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16 KiB
delv
delv
delv - DNS lookup and validation utility
Synopsis
delv
[@server] [
[-4] | [-6] ] [-a
anchor-file] [-b address] [-c class]
[-d level] [-i] [-m]
[-p port#] [-q name]
[-t type] [-x addr] [name] [type]
[class] [queryopt...]
delv
[-h]
delv
[-v]
delv
[queryopt...] [query...]
Description
delv
is a tool
for sending DNS queries and validating the results, using the same
internal resolver and validator logic as named
.
delv
sends to a
specified name server all queries needed to fetch and validate the
requested data; this includes the original requested query, subsequent
queries to follow CNAME or DNAME chains, queries for DNSKEY, and DS
records to establish a chain of trust for DNSSEC validation. It does not
perform iterative resolution, but simulates the behavior of a name
server configured for DNSSEC validating and forwarding.
By default, responses are validated using the built-in DNSSEC trust
anchor for the root zone ("."). Records returned by delv
are either fully
validated or were not signed. If validation fails, an explanation of the
failure is included in the output; the validation process can be traced
in detail. Because delv
does not rely on an external server to carry
out validation, it can be used to check the validity of DNS responses in
environments where local name servers may not be trustworthy.
Unless it is told to query a specific name server, delv
tries each of the
servers listed in /etc/resolv.conf
. If no usable server
addresses are found, delv
sends queries to the localhost addresses
(127.0.0.1 for IPv4, ::1 for IPv6).
When no command-line arguments or options are given, delv
performs an NS query
for "." (the root zone).
Simple Usage
A typical invocation of delv
looks like:
delv @server name type
where:
server
is the name or IP address of the name server to query. This can be an
IPv4 address in dotted-decimal notation or an IPv6 address in
colon-delimited notation. When the supplied server
argument
is a hostname, delv
resolves that name before querying that name server (note, however, that
this initial lookup is not validated by DNSSEC).
If no server
argument is provided, delv
consults
/etc/resolv.conf
; if an address is found there, it queries
the name server at that address. If either of the -4
or -6
options is in use, then
only addresses for the corresponding transport are tried. If no usable
addresses are found, delv
sends queries to the localhost addresses
(127.0.0.1 for IPv4, ::1 for IPv6).
name
is the domain name to be looked up.
type
indicates what type of query is required - ANY, A, MX, etc.
type
can be any valid query type. If no type
argument is supplied, delv
performs a lookup for an A record.
Options
-a anchor-file
This option specifies a file from which to read an alternate DNSSEC root zone trust anchor.
By default, keys that do not match the root zone name (.) are ignored. If an alternate key name is
desired, it can be specified using the +root
option.
Note: When reading trust anchors, delv
treats trust-anchors
,
initial-key
, and static-key
identically. That
is, for a managed key, it is the initial key that is trusted;
5011
key management is
not supported. delv
does not consult the managed-keys database maintained by named
. This means that if
the default key built in to delv
is revoked, delv
must be updated to a newer version in order
to continue validating.
-b address
This option sets the source IP address of the query to
address
. This must be a valid address on one of the host's
network interfaces, or 0.0.0.0
, or ::
. An
optional source port may be specified by appending
#<port>
-c class
This option sets the query class for the requested data. Currently,
only class "IN" is supported in delv
and any other value is ignored.
-d level
This option sets the systemwide debug level to level
.
The allowed range is from 0 to 99. The default is 0 (no debugging).
Debugging traces from delv
become more verbose as the debug level
increases. See the +mtrace
, +rtrace
, and +vtrace
options below for additional debugging
details.
-h
This option displays the delv
help usage output and exits.
-i
This option sets insecure mode, which disables internal DNSSEC
validation. (Note, however, that this does not set the CD bit on
upstream queries. If the server being queried is performing DNSSEC
validation, then it does not return invalid data; this can cause delv
to time out. When it
is necessary to examine invalid data to debug a DNSSEC problem, use
dig +cd
.)
-m
This option enables memory usage debugging.
-p port#
This option specifies a destination port to use for queries, instead of the standard DNS port number 53. This option is used with a name server that has been configured to listen for queries on a non-standard port number.
-q name
This option sets the query name to name
. While the query
name can be specified without using the -q
option, it is sometimes necessary to
disambiguate names from types or classes (for example, when looking up
the name "ns", which could be misinterpreted as the type NS, or "ch",
which could be misinterpreted as class CH).
-t type
This option sets the query type to type
, which can be
any valid query type supported in BIND 9 except for zone transfer types
AXFR and IXFR. As with -q
, this is useful to distinguish query-name types
or classes when they are ambiguous. It is sometimes necessary to
disambiguate names from types.
The default query type is "A", unless the -x
option is supplied to
indicate a reverse lookup, in which case it is "PTR".
-v
This option prints the delv
version and exits.
-x addr
This option performs a reverse lookup, mapping an address to a name.
addr
is an IPv4 address in dotted-decimal notation, or a
colon-delimited IPv6 address. When -x
is used, there is no need to provide the
name
or type
arguments; delv
automatically
performs a lookup for a name like 11.12.13.10.in-addr.arpa
and sets the query type to PTR. IPv6 addresses are looked up using
nibble format under the IP6.ARPA domain.
-4
This option forces delv
to only use IPv4.
-6
This option forces delv
to only use IPv6.
Query Options
delv
provides a
number of query options which affect the way results are displayed, and
in some cases the way lookups are performed.
