DNS::ZoneParse - Parse and manipulate DNS Zone Files.
use DNS::ZoneParse; my $zonefile = DNS::ZoneParse->new("/path/to/dns/zonefile.db", $origin); # Get a reference to the MX records my $mx = $zonefile->mx; # Change the first mailserver on the list $mx->[0] = { host => 'mail.localhost.com', priority => 10, name => '@' }; # update the serial number $zonefile->new_serial(); # write the new zone file to disk open NEWZONE, ">/path/to/dns/zonefile.db" or die "error"; print NEWZONE $zonefile->output(); close NEWZONE;
perl Makefile.PL make make test make install
Win32 users substitute "make" with "nmake" or equivalent. nmake is available at http://download.microsoft.com/download/vc15/Patch/1.52/W95/EN-US/Nmake15.exe
This module will parse a Zone File and put all the Resource Records (RRs) into an anonymous hash structure. At the moment, the following types of RRs are supported: SOA, NS, MX, A, CNAME, TXT, PTR. It could be useful for maintaining DNS zones, or for transferring DNS zones to other servers. If you want to generate an XML-friendly version of your zone files, it is easy to use XML::Simple with this module once you have parsed the zonefile.
DNS::ZoneParse scans the DNS zonefile - removes comments and seperates the file into its constituent records. It then parses each record and stores the records internally. See below for information on the accessor methods.
This creates the DNS::ZoneParse Object and loads the zonefile
Example: my $zonefile = DNS::ZoneParse->new("/path/to/zonefile.db");
You can also initialise the object with the contents of a file: my $zonefile = DNS::ZoneParse->new( \$zone_contents );
You can pass a second, optional parameter to the constructor to supply an $origin if none can be found in the zone file.
$origin
my $zonefile = DNS::ZoneParse->new( \$zone_contents, $origin );
These methods return references to the resource records. For example:
my $mx = $zonefile->mx;
Returns the mx records in an array reference.
A, CNAME, NS, MX and PTR records have the following properties: 'ttl', 'class', 'host', 'name'
MX records also have a 'priority' property.
Returns a hash reference with the following properties: 'serial', 'origin', 'primary', 'refresh', 'retry', 'ttl', 'minimumTTL', 'email', 'expire'
Returns a copy of the datastructute that stores all the resource records. This might be useful if you want to quickly transform the data into another format, such as XML.
new_serial() incriments the Zone serial number. It will generate a date-based serial number. Or you can pass a positive number to add to the current serial number.
new_serial()
Examples:
$zonefile->new_serial(); # generates a new serial number based on date: # YYYYmmddHH format, incriments current serial # by 1 if the new serial is still smaller $zonefile->new_serial(50); # adds 50 to the original serial number
output() returns the new zonefile output as a string. If you wish your output formatted differently, you can pass the output of dump() to your favourite templating module.
output()
dump()
This script will print the A records in a zone file, add a new A record for the name "new" and then return the zone file.
use strict; use DNS::ZoneParse; my $zonefile = DNS::ZoneParse->new("/path/to/zonefile.db"); print "Current A Records\n"; my $a_records = $zonefile->a(); foreach my $record (@$a_records) { print "$record->{name} resolves at $record->{host}\n"; } push (@$a_records, { name => 'new', class => 'IN', host => '127.0.0.1', ttl => '' }); $zonefile->new_serial(); my $newfile = $zonefile->output();
This script will convert a DNS Zonefile to an XML file using XML::Simple.
use strict; use DNS::ZoneParse; use XML::Simple; my $zonefile = DNS::ZoneParse->new("/path/to/zonefile.db"); my $new_xml = XMLout($zonefile->dump, noattr => 1, suppressempty => 1, rootname => $zonefile->origin);
see Changes
The DNS::ZoneParse API may change in future versions. At present, the parsing is not as strict as it should be and support for $ORIGIN and $TTL is quite basic. It would also be nice to support the INCLUDE statement. Furthermore, parsing large zonefiles with thousands of records can use lots of memory - some people have requested a callback interface.
$ORIGIN
$TTL
INCLUDE
I can squash more bugs with your help. Please let me know if you spot something that doesn't work as expected.
You can report bugs via the CPAN RT: http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=DNS-ZoneParse
If possible, please provide a diff against t/dns-zoneparse.t and t/test-zone.db that demonstrates the bug(s).
Other modules with similar functionality:
Net::DNS::ZoneParser, Net::DNS::ZoneFile, DNS::ZoneFile
Simon Flack
DNS::ZoneParse is free software which you can redistribute and/or modify under the same terms as Perl itself.
To install DNS::ZoneParse, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm DNS::ZoneParse
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install DNS::ZoneParse
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.