gethostbyname, gethostbyaddr, sethostent, gethostent, endhostent, h_errno, herror, hstrerror, gethostbyaddr_r, gethostbyname2, gethostbyname2_r, gethostbyname_r, gethostent_r - get network host entry
Standard C library (libc
, -lc
)
#include <netdb.h>
void sethostent(int stayopen);
void endhostent(void);
[[deprecated]] extern int h_errno;
[[deprecated]] struct hostent *gethostbyname(const char *name);
[[deprecated]] struct hostent *gethostbyaddr(const void addr[.len],
socklen_t len, int type);
[[deprecated]] void herror(const char *s);
[[deprecated]] const char *hstrerror(int err);
/* System V/POSIX extension */
struct hostent *gethostent(void);
/* GNU extensions */
[[deprecated]]
struct hostent *gethostbyname2(const char *name, int af);
int gethostent_r(struct hostent *restrict ret,
char buf[restrict .buflen], size_t buflen,
struct hostent **restrict result,
int *restrict h_errnop);
[[deprecated]]
int gethostbyaddr_r(const void addr[restrict .len], socklen_t len,
int type,
struct hostent *restrict ret,
char buf[restrict .buflen], size_t buflen,
struct hostent **restrict result,
int *restrict h_errnop);
[[deprecated]]
int gethostbyname_r(const char *restrict name,
struct hostent *restrict ret,
char buf[restrict .buflen], size_t buflen,
struct hostent **restrict result,
int *restrict h_errnop);
[[deprecated]]
int gethostbyname2_r(const char *restrict name, int af,
struct hostent *restrict ret,
char buf[restrict .buflen], size_t buflen,
struct hostent **restrict result,
int *restrict h_errnop);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
gethostbyname2(), gethostent_r(), gethostbyaddr_r(), gethostbyname_r(), gethostbyname2_r():
Since glibc 2.19:
_DEFAULT_SOURCE
glibc up to and including 2.19:
_BSD_SOURCE || _SVID_SOURCE
Since glibc 2.19:
_DEFAULT_SOURCE
glibc 2.8 to glibc 2.19:
_BSD_SOURCE || _SVID_SOURCE
Before glibc 2.8:
none
h_errno:
Since glibc 2.19
_DEFAULT_SOURCE || _POSIX_C_SOURCE < 200809L
glibc 2.12 to glibc 2.19:
_BSD_SOURCE || _SVID_SOURCE || _POSIX_C_SOURCE < 200809L
Before glibc 2.12:
none
The gethostbyname*(), gethostbyaddr*(), herror(), and hstrerror() functions are obsolete. Applications should use getaddrinfo(3), getnameinfo(3), and gai_strerror(3) instead.
The sethostent() function specifies, if
stayopen
is true (1), that a connected TCP socket should be
used for the name server queries and that the connection should remain
open during successive queries. Otherwise, name server queries will use
UDP datagrams.
The endhostent() function ends the use of a TCP connection for name server queries.
The gethostbyname() function returns a structure of
type hostent
for the given host name
. Here
name
is either a hostname or an IPv4 address in standard dot
notation (as for inet_addr(3)). If name
is an
IPv4 address, no lookup is performed and
gethostbyname() simply copies name
into the
h_name
field and its struct in_addr
equivalent into
the h_addr_list[0]
field of the returned hostent
structure. If name
doesn't end in a dot and the environment
variable HOSTALIASES is set, the alias file pointed to
by HOSTALIASES will first be searched for name
(see hostname(7) for the file format). The current
domain and its parents are searched unless name
ends in a
dot.
The gethostbyaddr() function returns a structure of
type hostent
for the given host address addr
of length
len
and address type type
. Valid address types are
AF_INET and AF_INET6 (defined in
<sys/socket.h>
). The host address argument is a pointer
to a struct of a type depending on the address type, for example a
struct in_addr *
(probably obtained via a call to
inet_addr(3)) for address type
AF_INET.
The (obsolete) herror() function prints the error
message associated with the current value of h_errno
on
stderr
.
The (obsolete) hstrerror() function takes an error
number (typically h_errno
) and returns the corresponding
message string.
The domain name queries carried out by gethostbyname() and gethostbyaddr() rely on the Name Service Switch (nsswitch.conf(5)) configured sources or a local name server (named(8)). The default action is to query the Name Service Switch (nsswitch.conf(5)) configured sources, failing that, a local name server (named(8)).