Each query option is identified by a keyword preceded by a plus sign
(+
). Some keywords set or reset an option. These may be
preceded by the string no
to negate the meaning of that
keyword. Other keywords assign values to options like the timeout
interval. They have the form +keyword=value
. The query
options are:
+cdflag, +nocdflag
This option controls whether to set the CD (checking disabled) bit in
queries sent by delv
. This may be useful when troubleshooting
DNSSEC problems from behind a validating resolver. A validating resolver
blocks invalid responses, making it difficult to retrieve them for
analysis. Setting the CD flag on queries causes the resolver to return
invalid responses, which delv
can then validate internally and report the
errors in detail.
+class, +noclass
This option controls whether to display the CLASS when printing a record. The default is to display the CLASS.
+hint=FILE, +nohint
This option specifies a filename from which to load root hints; this
will be used to find the root name servers when name server mode
(delv +ns
) is in use. If the option is not specified,
built-in root hints will be used.
+ns, +nons
This option toggles name server mode. When this option is in use, the
delv
process instantiates a full recursive resolver, and
uses that to look up the requested query name and type. Turning on this
option also activates +mtrace
, +strace
and
+rtrace
, so that every iterative query will be logged,
including the full response messages from each authoritatve server.
These logged messages will be written to stdout
rather than
stderr
as usual, so that the full trace can be captured
more easily.
This is intended to be similar to the behavior of
dig +trace
, but because it uses the same code as
named
, it much more accurately replicates the behavior of a
recursive name server with a cold cache that is processing a recursive
query.
+qmin[=MODE], +noqmin
When used with +ns
, this option enables QNAME
minimization mode. Valid options of MODE are relaxed
and
strict
. By default, QNAME minimization is disabled. If
+qmin
is specified but MODE is omitted, then
relaxed
mode will be used.
+ttl, +nottl
This option controls whether to display the TTL when printing a record. The default is to display the TTL.
+rtrace, +nortrace
This option toggles resolver fetch logging. This reports the name and
type of each query sent by delv
in the process of carrying out the resolution
and validation process, including the original query and all subsequent
queries to follow CNAMEs and to establish a chain of trust for DNSSEC
validation.
This is equivalent to setting the debug level to 1 in the "resolver"
logging category. Setting the systemwide debug level to 1 using the
-d
option produces
the same output, but affects other logging categories as well.
+mtrace, +nomtrace
This option toggles logging of messages received. This produces a
detailed dump of the responses received by delv
in the process of
carrying out the resolution and validation process.
This is equivalent to setting the debug level to 10 for the "packets"
module of the "resolver" logging category. Setting the systemwide debug
level to 10 using the -d
option produces the same output, but affects
other logging categories as well.
+strace, +nostrace
This option toggles logging of messages sent. This produces a
detailed dump of the queries sent by delv
in the process of carrying out the resolution
and validation process. Turning on this option also activates
+mtrace
.
This is equivalent to setting the debug level to 11 for the "packets"
module of the "resolver" logging category. Setting the systemwide debug
level to 11 using the -d
option produces the same output, but affects
other logging categories as well.
+vtrace, +novtrace
This option toggles validation logging. This shows the internal process of the validator as it determines whether an answer is validly signed, unsigned, or invalid.
This is equivalent to setting the debug level to 3 for the
"validator" module of the "dnssec" logging category. Setting the
systemwide debug level to 3 using the -d
option produces the same output, but affects
other logging categories as well.
+short, +noshort
This option toggles between verbose and terse answers. The default is to print the answer in a verbose form.
+comments, +nocomments
This option toggles the display of comment lines in the output. The default is to print comments.
+rrcomments, +norrcomments
This option toggles the display of per-record comments in the output (for example, human-readable key information about DNSKEY records). The default is to print per-record comments.
+crypto, +nocrypto
This option toggles the display of cryptographic fields in DNSSEC
records. The contents of these fields are unnecessary to debug most
DNSSEC validation failures and removing them makes it easier to see the
common failures. The default is to display the fields. When omitted,
they are replaced by the string [omitted]
or, in the DNSKEY
case, the key ID is displayed as the replacement, e.g.
[ key id = value ]
.
+trust, +notrust
This option controls whether to display the trust level when printing a record. The default is to display the trust level.
+split[=W], +nosplit
This option splits long hex- or base64-formatted fields in resource
records into chunks of W
characters (where W
is rounded up to the nearest multiple of 4). +nosplit
or
+split=0
causes fields not to be split at all. The default
is 56 characters, or 44 characters when multiline mode is active.
+all, +noall
This option sets or clears the display options +comments
, +rrcomments
, and +trust
as a group.
+multiline, +nomultiline
This option prints long records (such as RRSIG, DNSKEY, and SOA
records) in a verbose multi-line format with human-readable comments.
The default is to print each record on a single line, to facilitate
machine parsing of the delv
output.
+dnssec, +nodnssec
This option indicates whether to display RRSIG records in the delv
output. The default
is to do so. Note that (unlike in dig
) this does not control whether to
request DNSSEC records or to validate them. DNSSEC records are always
requested, and validation always occurs unless suppressed by the use of
-i
or +noroot
.
+root[=ROOT], +noroot
This option indicates whether to perform conventional DNSSEC
validation, and if so, specifies the name of a trust anchor. The default
is to validate using a trust anchor of "." (the root zone), for which
there is a built-in key. If specifying a different trust anchor, then
-a
must be used to
specify a file containing the key.
+tcp, +notcp
This option controls whether to use TCP when sending queries. The default is to use UDP unless a truncated response has been received.
+unknownformat, +nounknownformat
This option prints all RDATA in unknown RR-type presentation format
(3597
). The default is
to print RDATA for known types in the type's presentation format.
+yaml, +noyaml
This option prints response data in YAML format.
Files
/etc/resolv.conf
See Also
dig(1) <dig>
, named(8) <named>
, 4034
, 4035
, 4431
, 5074
, 5155
.