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package Net::DNS::Domain; # # $Id: Domain.pm 1096 2012-12-28 13:35:15Z willem $ # use vars qw($VERSION); $VERSION = (qw$LastChangedRevision: 1096 $)[1]; # Unchanged since 1055 =head1 NAME Net::DNS::Domain - Domain Name System domains =head1 SYNOPSIS use Net::DNS::Domain; $domain = new Net::DNS::Domain('example.com'); $name = $domain->name; =head1 DESCRIPTION The Net::DNS::Domain module implements a class of abstract DNS domain objects with associated class and instance methods. Each domain object instance represents a single DNS domain which has a fixed identity throughout its lifetime. Internally, the primary representation is a (possibly empty) list of ASCII domain name labels, and optional link to an arbitrary origin domain object topologically closer to the DNS root. The presentation form of the domain name is generated on demand and the result cached within the object. =cut use strict; use integer; use Carp; use constant ASCII => eval { require Encode; Encode::find_encoding('ASCII'); # return encoding object } || 0; use constant UTF8 => eval { die if Encode::decode_utf8( chr(91) ) ne '['; # not UTF-EBCDIC [see UTR#16 3.6] Encode::find_encoding('UTF8'); # return encoding object } || 0; use constant LIBIDN => eval { require Net::LibIDN; # tested and working UTF8 && Net::LibIDN::idn_to_ascii( pack( 'U*', 20013, 22269 ), 'utf-8' ) eq 'xn--fiqs8s'; } || 0; =head1 METHODS =head2 new $object = new Net::DNS::Domain('example.com'); Creates a domain object which represents the DNS domain specified by the character string argument. The argument consists of a sequence of labels delimited by dots. A character preceded by \ represents itself, without any special interpretation. Arbitrary 8-bit codes can be represented by \ followed by exactly three decimal digits. Character code points are ASCII, irrespective of the character coding scheme employed by the underlying platform. Argument string literals should be delimited by single quotes to avoid escape sequences being interpreted as octal character codes by the Perl compiler. The character string presentation format follows the conventions for zone files described in RFC1035. =cut use vars qw($ORIGIN); sub new { my $self = bless {}, shift; local $_ = shift; croak 'domain identifier undefined' unless defined $_; $self->{origin} = $ORIGIN if $ORIGIN && not /\.$/; # dynamically scoped $ORIGIN if (/\\/) { s/\\\\/\\092/g; # disguise escaped escape s/\\\./\\046/g; # disguise escaped dot @{$self->{label}} = map _unescape( _encode_ascii($_) ), split /\.+/; } elsif ( $_ ne '@' ) { @{$self->{label}} = split /\056+/, _encode_ascii($_); } foreach ( @{$self->{label}} ) { next if ( length($_) || croak 'unexpected null domain label' ) < 64; carp length($_) . ' octet domain label truncated'; substr( $_, 63 ) = ''; } return $self; } =head2 name $name = $domain->name; Returns the domain name as a character string corresponding to the "common interpretation" to which RFC1034, 3.1, paragraph 9 alludes. Character escape sequences are used to represent a dot inside a domain name label and the escape character itself. Any non-printable code point is represented using the appropriate numerical escape sequence. =cut my $dot = _decode_ascii( pack 'C', 46 ); sub name { my $self = shift; return $self->{name} if $self->{name}; my @label = map _decode_ascii( _escape($_) ), @{$self->{label}}; return $self->{name} = join( $dot, @label, $self->{origin}->name ) if $self->{origin}; return $self->{name} = join( $dot, @label ) || $dot; } =head2 fqdn @fqdn = $domain->fqdn; Returns a character string containing the fully qualified domain name, including the trailing dot. =cut sub fqdn { my $name = &name; return $name =~ /[$dot]$/o ? $name : $name . $dot; # append trailing dot } =head2 xname $xname = $domain->xname; Interprets an extended name containing Unicode domain name labels encoded as Punycode A-labels. Domain names containing Unicode characters are supported if the Net::LibIDN module is installed. =cut sub xname { return &name unless LIBIDN; my $name = &name; return $name unless $name =~ /xn--/; my $self = shift; return $self->{xname} ||= UTF8->decode( Net::LibIDN::idn_to_unicode( $name, 'utf-8' ) || $name ); } =head2 label @label = $domain->label; Identifies the domain by means of a list of domain labels. =cut sub label { my $self = shift; my @label = map _decode_ascii( _escape($_) ), @{$self->{label}} unless LIBIDN; my @xlabel = map UTF8->decode( Net::LibIDN::idn_to_unicode( _escape($_), 'utf-8' ) ), @{$self->{label}} if LIBIDN; return ( @label, @xlabel ) unless $self->{origin}; return ( @label, @xlabel, $self->{origin}->label ); } =head2 string $string = $object->string; Returns a character string containing the fully qualified domain name as it appears in a zone file. Characters which are recognised by RFC1035 zone file syntax are represented by the appropriate escape sequence. =cut sub string { my $name = &name; $name =~ s/^(['"\$;@])/\\$1/; # escape leading special char return $name =~ /[$dot]$/o ? $name : $name . $dot; # append trailing dot } =head2 origin $create = origin Net::DNS::Domain( $ORIGIN ); $result = &$create( sub{ new Net::DNS::RR( 'mx MX 10 a' ); } ); $expect = new Net::DNS::RR( "mx.$ORIGIN. MX 10 a.$ORIGIN." ); Class method which returns a reference to a subroutine wrapper which executes a given constructor in a dynamically scoped context where relative names are rooted at the specified $ORIGIN. =cut sub origin { my $class = shift; my $name = shift || ''; return sub { my $constructor = shift; &$constructor; } # absolute names unless $name =~ /[^.]/; my $domain = new Net::DNS::Domain($name); return sub { # closure w.r.t. $domain local $ORIGIN = $domain; # dynamically scoped $ORIGIN my $constructor = shift; &$constructor; } } ######################################## use vars qw($AUTOLOAD); sub AUTOLOAD { ## Default method no strict; @_ = ("method $AUTOLOAD undefined"); goto &{'Carp::confess'}; } sub DESTROY { } ## Avoid tickling AUTOLOAD (in cleanup) sub _decode_ascii { return ASCII->decode(shift) if ASCII; unless (ASCII) { my $s = shift; # partial transliteration for non-ASCII character encodings $s =~ tr [\055\041-\054\056-\176\000-\377] [-!"#$%&'()*+,./0-9:;<=>?@A-Z\[\\\]^_`a-z{|}~?]; return $s; # native 8-bit code } } sub _encode_ascii { return Net::LibIDN::idn_to_ascii( shift, 'utf-8' ) || croak 'invalid name' if UTF8 && $_[0] =~ /[^\000-\177]/; return ASCII->encode(shift) if ASCII; unless (ASCII) { my $s = shift; # partial transliteration for non-ASCII character encodings $s =~ tr [-!"#$%&'()*+,./0-9:;<=>?@A-Z\[\\\]^_`a-z{|}~\000-\377] [\055\041-\054\056-\176\077]; return $s; # ASCII } } my %esc = eval { ## precalculated ASCII escape table my %table; foreach ( 33 .. 126 ) { # ASCII printable $table{pack( 'C', $_ )} = pack 'C', $_; } # minimal character escapes foreach ( 46, 92 ) { # \. \\ $table{pack( 'C', $_ )} = pack 'C*', 92, $_; } foreach ( 0 .. 32, 127 .. 255 ) { # \ddd $table{pack( 'C', $_ )} = sprintf '\\%03u', $_; } return %table; }; sub _escape { ## Insert escape sequences in string my $s = shift; $s =~ s/([^\055\101-\132\141-\172\060-\071])/$esc{$1}/eg; return $s; } my %unesc = eval { ## precalculated numeric escape table my %table; foreach ( 0 .. 255 ) { $table{_encode_ascii sprintf( '%03u', $_ )} = pack 'C', $_; } $table{_encode_ascii('092')} = pack 'Ca*', 92, _encode_ascii '666'; return %table; }; sub _unescape { ## Remove escape sequences in string my $s = shift; $s =~ s/\134([\060-\062][\060-\071]{2})/$unesc{$1}/eg; # numeric escape $s =~ s/\134\066\066\066/\134\134/g; # reveal escaped escape $s =~ s/\134(.)/$1/g; # character escape return $s; } 1; __END__ ######################################## =head1 BUGS Coding strategy is intended to avoid creating unnecessary argument lists and stack frames. This improves efficiency at the expense of code readability. Platform specific character coding features are conditionally compiled into the code. =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (c)2009-2011 Dick Franks. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 SEE ALSO L<perl>, L<Net::LibIDN>, L<Net::DNS>, RFC1034, RFC1035, RFC5891, Unicode Technical Report #16 =cut