The nsswitch.conf(5) file is the modern way of controlling the order of host lookups.
In glibc 2.4 and earlier, the order
keyword was used to
control the order of host lookups as defined in /etc/host.conf
(host.conf(5)).
The hostent
structure is defined in <netdb.h>
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 */
}
#define h_addr h_addr_list[0] /* for backward compatibility */
The members of the hostent
structure are:
h_name
The official name of the host.
h_aliases
An array of alternative names for the host, terminated by a null pointer.
h_addrtype
The type of address; always AF_INET or AF_INET6 at present.
h_length
The length of the address in bytes.
h_addr_list
An array of pointers to network addresses for the host (in network byte order), terminated by a null pointer.
h_addr
The first address in h_addr_list
for backward
compatibility.
The gethostbyname() and
gethostbyaddr() functions return the hostent
structure or a null pointer if an error occurs. On error, the
h_errno
variable holds an error number. When non-NULL, the
return value may point at static data, see the notes below.
The variable h_errno
can have the following values:
The specified host is unknown.
The requested name is valid but does not have an IP address. Another type of request to the name server for this domain may return an answer. The constant NO_ADDRESS is a synonym for NO_DATA.
A nonrecoverable name server error occurred.
A temporary error occurred on an authoritative name server. Try again later.
/etc/host.conf
resolver configuration file
/etc/hosts
host database file
/etc/nsswitch.conf
name service switch configuration
For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7).
Interface | Attribute | Value |
Thread safety | MT-Unsafe race:hostbyname env locale |
|
Thread safety | MT-Unsafe race:hostbyaddr env locale |
|
sethostent(), endhostent(), gethostent_r() |
Thread safety | MT-Unsafe race:hostent env locale |
Thread safety | MT-Safe | |
Thread safety | MT-Unsafe race:hostent race:hostentbuf env locale |
|
Thread safety | MT-Unsafe race:hostbyname2 env locale |
|
Thread safety | MT-Safe env locale |
In the above table, hostent
in race:hostent
signifies that if any of the functions sethostent(),
gethostent(), gethostent_r(), or
endhostent() are used in parallel in different threads
of a program, then data races could occur.
POSIX.1-2008.
GNU.
None.
POSIX.1-2001.
h_errno
Marked obsolescent in POSIX.1-2001. Removed in POSIX.1-2008, recommending the use of getaddrinfo(3) and getnameinfo(3) instead.
The functions gethostbyname() and gethostbyaddr() may return pointers to static data, which may be overwritten by later calls. Copying the struct hostent does not suffice, since it contains pointers; a deep copy is required.
In the original BSD implementation the len
argument of
gethostbyname() was an int
. The SUSv2 standard
is buggy and declares the len
argument of
gethostbyaddr() to be of type size_t
. (That is
wrong, because it has to be int
, and size_t
is not.
POSIX.1-2001 makes it socklen_t
, which is OK.) See also
accept(2).
The BSD prototype for gethostbyaddr() uses const char * for the first argument.
POSIX requires the gethostent() call, which should
return the next entry in the host data base. When using DNS/BIND this
does not make much sense, but it may be reasonable if the host data base
is a file that can be read line by line. On many systems, a routine of
this name reads from the file /etc/hosts
. It may be available
only when the library was built without DNS support. The glibc version
will ignore ipv6 entries. This function is not reentrant, and glibc adds
a reentrant version gethostent_r().
glibc2 also has a gethostbyname2() that works like gethostbyname(), but permits to specify the address family to which the address must belong.
glibc2 also has reentrant versions gethostent_r(),
gethostbyaddr_r(), gethostbyname_r(),
and gethostbyname2_r(). The caller supplies a
hostent
structure ret
which will be filled in on
success, and a temporary work buffer buf
of size
buflen
. After the call, result
will point to the
result on success. In case of an error or if no entry is found
result
will be NULL. The functions return 0 on success and a
nonzero error number on failure. In addition to the errors returned by
the nonreentrant versions of these functions, if buf
is too
small, the functions will return ERANGE, and the call
should be retried with a larger buffer. The global variable
h_errno
is not modified, but the address of a variable in which
to store error numbers is passed in h_errnop
.
gethostbyname() does not recognize components of a dotted IPv4 address string that are expressed in hexadecimal.
getaddrinfo(3), getnameinfo(3), inet(3), inet_ntop(3), inet_pton(3), resolver(3), hosts(5), nsswitch.conf(5), hostname(7), named(8)