NAME¶
hesiod, hesiod_init, hesiod_resolve, hesiod_free_list, hesiod_to_bind,
  hesiod_end - Hesiod name server interface library
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <hesiod.h>
int hesiod_init(void **context)
char **hesiod_resolve(void *context, const char *name,
	const char *type)
void hesiod_free_list(void *context, char **list);
char *hesiod_to_bind(void *context, const char *name,
	const char *type)
void hesiod_end(void *context)
cc file.c -lhesiod
DESCRIPTION¶
This family of functions allows you to perform lookups of Hesiod information,
  which is stored as text records in the Domain Name Service. To perform
  lookups, you must first initialize a 
context, an opaque object which
  stores information used internally by the library between calls.
  
hesiod_init initializes a context, storing a pointer to the context in
  the location pointed to by the 
context argument. 
hesiod_end
  frees the resources used by a context.
hesiod_resolve is the primary interface to the library. If successful, it
  returns a list of one or more strings giving the records matching 
name
  and 
type. The last element of the list is followed by a NULL pointer.
  It is the caller's responsibility to call 
hesiod_free_list to free the
  resources used by the returned list.
hesiod_to_bind converts 
name and 
type into the DNS name
  used by 
hesiod_resolve. It is the caller's responsibility to free the
  returned string using 
free.
RETURN VALUES¶
If successful, 
hesiod_init returns 0; otherwise it returns -1 and sets
  
errno to indicate the error. On failure, 
hesiod_resolve and
  
hesiod_to_bind return NULL and set the global variable 
errno to
  indicate the error.
ENVIRONMENT¶
If the environment variable 
HES_DOMAIN is set, it will override the
  domain in the Hesiod configuration file. If the environment variable
  
HESIOD_CONFIG is set, it specifies the location of the Hesiod
  configuration file.
SEE ALSO¶
`Hesiod - Project Athena Technical Plan -- Name Service', 
named(8),
  
hesiod.conf(5)
ERRORS¶
Hesiod calls may fail because of:
  - ENOMEM
 
  - Insufficient memory was available to carry out the
      requested operation.
 
  - ENOEXEC
 
  - hesiod_init failed because the Hesiod configuration
      file was invalid.
 
  - ECONNREFUSED
 
  - hesiod_resolve failed because no name server could
      be contacted to answer the query.
 
  - EMSGSIZE
 
  - hesiod_resolve or hesiod_to_bind failed
      because the query or response was too big to fit into the packet
    buffers.
 
  - ENOENT
 
  - hesiod_resolve failed because the name server had no
      text records matching name and type, or
      hesiod_to_bind failed because the name argument had a domain
      extension which could not be resolved with type ``rhs-extension'' in the
      local Hesiod domain.
 
AUTHOR¶
Steve Dyer, IBM/Project Athena
 
Greg Hudson, MIT Team Athena
 
Copyright 1987, 1988, 1995, 1996 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
BUGS¶
The strings corresponding to the 
errno values set by the Hesiod functions
  are not particularly indicative of what went wrong, especially for
  
ENOEXEC and 
ENOENT.