gethostent(3N)


gethostent -- get network host entry

Synopsis

cc [options] file -lsocket -lnsl
#include <netdb.h>

extern int h_errno;

struct hostent *gethostent(void);

struct hostent *gethostbyname(const char *name);

struct hostent *gethostbyname2(const char *name, int af);

struct hostent *gethostbyaddr(const void *addr, size_t len, int type);

void sethostent(int stayopen);

void endhostent(void)

Description

gethostent reads a line from /etc/hosts, opening the file if necessary. It returns a pointer to a structure of type hostent which describes an internet host.

sethostent allows gethostent to read subsequent lines from /etc/hosts. If the stayopen argument is non-zero, the hosts' database will not be closed after each call to gethostent. sethostent opens a connected TCP socket for queries, and retains the connection after each call to gethostent. If stayopen is zero, queries are performed using UDP datagrams and the file is re-opened (and rewound) on each invocation of gethostent.

endhostent closes the TCP connection.

gethostbyname, gethostbyname2 and gethostbyaddr also return a pointer to a structure of type hostent which describes an internet host. These routines search for this description, by hostname, hostname and address family or by host address, respectively, in any or all of the following databases: the Domain Name System (DNS), the Network Information Service (NIS), and the file /etc/hosts.


NOTE: For gethostbyname2, use the af argument to specify the address family. Valid address families are AF_INET (IP version 4) and AF_INET6 (IP version 6). If you do not specify a valid address family, this function returns NULL, and sets h_errno to NETDB_INTERNAL. gethostbyname assumes AF_INET by default.

The order and number of databases searched depends on the order given for the libraries in the ``directory lookup libraries'' field of the entries for the tcp, udp, icmp, rawip, igmp, tcp6, udp6, icmpv6 and rawipv6 services in the network configuration database, /etc/netconfig (see netconfig(4bnu)).


NOTE: These routines do not read /etc/netconfig directly. They invoke the resolver routine res_init (see resolver(3N)).

The hostent structure is defined as follows:

struct	hostent {
	char	*h_name;       /* official name of host */
	char	**h_aliases;   /* alias list */
	int	h_addrtype;    /* host address type */
	int	h_length;      /* length of address */
	char	**h_addr_list; /* list of addresses from name server */
};
#define	h_addr  h_addr_list[0] /* address, for backward compatibility */
The members of this structure are:

h_name
Official name of the host.

h_aliases
A null-terminated array of alternate names for the host.

h_addrtype
The type of address being returned; currently either AF_INET or AF_INET6.

h_length
The length, in bytes, of the address.

h_addr_list
A null-terminated array of network addresses for the host. Host addresses are returned in network byte order in struct in_addr for AF_INET and struct in6_addr for AF_INET6.

h_addr
The first address in h_addr_list; this is for backward compatibility.
When using the name server, gethostbyname and gethostbyname2 search for the named host in the current domain and then its parents, unless the name ends in a dot. If the name contains no dot, and if the environment variable HOSTALIASES contains the name of an alias file, the alias file is first searched for an alias matching the input name. See hostname(1bsd) for the domain search procedure and the alias file format.

Files

/etc/hosts
/etc/netconfig

Diagnostics

Error return status from gethostbyname, gethostbyname2 and gethostbyaddr is indicated by return of a null pointer. The external integer h_errno may then be checked to see whether this is a temporary failure or an invalid or unknown host.

h_errno can have the following values:


NETDB_INTERNAL
This indicates an internal error in the library, unrelated to the network or name service. errno is valid in this case.

HOST_NOT_FOUND
No such host is known.

TRY_AGAIN
This is usually a temporary error and means that the local server did not receive a response from an authoritative server. A retry at some later time may succeed.

NO_RECOVERY
Some unexpected server failure was encountered. This is a non-recoverable error.

NO_DATA
The requested name is valid but does not have an IP address; this is not a temporary error. This means that the name is known to the name server but there is no address associated with this name. Another type of request to the name server using this domain name will result in an answer; for example, a mail-forwarder may be registered for this domain.

References

getaddrinfo(3N), getnameinfo(3N), hosts(4tcp), hostname(1bsd), named(1Mtcp), netconfig(4bnu), resolver(3N)

Notices

All information is contained in a static area so it must be copied if it is to be saved. Only the Internet address format is currently understood.

Standards compliance

gethostbyname, gethostbyname2 and gethostbyaddr are conformant with:

RFC1034 (STD13), RFC1035 (STD13)


© 2004 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 25 April 2004