NAME
ares_parse_txt_reply - Parse a reply to a DNS query of type TXT
SYNOPSIS
#include <ares.h>
int
ares_parse_txt_reply(const unsigned char* abuf, int
alen,
struct ares_txt_reply **txt_out);
int
ares_parse_txt_reply_ext(const unsigned char* abuf,
int alen,
struct ares_txt_ext **txt_out);
DESCRIPTION
The ares_parse_txt_reply(3) and ares_parse_txt_reply_ext(3) functions parse the response to a query of type TXT into a linked list (one element per sub-string) of struct ares_txt_reply (struct ares_txt_ext) The parameters abuf and alen give the contents of the response. The result is stored in allocated memory and a pointer to it stored into the variable pointed to by txt_out. It is the caller’s responsibility to free the resulting txt_out structure when it is no longer needed using the function ares_free_data(3).
The structure
ares_txt_reply contains the following fields:
struct ares_txt_reply {
struct ares_txt_reply *next;
unsigned int length;
unsigned char *txt;
};
The structure
ares_txt_ext contains the following fields:
struct ares_txt_ext {
struct ares_txt_ext *next;
unsigned int length;
unsigned char *txt;
unsigned char record_start;
};
The record_start field in struct ares_txt_ext
is 1 if this structure is a start of a TXT record, and 0 if
the structure is a continuation of a previous record. The
linked list of the struct ares_txt_ext will have at
least one item with record_start equal to 1, and may
have some items with record_start equal to 0 between
them.
These sequences of struct ares_txt_ext (starting from the item with record_start equal to 1, and ending right before the record start item) may be treated as either components of a single TXT record or as a multi-parted TXT record, depending on particular use case.
RETURN VALUES
ares_parse_txt_reply (ares_parse_txt_reply_ext) can return any of the following values:
ARES_SUCCESS |
The response was successfully parsed. | ||
ARES_EBADRESP |
The response was malformatted. | ||
ARES_ENODATA |
The response did not contain an answer to the query. | ||
ARES_ENOMEM |
Memory was exhausted. |
AVAILABILITY
This function was first introduced in c-ares version 1.7.0.