response as for other query functions.  

SEE ALSO

ares_process(3)  

AUTHOR

Greg Hudson, MIT Information Systems
Copyright 1998 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.


 

Index

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR