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1 | /* -*- Mode: C; tab-width: 4 -*- | |
2 | * | |
3 | * Copyright (c) 2003-2015 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. | |
4 | * | |
5 | * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without | |
6 | * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: | |
7 | * | |
8 | * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, | |
9 | * this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. | |
10 | * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, | |
11 | * this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation | |
12 | * and/or other materials provided with the distribution. | |
13 | * 3. Neither the name of Apple Inc. ("Apple") nor the names of its | |
14 | * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this | |
15 | * software without specific prior written permission. | |
16 | * | |
17 | * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY APPLE AND ITS CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY | |
18 | * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED | |
19 | * WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE | |
20 | * DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL APPLE OR ITS CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY | |
21 | * DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES | |
22 | * (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; | |
23 | * LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND | |
24 | * ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT | |
25 | * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS | |
26 | * SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | |
27 | */ | |
28 | ||
29 | ||
30 | /*! @header DNS Service Discovery | |
31 | * | |
32 | * @discussion This section describes the functions, callbacks, and data structures | |
33 | * that make up the DNS Service Discovery API. | |
34 | * | |
35 | * The DNS Service Discovery API is part of Bonjour, Apple's implementation | |
36 | * of zero-configuration networking (ZEROCONF). | |
37 | * | |
38 | * Bonjour allows you to register a network service, such as a | |
39 | * printer or file server, so that it can be found by name or browsed | |
40 | * for by service type and domain. Using Bonjour, applications can | |
41 | * discover what services are available on the network, along with | |
42 | * all the information -- such as name, IP address, and port -- | |
43 | * necessary to access a particular service. | |
44 | * | |
45 | * In effect, Bonjour combines the functions of a local DNS server and | |
46 | * AppleTalk. Bonjour allows applications to provide user-friendly printer | |
47 | * and server browsing, among other things, over standard IP networks. | |
48 | * This behavior is a result of combining protocols such as multicast and | |
49 | * DNS to add new functionality to the network (such as multicast DNS). | |
50 | * | |
51 | * Bonjour gives applications easy access to services over local IP | |
52 | * networks without requiring the service or the application to support | |
53 | * an AppleTalk or a Netbeui stack, and without requiring a DNS server | |
54 | * for the local network. | |
55 | */ | |
56 | ||
57 | /* _DNS_SD_H contains the API version number for this header file | |
58 | * The API version defined in this header file symbol allows for compile-time | |
59 | * checking, so that C code building with earlier versions of the header file | |
60 | * can avoid compile errors trying to use functions that aren't even defined | |
61 | * in those earlier versions. Similar checks may also be performed at run-time: | |
62 | * => weak linking -- to avoid link failures if run with an earlier | |
63 | * version of the library that's missing some desired symbol, or | |
64 | * => DNSServiceGetProperty(DaemonVersion) -- to verify whether the running daemon | |
65 | * ("system service" on Windows) meets some required minimum functionality level. | |
66 | */ | |
67 | ||
68 | #ifndef _DNS_SD_H | |
69 | #define _DNS_SD_H 7653011 | |
70 | ||
71 | #ifdef __cplusplus | |
72 | extern "C" { | |
73 | #endif | |
74 | ||
75 | /* Set to 1 if libdispatch is supported | |
76 | * Note: May also be set by project and/or Makefile | |
77 | */ | |
78 | #ifndef _DNS_SD_LIBDISPATCH | |
79 | #define _DNS_SD_LIBDISPATCH 0 | |
80 | #endif /* ndef _DNS_SD_LIBDISPATCH */ | |
81 | ||
82 | /* standard calling convention under Win32 is __stdcall */ | |
83 | /* Note: When compiling Intel EFI (Extensible Firmware Interface) under MS Visual Studio, the */ | |
84 | /* _WIN32 symbol is defined by the compiler even though it's NOT compiling code for Windows32 */ | |
85 | #if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(EFI32) && !defined(EFI64) | |
86 | #define DNSSD_API __stdcall | |
87 | #else | |
88 | #define DNSSD_API | |
89 | #endif | |
90 | ||
91 | #if defined(_WIN32) | |
92 | #include <winsock2.h> | |
93 | typedef SOCKET dnssd_sock_t; | |
94 | #else | |
95 | typedef int dnssd_sock_t; | |
96 | #endif | |
97 | ||
98 | /* stdint.h does not exist on FreeBSD 4.x; its types are defined in sys/types.h instead */ | |
99 | #if defined(__FreeBSD__) && (__FreeBSD__ < 5) | |
100 | #include <sys/types.h> | |
101 | ||
102 | /* Likewise, on Sun, standard integer types are in sys/types.h */ | |
103 | #elif defined(__sun__) | |
104 | #include <sys/types.h> | |
105 | ||
106 | /* EFI does not have stdint.h, or anything else equivalent */ | |
107 | #elif defined(EFI32) || defined(EFI64) || defined(EFIX64) | |
108 | #include "Tiano.h" | |
109 | #if !defined(_STDINT_H_) | |
110 | typedef UINT8 uint8_t; | |
111 | typedef INT8 int8_t; | |
112 | typedef UINT16 uint16_t; | |
113 | typedef INT16 int16_t; | |
114 | typedef UINT32 uint32_t; | |
115 | typedef INT32 int32_t; | |
116 | #endif | |
117 | /* Windows has its own differences */ | |
118 | #elif defined(_WIN32) | |
119 | #include <windows.h> | |
120 | #define _UNUSED | |
121 | #ifndef _MSL_STDINT_H | |
122 | typedef UINT8 uint8_t; | |
123 | typedef INT8 int8_t; | |
124 | typedef UINT16 uint16_t; | |
125 | typedef INT16 int16_t; | |
126 | typedef UINT32 uint32_t; | |
127 | typedef INT32 int32_t; | |
128 | #endif | |
129 | ||
130 | /* All other Posix platforms use stdint.h */ | |
131 | #else | |
132 | #include <stdint.h> | |
133 | #endif | |
134 | ||
135 | #if _DNS_SD_LIBDISPATCH | |
136 | #include <dispatch/dispatch.h> | |
137 | #endif | |
138 | ||
139 | /* DNSServiceRef, DNSRecordRef | |
140 | * | |
141 | * Opaque internal data types. | |
142 | * Note: client is responsible for serializing access to these structures if | |
143 | * they are shared between concurrent threads. | |
144 | */ | |
145 | ||
146 | typedef struct _DNSServiceRef_t *DNSServiceRef; | |
147 | typedef struct _DNSRecordRef_t *DNSRecordRef; | |
148 | ||
149 | struct sockaddr; | |
150 | ||
151 | /*! @enum General flags | |
152 | * Most DNS-SD API functions and callbacks include a DNSServiceFlags parameter. | |
153 | * As a general rule, any given bit in the 32-bit flags field has a specific fixed meaning, | |
154 | * regardless of the function or callback being used. For any given function or callback, | |
155 | * typically only a subset of the possible flags are meaningful, and all others should be zero. | |
156 | * The discussion section for each API call describes which flags are valid for that call | |
157 | * and callback. In some cases, for a particular call, it may be that no flags are currently | |
158 | * defined, in which case the DNSServiceFlags parameter exists purely to allow future expansion. | |
159 | * In all cases, developers should expect that in future releases, it is possible that new flag | |
160 | * values will be defined, and write code with this in mind. For example, code that tests | |
161 | * if (flags == kDNSServiceFlagsAdd) ... | |
162 | * will fail if, in a future release, another bit in the 32-bit flags field is also set. | |
163 | * The reliable way to test whether a particular bit is set is not with an equality test, | |
164 | * but with a bitwise mask: | |
165 | * if (flags & kDNSServiceFlagsAdd) ... | |
166 | * With the exception of kDNSServiceFlagsValidate, each flag can be valid(be set) | |
167 | * EITHER only as an input to one of the DNSService*() APIs OR only as an output | |
168 | * (provide status) through any of the callbacks used. For example, kDNSServiceFlagsAdd | |
169 | * can be set only as an output in the callback, whereas the kDNSServiceFlagsIncludeP2P | |
170 | * can be set only as an input to the DNSService*() APIs. See comments on kDNSServiceFlagsValidate | |
171 | * defined in enum below. | |
172 | */ | |
173 | enum | |
174 | { | |
175 | kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing = 0x1, | |
176 | /* MoreComing indicates to a callback that at least one more result is | |
177 | * queued and will be delivered following immediately after this one. | |
178 | * When the MoreComing flag is set, applications should not immediately | |
179 | * update their UI, because this can result in a great deal of ugly flickering | |
180 | * on the screen, and can waste a great deal of CPU time repeatedly updating | |
181 | * the screen with content that is then immediately erased, over and over. | |
182 | * Applications should wait until MoreComing is not set, and then | |
183 | * update their UI when no more changes are imminent. | |
184 | * When MoreComing is not set, that doesn't mean there will be no more | |
185 | * answers EVER, just that there are no more answers immediately | |
186 | * available right now at this instant. If more answers become available | |
187 | * in the future they will be delivered as usual. | |
188 | */ | |
189 | ||
190 | kDNSServiceFlagsAutoTrigger = 0x1, | |
191 | /* Valid for browses using kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexAny. | |
192 | * Will auto trigger the browse over AWDL as well once the service is discoveryed | |
193 | * over BLE. | |
194 | * This flag is an input value to DNSServiceBrowse(), which is why we can | |
195 | * use the same value as kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing, which is an output flag | |
196 | * for various client callbacks. | |
197 | */ | |
198 | ||
199 | kDNSServiceFlagsAdd = 0x2, | |
200 | kDNSServiceFlagsDefault = 0x4, | |
201 | /* Flags for domain enumeration and browse/query reply callbacks. | |
202 | * "Default" applies only to enumeration and is only valid in | |
203 | * conjunction with "Add". An enumeration callback with the "Add" | |
204 | * flag NOT set indicates a "Remove", i.e. the domain is no longer | |
205 | * valid. | |
206 | */ | |
207 | ||
208 | kDNSServiceFlagsNoAutoRename = 0x8, | |
209 | /* Flag for specifying renaming behavior on name conflict when registering | |
210 | * non-shared records. By default, name conflicts are automatically handled | |
211 | * by renaming the service. NoAutoRename overrides this behavior - with this | |
212 | * flag set, name conflicts will result in a callback. The NoAutorename flag | |
213 | * is only valid if a name is explicitly specified when registering a service | |
214 | * (i.e. the default name is not used.) | |
215 | */ | |
216 | ||
217 | kDNSServiceFlagsShared = 0x10, | |
218 | kDNSServiceFlagsUnique = 0x20, | |
219 | /* Flag for registering individual records on a connected | |
220 | * DNSServiceRef. Shared indicates that there may be multiple records | |
221 | * with this name on the network (e.g. PTR records). Unique indicates that the | |
222 | * record's name is to be unique on the network (e.g. SRV records). | |
223 | */ | |
224 | ||
225 | kDNSServiceFlagsBrowseDomains = 0x40, | |
226 | kDNSServiceFlagsRegistrationDomains = 0x80, | |
227 | /* Flags for specifying domain enumeration type in DNSServiceEnumerateDomains. | |
228 | * BrowseDomains enumerates domains recommended for browsing, RegistrationDomains | |
229 | * enumerates domains recommended for registration. | |
230 | */ | |
231 | ||
232 | kDNSServiceFlagsLongLivedQuery = 0x100, | |
233 | /* Flag for creating a long-lived unicast query for the DNSServiceQueryRecord call. */ | |
234 | ||
235 | kDNSServiceFlagsAllowRemoteQuery = 0x200, | |
236 | /* Flag for creating a record for which we will answer remote queries | |
237 | * (queries from hosts more than one hop away; hosts not directly connected to the local link). | |
238 | */ | |
239 | ||
240 | kDNSServiceFlagsForceMulticast = 0x400, | |
241 | /* Flag for signifying that a query or registration should be performed exclusively via multicast | |
242 | * DNS, even for a name in a domain (e.g. foo.apple.com.) that would normally imply unicast DNS. | |
243 | */ | |
244 | ||
245 | kDNSServiceFlagsForce = 0x800, // This flag is deprecated. | |
246 | ||
247 | kDNSServiceFlagsKnownUnique = 0x800, | |
248 | /* | |
249 | * Client guarantees that record names are unique, so we can skip sending out initial | |
250 | * probe messages. Standard name conflict resolution is still done if a conflict is discovered. | |
251 | * Currently only valid for a DNSServiceRegister call. | |
252 | */ | |
253 | ||
254 | kDNSServiceFlagsReturnIntermediates = 0x1000, | |
255 | /* Flag for returning intermediate results. | |
256 | * For example, if a query results in an authoritative NXDomain (name does not exist) | |
257 | * then that result is returned to the client. However the query is not implicitly | |
258 | * cancelled -- it remains active and if the answer subsequently changes | |
259 | * (e.g. because a VPN tunnel is subsequently established) then that positive | |
260 | * result will still be returned to the client. | |
261 | * Similarly, if a query results in a CNAME record, then in addition to following | |
262 | * the CNAME referral, the intermediate CNAME result is also returned to the client. | |
263 | * When this flag is not set, NXDomain errors are not returned, and CNAME records | |
264 | * are followed silently without informing the client of the intermediate steps. | |
265 | * (In earlier builds this flag was briefly calledkDNSServiceFlagsReturnCNAME) | |
266 | */ | |
267 | ||
268 | kDNSServiceFlagsNonBrowsable = 0x2000, | |
269 | /* A service registered with the NonBrowsable flag set can be resolved using | |
270 | * DNSServiceResolve(), but will not be discoverable using DNSServiceBrowse(). | |
271 | * This is for cases where the name is actually a GUID; it is found by other means; | |
272 | * there is no end-user benefit to browsing to find a long list of opaque GUIDs. | |
273 | * Using the NonBrowsable flag creates SRV+TXT without the cost of also advertising | |
274 | * an associated PTR record. | |
275 | */ | |
276 | ||
277 | kDNSServiceFlagsShareConnection = 0x4000, | |
278 | /* For efficiency, clients that perform many concurrent operations may want to use a | |
279 | * single Unix Domain Socket connection with the background daemon, instead of having a | |
280 | * separate connection for each independent operation. To use this mode, clients first | |
281 | * call DNSServiceCreateConnection(&MainRef) to initialize the main DNSServiceRef. | |
282 | * For each subsequent operation that is to share that same connection, the client copies | |
283 | * the MainRef, and then passes the address of that copy, setting the ShareConnection flag | |
284 | * to tell the library that this DNSServiceRef is not a typical uninitialized DNSServiceRef; | |
285 | * it's a copy of an existing DNSServiceRef whose connection information should be reused. | |
286 | * | |
287 | * For example: | |
288 | * | |
289 | * DNSServiceErrorType error; | |
290 | * DNSServiceRef MainRef; | |
291 | * error = DNSServiceCreateConnection(&MainRef); | |
292 | * if (error) ... | |
293 | * DNSServiceRef BrowseRef = MainRef; // Important: COPY the primary DNSServiceRef first... | |
294 | * error = DNSServiceBrowse(&BrowseRef, kDNSServiceFlagsShareConnection, ...); // then use the copy | |
295 | * if (error) ... | |
296 | * ... | |
297 | * DNSServiceRefDeallocate(BrowseRef); // Terminate the browse operation | |
298 | * DNSServiceRefDeallocate(MainRef); // Terminate the shared connection | |
299 | * Also see Point 4.(Don't Double-Deallocate if the MainRef has been Deallocated) in Notes below: | |
300 | * | |
301 | * Notes: | |
302 | * | |
303 | * 1. Collective kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing flag | |
304 | * When callbacks are invoked using a shared DNSServiceRef, the | |
305 | * kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing flag applies collectively to *all* active | |
306 | * operations sharing the same parent DNSServiceRef. If the MoreComing flag is | |
307 | * set it means that there are more results queued on this parent DNSServiceRef, | |
308 | * but not necessarily more results for this particular callback function. | |
309 | * The implication of this for client programmers is that when a callback | |
310 | * is invoked with the MoreComing flag set, the code should update its | |
311 | * internal data structures with the new result, and set a variable indicating | |
312 | * that its UI needs to be updated. Then, later when a callback is eventually | |
313 | * invoked with the MoreComing flag not set, the code should update *all* | |
314 | * stale UI elements related to that shared parent DNSServiceRef that need | |
315 | * updating, not just the UI elements related to the particular callback | |
316 | * that happened to be the last one to be invoked. | |
317 | * | |
318 | * 2. Canceling operations and kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing | |
319 | * Whenever you cancel any operation for which you had deferred UI updates | |
320 | * waiting because of a kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing flag, you should perform | |
321 | * those deferred UI updates. This is because, after cancelling the operation, | |
322 | * you can no longer wait for a callback *without* MoreComing set, to tell | |
323 | * you do perform your deferred UI updates (the operation has been canceled, | |
324 | * so there will be no more callbacks). An implication of the collective | |
325 | * kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing flag for shared connections is that this | |
326 | * guideline applies more broadly -- any time you cancel an operation on | |
327 | * a shared connection, you should perform all deferred UI updates for all | |
328 | * operations sharing that connection. This is because the MoreComing flag | |
329 | * might have been referring to events coming for the operation you canceled, | |
330 | * which will now not be coming because the operation has been canceled. | |
331 | * | |
332 | * 3. Only share DNSServiceRef's created with DNSServiceCreateConnection | |
333 | * Calling DNSServiceCreateConnection(&ref) creates a special shareable DNSServiceRef. | |
334 | * DNSServiceRef's created by other calls like DNSServiceBrowse() or DNSServiceResolve() | |
335 | * cannot be shared by copying them and using kDNSServiceFlagsShareConnection. | |
336 | * | |
337 | * 4. Don't Double-Deallocate if the MainRef has been Deallocated | |
338 | * Calling DNSServiceRefDeallocate(ref) for a particular operation's DNSServiceRef terminates | |
339 | * just that operation. Calling DNSServiceRefDeallocate(ref) for the main shared DNSServiceRef | |
340 | * (the parent DNSServiceRef, originally created by DNSServiceCreateConnection(&ref)) | |
341 | * automatically terminates the shared connection and all operations that were still using it. | |
342 | * After doing this, DO NOT then attempt to deallocate any remaining subordinate DNSServiceRef's. | |
343 | * The memory used by those subordinate DNSServiceRef's has already been freed, so any attempt | |
344 | * to do a DNSServiceRefDeallocate (or any other operation) on them will result in accesses | |
345 | * to freed memory, leading to crashes or other equally undesirable results. | |
346 | * | |
347 | * 5. Thread Safety | |
348 | * The dns_sd.h API does not presuppose any particular threading model, and consequently | |
349 | * does no locking internally (which would require linking with a specific threading library). | |
350 | * If the client concurrently, from multiple threads (or contexts), calls API routines using | |
351 | * the same DNSServiceRef, it is the client's responsibility to provide mutual exclusion for | |
352 | * that DNSServiceRef. | |
353 | ||
354 | * For example, use of DNSServiceRefDeallocate requires caution. A common mistake is as follows: | |
355 | * Thread B calls DNSServiceRefDeallocate to deallocate sdRef while Thread A is processing events | |
356 | * using sdRef. Doing this will lead to intermittent crashes on thread A if the sdRef is used after | |
357 | * it was deallocated. | |
358 | ||
359 | * A telltale sign of this crash type is to see DNSServiceProcessResult on the stack preceding the | |
360 | * actual crash location. | |
361 | ||
362 | * To state this more explicitly, mDNSResponder does not queue DNSServiceRefDeallocate so | |
363 | * that it occurs discretely before or after an event is handled. | |
364 | */ | |
365 | ||
366 | kDNSServiceFlagsSuppressUnusable = 0x8000, | |
367 | /* | |
368 | * This flag is meaningful only in DNSServiceQueryRecord which suppresses unusable queries on the | |
369 | * wire. If "hostname" is a wide-area unicast DNS hostname (i.e. not a ".local." name) | |
370 | * but this host has no routable IPv6 address, then the call will not try to look up IPv6 addresses | |
371 | * for "hostname", since any addresses it found would be unlikely to be of any use anyway. Similarly, | |
372 | * if this host has no routable IPv4 address, the call will not try to look up IPv4 addresses for | |
373 | * "hostname". | |
374 | */ | |
375 | ||
376 | kDNSServiceFlagsTimeout = 0x10000, | |
377 | /* | |
378 | * When kDNServiceFlagsTimeout is passed to DNSServiceQueryRecord or DNSServiceGetAddrInfo, the query is | |
379 | * stopped after a certain number of seconds have elapsed. The time at which the query will be stopped | |
380 | * is determined by the system and cannot be configured by the user. The query will be stopped irrespective | |
381 | * of whether a response was given earlier or not. When the query is stopped, the callback will be called | |
382 | * with an error code of kDNSServiceErr_Timeout and a NULL sockaddr will be returned for DNSServiceGetAddrInfo | |
383 | * and zero length rdata will be returned for DNSServiceQueryRecord. | |
384 | */ | |
385 | ||
386 | kDNSServiceFlagsIncludeP2P = 0x20000, | |
387 | /* | |
388 | * Include P2P interfaces when kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexAny is specified. | |
389 | * By default, specifying kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexAny does not include P2P interfaces. | |
390 | */ | |
391 | ||
392 | kDNSServiceFlagsWakeOnResolve = 0x40000, | |
393 | /* | |
394 | * This flag is meaningful only in DNSServiceResolve. When set, it tries to send a magic packet | |
395 | * to wake up the client. | |
396 | */ | |
397 | ||
398 | kDNSServiceFlagsBackgroundTrafficClass = 0x80000, | |
399 | /* | |
400 | * This flag is meaningful for Unicast DNS queries. When set, it uses the background traffic | |
401 | * class for packets that service the request. | |
402 | */ | |
403 | ||
404 | kDNSServiceFlagsIncludeAWDL = 0x100000, | |
405 | /* | |
406 | * Include AWDL interface when kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexAny is specified. | |
407 | */ | |
408 | ||
409 | kDNSServiceFlagsValidate = 0x200000, | |
410 | /* | |
411 | * This flag is meaningful in DNSServiceGetAddrInfo and DNSServiceQueryRecord. This is the ONLY flag to be valid | |
412 | * as an input to the APIs and also an output through the callbacks in the APIs. | |
413 | * | |
414 | * When this flag is passed to DNSServiceQueryRecord and DNSServiceGetAddrInfo to resolve unicast names, | |
415 | * the response will be validated using DNSSEC. The validation results are delivered using the flags field in | |
416 | * the callback and kDNSServiceFlagsValidate is marked in the flags to indicate that DNSSEC status is also available. | |
417 | * When the callback is called to deliver the query results, the validation results may or may not be available. | |
418 | * If it is not delivered along with the results, the validation status is delivered when the validation completes. | |
419 | * | |
420 | * When the validation results are delivered in the callback, it is indicated by marking the flags with | |
421 | * kDNSServiceFlagsValidate and kDNSServiceFlagsAdd along with the DNSSEC status flags (described below) and a NULL | |
422 | * sockaddr will be returned for DNSServiceGetAddrInfo and zero length rdata will be returned for DNSServiceQueryRecord. | |
423 | * DNSSEC validation results are for the whole RRSet and not just individual records delivered in the callback. When | |
424 | * kDNSServiceFlagsAdd is not set in the flags, applications should implicitly assume that the DNSSEC status of the | |
425 | * RRSet that has been delivered up until that point is not valid anymore, till another callback is called with | |
426 | * kDNSServiceFlagsAdd and kDNSServiceFlagsValidate. | |
427 | * | |
428 | * The following four flags indicate the status of the DNSSEC validation and marked in the flags field of the callback. | |
429 | * When any of the four flags is set, kDNSServiceFlagsValidate will also be set. To check the validation status, the | |
430 | * other applicable output flags should be masked. See kDNSServiceOutputFlags below. | |
431 | */ | |
432 | ||
433 | kDNSServiceFlagsSecure = 0x200010, | |
434 | /* | |
435 | * The response has been validated by verifying all the signatures in the response and was able to | |
436 | * build a successful authentication chain starting from a known trust anchor. | |
437 | */ | |
438 | ||
439 | kDNSServiceFlagsInsecure = 0x200020, | |
440 | /* | |
441 | * A chain of trust cannot be built starting from a known trust anchor to the response. | |
442 | */ | |
443 | ||
444 | kDNSServiceFlagsBogus = 0x200040, | |
445 | /* | |
446 | * If the response cannot be verified to be secure due to expired signatures, missing signatures etc., | |
447 | * then the results are considered to be bogus. | |
448 | */ | |
449 | ||
450 | kDNSServiceFlagsIndeterminate = 0x200080, | |
451 | /* | |
452 | * There is no valid trust anchor that can be used to determine whether a response is secure or not. | |
453 | */ | |
454 | ||
455 | kDNSServiceFlagsUnicastResponse = 0x400000, | |
456 | /* | |
457 | * Request unicast response to query. | |
458 | */ | |
459 | kDNSServiceFlagsValidateOptional = 0x800000, | |
460 | ||
461 | /* | |
462 | * This flag is identical to kDNSServiceFlagsValidate except for the case where the response | |
463 | * cannot be validated. If this flag is set in DNSServiceQueryRecord or DNSServiceGetAddrInfo, | |
464 | * the DNSSEC records will be requested for validation. If they cannot be received for some reason | |
465 | * during the validation (e.g., zone is not signed, zone is signed but cannot be traced back to | |
466 | * root, recursive server does not understand DNSSEC etc.), then this will fallback to the default | |
467 | * behavior where the validation will not be performed and no DNSSEC results will be provided. | |
468 | * | |
469 | * If the zone is signed and there is a valid path to a known trust anchor configured in the system | |
470 | * and the application requires DNSSEC validation irrespective of the DNSSEC awareness in the current | |
471 | * network, then this option MUST not be used. This is only intended to be used during the transition | |
472 | * period where the different nodes participating in the DNS resolution may not understand DNSSEC or | |
473 | * managed properly (e.g. missing DS record) but still want to be able to resolve DNS successfully. | |
474 | */ | |
475 | ||
476 | kDNSServiceFlagsWakeOnlyService = 0x1000000, | |
477 | /* | |
478 | * This flag is meaningful only in DNSServiceRegister. When set, the service will not be registered | |
479 | * with sleep proxy server during sleep. | |
480 | */ | |
481 | ||
482 | kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdOne = 0x2000000, | |
483 | kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdFinder = 0x4000000, | |
484 | kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdReached = kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdOne, | |
485 | /* | |
486 | * kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdOne is meaningful only in DNSServiceBrowse. When set, | |
487 | * the system will stop issuing browse queries on the network once the number | |
488 | * of answers returned is one or more. It will issue queries on the network | |
489 | * again if the number of answers drops to zero. | |
490 | * This flag is for Apple internal use only. Third party developers | |
491 | * should not rely on this behavior being supported in any given software release. | |
492 | * | |
493 | * kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdFinder is meaningful only in DNSServiceBrowse. When set, | |
494 | * the system will stop issuing browse queries on the network once the number | |
495 | * of answers has reached the threshold set for Finder. | |
496 | * It will issue queries on the network again if the number of answers drops below | |
497 | * this threshold. | |
498 | * This flag is for Apple internal use only. Third party developers | |
499 | * should not rely on this behavior being supported in any given software release. | |
500 | * | |
501 | * When kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdReached is set in the client callback add or remove event, | |
502 | * it indicates that the browse answer threshold has been reached and no | |
503 | * browse requests will be generated on the network until the number of answers falls | |
504 | * below the threshold value. Add and remove events can still occur based | |
505 | * on incoming Bonjour traffic observed by the system. | |
506 | * The set of services return to the client is not guaranteed to represent the | |
507 | * entire set of services present on the network once the threshold has been reached. | |
508 | * | |
509 | * Note, while kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdReached and kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdOne | |
510 | * have the same value, there isn't a conflict because kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdReached | |
511 | * is only set in the callbacks and kDNSServiceFlagsThresholdOne is only set on | |
512 | * input to a DNSServiceBrowse call. | |
513 | */ | |
514 | kDNSServiceFlagsDenyCellular = 0x8000000, | |
515 | /* | |
516 | * This flag is meaningful only for Unicast DNS queries. When set, the kernel will restrict | |
517 | * DNS resolutions on the cellular interface for that request. | |
518 | */ | |
519 | ||
520 | kDNSServiceFlagsServiceIndex = 0x10000000, | |
521 | /* | |
522 | * This flag is meaningful only for DNSServiceGetAddrInfo() for Unicast DNS queries. | |
523 | * When set, DNSServiceGetAddrInfo() will interpret the "interfaceIndex" argument of the call | |
524 | * as the "serviceIndex". | |
525 | */ | |
526 | ||
527 | kDNSServiceFlagsDenyExpensive = 0x20000000, | |
528 | /* | |
529 | * This flag is meaningful only for Unicast DNS queries. When set, the kernel will restrict | |
530 | * DNS resolutions on interfaces defined as expensive for that request. | |
531 | */ | |
532 | ||
533 | kDNSServiceFlagsPathEvaluationDone = 0x40000000 | |
534 | /* | |
535 | * This flag is meaningful for only Unicast DNS queries. | |
536 | * When set, it indicates that Network PathEvaluation has already been performed. | |
537 | */ | |
538 | ||
539 | }; | |
540 | ||
541 | #define kDNSServiceOutputFlags (kDNSServiceFlagsValidate | kDNSServiceFlagsValidateOptional | kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing | kDNSServiceFlagsAdd | kDNSServiceFlagsDefault) | |
542 | /* All the output flags excluding the DNSSEC Status flags. Typically used to check DNSSEC Status */ | |
543 | ||
544 | /* Possible protocol values */ | |
545 | enum | |
546 | { | |
547 | /* for DNSServiceGetAddrInfo() */ | |
548 | kDNSServiceProtocol_IPv4 = 0x01, | |
549 | kDNSServiceProtocol_IPv6 = 0x02, | |
550 | /* 0x04 and 0x08 reserved for future internetwork protocols */ | |
551 | ||
552 | /* for DNSServiceNATPortMappingCreate() */ | |
553 | kDNSServiceProtocol_UDP = 0x10, | |
554 | kDNSServiceProtocol_TCP = 0x20 | |
555 | /* 0x40 and 0x80 reserved for future transport protocols, e.g. SCTP [RFC 2960] | |
556 | * or DCCP [RFC 4340]. If future NAT gateways are created that support port | |
557 | * mappings for these protocols, new constants will be defined here. | |
558 | */ | |
559 | }; | |
560 | ||
561 | /* | |
562 | * The values for DNS Classes and Types are listed in RFC 1035, and are available | |
563 | * on every OS in its DNS header file. Unfortunately every OS does not have the | |
564 | * same header file containing DNS Class and Type constants, and the names of | |
565 | * the constants are not consistent. For example, BIND 8 uses "T_A", | |
566 | * BIND 9 uses "ns_t_a", Windows uses "DNS_TYPE_A", etc. | |
567 | * For this reason, these constants are also listed here, so that code using | |
568 | * the DNS-SD programming APIs can use these constants, so that the same code | |
569 | * can compile on all our supported platforms. | |
570 | */ | |
571 | ||
572 | enum | |
573 | { | |
574 | kDNSServiceClass_IN = 1 /* Internet */ | |
575 | }; | |
576 | ||
577 | enum | |
578 | { | |
579 | kDNSServiceType_A = 1, /* Host address. */ | |
580 | kDNSServiceType_NS = 2, /* Authoritative server. */ | |
581 | kDNSServiceType_MD = 3, /* Mail destination. */ | |
582 | kDNSServiceType_MF = 4, /* Mail forwarder. */ | |
583 | kDNSServiceType_CNAME = 5, /* Canonical name. */ | |
584 | kDNSServiceType_SOA = 6, /* Start of authority zone. */ | |
585 | kDNSServiceType_MB = 7, /* Mailbox domain name. */ | |
586 | kDNSServiceType_MG = 8, /* Mail group member. */ | |
587 | kDNSServiceType_MR = 9, /* Mail rename name. */ | |
588 | kDNSServiceType_NULL = 10, /* Null resource record. */ | |
589 | kDNSServiceType_WKS = 11, /* Well known service. */ | |
590 | kDNSServiceType_PTR = 12, /* Domain name pointer. */ | |
591 | kDNSServiceType_HINFO = 13, /* Host information. */ | |
592 | kDNSServiceType_MINFO = 14, /* Mailbox information. */ | |
593 | kDNSServiceType_MX = 15, /* Mail routing information. */ | |
594 | kDNSServiceType_TXT = 16, /* One or more text strings (NOT "zero or more..."). */ | |
595 | kDNSServiceType_RP = 17, /* Responsible person. */ | |
596 | kDNSServiceType_AFSDB = 18, /* AFS cell database. */ | |
597 | kDNSServiceType_X25 = 19, /* X_25 calling address. */ | |
598 | kDNSServiceType_ISDN = 20, /* ISDN calling address. */ | |
599 | kDNSServiceType_RT = 21, /* Router. */ | |
600 | kDNSServiceType_NSAP = 22, /* NSAP address. */ | |
601 | kDNSServiceType_NSAP_PTR = 23, /* Reverse NSAP lookup (deprecated). */ | |
602 | kDNSServiceType_SIG = 24, /* Security signature. */ | |
603 | kDNSServiceType_KEY = 25, /* Security key. */ | |
604 | kDNSServiceType_PX = 26, /* X.400 mail mapping. */ | |
605 | kDNSServiceType_GPOS = 27, /* Geographical position (withdrawn). */ | |
606 | kDNSServiceType_AAAA = 28, /* IPv6 Address. */ | |
607 | kDNSServiceType_LOC = 29, /* Location Information. */ | |
608 | kDNSServiceType_NXT = 30, /* Next domain (security). */ | |
609 | kDNSServiceType_EID = 31, /* Endpoint identifier. */ | |
610 | kDNSServiceType_NIMLOC = 32, /* Nimrod Locator. */ | |
611 | kDNSServiceType_SRV = 33, /* Server Selection. */ | |
612 | kDNSServiceType_ATMA = 34, /* ATM Address */ | |
613 | kDNSServiceType_NAPTR = 35, /* Naming Authority PoinTeR */ | |
614 | kDNSServiceType_KX = 36, /* Key Exchange */ | |
615 | kDNSServiceType_CERT = 37, /* Certification record */ | |
616 | kDNSServiceType_A6 = 38, /* IPv6 Address (deprecated) */ | |
617 | kDNSServiceType_DNAME = 39, /* Non-terminal DNAME (for IPv6) */ | |
618 | kDNSServiceType_SINK = 40, /* Kitchen sink (experimental) */ | |
619 | kDNSServiceType_OPT = 41, /* EDNS0 option (meta-RR) */ | |
620 | kDNSServiceType_APL = 42, /* Address Prefix List */ | |
621 | kDNSServiceType_DS = 43, /* Delegation Signer */ | |
622 | kDNSServiceType_SSHFP = 44, /* SSH Key Fingerprint */ | |
623 | kDNSServiceType_IPSECKEY = 45, /* IPSECKEY */ | |
624 | kDNSServiceType_RRSIG = 46, /* RRSIG */ | |
625 | kDNSServiceType_NSEC = 47, /* Denial of Existence */ | |
626 | kDNSServiceType_DNSKEY = 48, /* DNSKEY */ | |
627 | kDNSServiceType_DHCID = 49, /* DHCP Client Identifier */ | |
628 | kDNSServiceType_NSEC3 = 50, /* Hashed Authenticated Denial of Existence */ | |
629 | kDNSServiceType_NSEC3PARAM = 51, /* Hashed Authenticated Denial of Existence */ | |
630 | ||
631 | kDNSServiceType_HIP = 55, /* Host Identity Protocol */ | |
632 | ||
633 | kDNSServiceType_SPF = 99, /* Sender Policy Framework for E-Mail */ | |
634 | kDNSServiceType_UINFO = 100, /* IANA-Reserved */ | |
635 | kDNSServiceType_UID = 101, /* IANA-Reserved */ | |
636 | kDNSServiceType_GID = 102, /* IANA-Reserved */ | |
637 | kDNSServiceType_UNSPEC = 103, /* IANA-Reserved */ | |
638 | ||
639 | kDNSServiceType_TKEY = 249, /* Transaction key */ | |
640 | kDNSServiceType_TSIG = 250, /* Transaction signature. */ | |
641 | kDNSServiceType_IXFR = 251, /* Incremental zone transfer. */ | |
642 | kDNSServiceType_AXFR = 252, /* Transfer zone of authority. */ | |
643 | kDNSServiceType_MAILB = 253, /* Transfer mailbox records. */ | |
644 | kDNSServiceType_MAILA = 254, /* Transfer mail agent records. */ | |
645 | kDNSServiceType_ANY = 255 /* Wildcard match. */ | |
646 | }; | |
647 | ||
648 | /* possible error code values */ | |
649 | enum | |
650 | { | |
651 | kDNSServiceErr_NoError = 0, | |
652 | kDNSServiceErr_Unknown = -65537, /* 0xFFFE FFFF */ | |
653 | kDNSServiceErr_NoSuchName = -65538, | |
654 | kDNSServiceErr_NoMemory = -65539, | |
655 | kDNSServiceErr_BadParam = -65540, | |
656 | kDNSServiceErr_BadReference = -65541, | |
657 | kDNSServiceErr_BadState = -65542, | |
658 | kDNSServiceErr_BadFlags = -65543, | |
659 | kDNSServiceErr_Unsupported = -65544, | |
660 | kDNSServiceErr_NotInitialized = -65545, | |
661 | kDNSServiceErr_AlreadyRegistered = -65547, | |
662 | kDNSServiceErr_NameConflict = -65548, | |
663 | kDNSServiceErr_Invalid = -65549, | |
664 | kDNSServiceErr_Firewall = -65550, | |
665 | kDNSServiceErr_Incompatible = -65551, /* client library incompatible with daemon */ | |
666 | kDNSServiceErr_BadInterfaceIndex = -65552, | |
667 | kDNSServiceErr_Refused = -65553, | |
668 | kDNSServiceErr_NoSuchRecord = -65554, | |
669 | kDNSServiceErr_NoAuth = -65555, | |
670 | kDNSServiceErr_NoSuchKey = -65556, | |
671 | kDNSServiceErr_NATTraversal = -65557, | |
672 | kDNSServiceErr_DoubleNAT = -65558, | |
673 | kDNSServiceErr_BadTime = -65559, /* Codes up to here existed in Tiger */ | |
674 | kDNSServiceErr_BadSig = -65560, | |
675 | kDNSServiceErr_BadKey = -65561, | |
676 | kDNSServiceErr_Transient = -65562, | |
677 | kDNSServiceErr_ServiceNotRunning = -65563, /* Background daemon not running */ | |
678 | kDNSServiceErr_NATPortMappingUnsupported = -65564, /* NAT doesn't support PCP, NAT-PMP or UPnP */ | |
679 | kDNSServiceErr_NATPortMappingDisabled = -65565, /* NAT supports PCP, NAT-PMP or UPnP, but it's disabled by the administrator */ | |
680 | kDNSServiceErr_NoRouter = -65566, /* No router currently configured (probably no network connectivity) */ | |
681 | kDNSServiceErr_PollingMode = -65567, | |
682 | kDNSServiceErr_Timeout = -65568 | |
683 | ||
684 | /* mDNS Error codes are in the range | |
685 | * FFFE FF00 (-65792) to FFFE FFFF (-65537) */ | |
686 | }; | |
687 | ||
688 | /* Maximum length, in bytes, of a service name represented as a */ | |
689 | /* literal C-String, including the terminating NULL at the end. */ | |
690 | ||
691 | #define kDNSServiceMaxServiceName 64 | |
692 | ||
693 | /* Maximum length, in bytes, of a domain name represented as an *escaped* C-String */ | |
694 | /* including the final trailing dot, and the C-String terminating NULL at the end. */ | |
695 | ||
696 | #define kDNSServiceMaxDomainName 1009 | |
697 | ||
698 | /* | |
699 | * Notes on DNS Name Escaping | |
700 | * -- or -- | |
701 | * "Why is kDNSServiceMaxDomainName 1009, when the maximum legal domain name is 256 bytes?" | |
702 | * | |
703 | * All strings used in the DNS-SD APIs are UTF-8 strings. | |
704 | * Apart from the exceptions noted below, the APIs expect the strings to be properly escaped, using the | |
705 | * conventional DNS escaping rules, as used by the traditional DNS res_query() API, as described below: | |
706 | * | |
707 | * Generally all UTF-8 characters (which includes all US ASCII characters) represent themselves, | |
708 | * with two exceptions, the dot ('.') character, which is the label separator, | |
709 | * and the backslash ('\') character, which is the escape character. | |
710 | * The escape character ('\') is interpreted as described below: | |
711 | * | |
712 | * '\ddd', where ddd is a three-digit decimal value from 000 to 255, | |
713 | * represents a single literal byte with that value. Any byte value may be | |
714 | * represented in '\ddd' format, even characters that don't strictly need to be escaped. | |
715 | * For example, the ASCII code for 'w' is 119, and therefore '\119' is equivalent to 'w'. | |
716 | * Thus the command "ping '\119\119\119.apple.com'" is the equivalent to the command "ping 'www.apple.com'". | |
717 | * Nonprinting ASCII characters in the range 0-31 are often represented this way. | |
718 | * In particular, the ASCII NUL character (0) cannot appear in a C string because C uses it as the | |
719 | * string terminator character, so ASCII NUL in a domain name has to be represented in a C string as '\000'. | |
720 | * Other characters like space (ASCII code 32) are sometimes represented as '\032' | |
721 | * in contexts where having an actual space character in a C string would be inconvenient. | |
722 | * | |
723 | * Otherwise, for all cases where a '\' is followed by anything other than a three-digit decimal value | |
724 | * from 000 to 255, the character sequence '\x' represents a single literal occurrence of character 'x'. | |
725 | * This is legal for any character, so, for example, '\w' is equivalent to 'w'. | |
726 | * Thus the command "ping '\w\w\w.apple.com'" is the equivalent to the command "ping 'www.apple.com'". | |
727 | * However, this encoding is most useful when representing the characters '.' and '\', | |
728 | * which otherwise would have special meaning in DNS name strings. | |
729 | * This means that the following encodings are particularly common: | |
730 | * '\\' represents a single literal '\' in the name | |
731 | * '\.' represents a single literal '.' in the name | |
732 | * | |
733 | * A lone escape character ('\') appearing at the end of a string is not allowed, since it is | |
734 | * followed by neither a three-digit decimal value from 000 to 255 nor a single character. | |
735 | * If a lone escape character ('\') does appear as the last character of a string, it is silently ignored. | |
736 | * | |
737 | * The exceptions, that do not use escaping, are the routines where the full | |
738 | * DNS name of a resource is broken, for convenience, into servicename/regtype/domain. | |
739 | * In these routines, the "servicename" is NOT escaped. It does not need to be, since | |
740 | * it is, by definition, just a single literal string. Any characters in that string | |
741 | * represent exactly what they are. The "regtype" portion is, technically speaking, | |
742 | * escaped, but since legal regtypes are only allowed to contain US ASCII letters, | |
743 | * digits, and hyphens, there is nothing to escape, so the issue is moot. | |
744 | * The "domain" portion is also escaped, though most domains in use on the public | |
745 | * Internet today, like regtypes, don't contain any characters that need to be escaped. | |
746 | * As DNS-SD becomes more popular, rich-text domains for service discovery will | |
747 | * become common, so software should be written to cope with domains with escaping. | |
748 | * | |
749 | * The servicename may be up to 63 bytes of UTF-8 text (not counting the C-String | |
750 | * terminating NULL at the end). The regtype is of the form _service._tcp or | |
751 | * _service._udp, where the "service" part is 1-15 characters, which may be | |
752 | * letters, digits, or hyphens. The domain part of the three-part name may be | |
753 | * any legal domain, providing that the resulting servicename+regtype+domain | |
754 | * name does not exceed 256 bytes. | |
755 | * | |
756 | * For most software, these issues are transparent. When browsing, the discovered | |
757 | * servicenames should simply be displayed as-is. When resolving, the discovered | |
758 | * servicename/regtype/domain are simply passed unchanged to DNSServiceResolve(). | |
759 | * When a DNSServiceResolve() succeeds, the returned fullname is already in | |
760 | * the correct format to pass to standard system DNS APIs such as res_query(). | |
761 | * For converting from servicename/regtype/domain to a single properly-escaped | |
762 | * full DNS name, the helper function DNSServiceConstructFullName() is provided. | |
763 | * | |
764 | * The following (highly contrived) example illustrates the escaping process. | |
765 | * Suppose you have an service called "Dr. Smith\Dr. Johnson", of type "_ftp._tcp" | |
766 | * in subdomain "4th. Floor" of subdomain "Building 2" of domain "apple.com." | |
767 | * The full (escaped) DNS name of this service's SRV record would be: | |
768 | * Dr\.\032Smith\\Dr\.\032Johnson._ftp._tcp.4th\.\032Floor.Building\0322.apple.com. | |
769 | */ | |
770 | ||
771 | ||
772 | /* | |
773 | * Constants for specifying an interface index | |
774 | * | |
775 | * Specific interface indexes are identified via a 32-bit unsigned integer returned | |
776 | * by the if_nametoindex() family of calls. | |
777 | * | |
778 | * If the client passes 0 for interface index, that means "do the right thing", | |
779 | * which (at present) means, "if the name is in an mDNS local multicast domain | |
780 | * (e.g. 'local.', '254.169.in-addr.arpa.', '{8,9,A,B}.E.F.ip6.arpa.') then multicast | |
781 | * on all applicable interfaces, otherwise send via unicast to the appropriate | |
782 | * DNS server." Normally, most clients will use 0 for interface index to | |
783 | * automatically get the default sensible behaviour. | |
784 | * | |
785 | * If the client passes a positive interface index, then that indicates to do the | |
786 | * operation only on that one specified interface. | |
787 | * | |
788 | * If the client passes kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexLocalOnly when registering | |
789 | * a service, then that service will be found *only* by other local clients | |
790 | * on the same machine that are browsing using kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexLocalOnly | |
791 | * or kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexAny. | |
792 | * If a client has a 'private' service, accessible only to other processes | |
793 | * running on the same machine, this allows the client to advertise that service | |
794 | * in a way such that it does not inadvertently appear in service lists on | |
795 | * all the other machines on the network. | |
796 | * | |
797 | * If the client passes kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexLocalOnly when querying or | |
798 | * browsing, then the LocalOnly authoritative records and /etc/hosts caches | |
799 | * are searched and will find *all* records registered or configured on that | |
800 | * same local machine. | |
801 | * | |
802 | * If interested in getting negative answers to local questions while querying | |
803 | * or browsing, then set both the kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexLocalOnly and the | |
804 | * kDNSServiceFlagsReturnIntermediates flags. If no local answers exist at this | |
805 | * moment in time, then the reply will return an immediate negative answer. If | |
806 | * local records are subsequently created that answer the question, then those | |
807 | * answers will be delivered, for as long as the question is still active. | |
808 | * | |
809 | * Clients explicitly wishing to discover *only* LocalOnly services during a | |
810 | * browse may do this, without flags, by inspecting the interfaceIndex of each | |
811 | * service reported to a DNSServiceBrowseReply() callback function, and | |
812 | * discarding those answers where the interface index is not set to | |
813 | * kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexLocalOnly. | |
814 | * | |
815 | * kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexP2P is meaningful only in Browse, QueryRecord, Register, | |
816 | * and Resolve operations. It should not be used in other DNSService APIs. | |
817 | * | |
818 | * - If kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexP2P is passed to DNSServiceBrowse or | |
819 | * DNSServiceQueryRecord, it restricts the operation to P2P. | |
820 | * | |
821 | * - If kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexP2P is passed to DNSServiceRegister, it is | |
822 | * mapped internally to kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexAny with the kDNSServiceFlagsIncludeP2P | |
823 | * set. | |
824 | * | |
825 | * - If kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexP2P is passed to DNSServiceResolve, it is | |
826 | * mapped internally to kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexAny with the kDNSServiceFlagsIncludeP2P | |
827 | * set, because resolving a P2P service may create and/or enable an interface whose | |
828 | * index is not known a priori. The resolve callback will indicate the index of the | |
829 | * interface via which the service can be accessed. | |
830 | * | |
831 | * If applications pass kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexAny to DNSServiceBrowse | |
832 | * or DNSServiceQueryRecord, they must set the kDNSServiceFlagsIncludeP2P flag | |
833 | * to include P2P. In this case, if a service instance or the record being queried | |
834 | * is found over P2P, the resulting ADD event will indicate kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexP2P | |
835 | * as the interface index. | |
836 | */ | |
837 | ||
838 | #define kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexAny 0 | |
839 | #define kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexLocalOnly ((uint32_t)-1) | |
840 | #define kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexUnicast ((uint32_t)-2) | |
841 | #define kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexP2P ((uint32_t)-3) | |
842 | #define kDNSServiceInterfaceIndexBLE ((uint32_t)-4) | |
843 | ||
844 | typedef uint32_t DNSServiceFlags; | |
845 | typedef uint32_t DNSServiceProtocol; | |
846 | typedef int32_t DNSServiceErrorType; | |
847 | ||
848 | ||
849 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
850 | * | |
851 | * Version checking | |
852 | * | |
853 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
854 | ||
855 | /* DNSServiceGetProperty() Parameters: | |
856 | * | |
857 | * property: The requested property. | |
858 | * Currently the only property defined is kDNSServiceProperty_DaemonVersion. | |
859 | * | |
860 | * result: Place to store result. | |
861 | * For retrieving DaemonVersion, this should be the address of a uint32_t. | |
862 | * | |
863 | * size: Pointer to uint32_t containing size of the result location. | |
864 | * For retrieving DaemonVersion, this should be sizeof(uint32_t). | |
865 | * On return the uint32_t is updated to the size of the data returned. | |
866 | * For DaemonVersion, the returned size is always sizeof(uint32_t), but | |
867 | * future properties could be defined which return variable-sized results. | |
868 | * | |
869 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, or kDNSServiceErr_ServiceNotRunning | |
870 | * if the daemon (or "system service" on Windows) is not running. | |
871 | */ | |
872 | ||
873 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceGetProperty | |
874 | ( | |
875 | const char *property, /* Requested property (i.e. kDNSServiceProperty_DaemonVersion) */ | |
876 | void *result, /* Pointer to place to store result */ | |
877 | uint32_t *size /* size of result location */ | |
878 | ); | |
879 | ||
880 | /* | |
881 | * When requesting kDNSServiceProperty_DaemonVersion, the result pointer must point | |
882 | * to a 32-bit unsigned integer, and the size parameter must be set to sizeof(uint32_t). | |
883 | * | |
884 | * On return, the 32-bit unsigned integer contains the API version number | |
885 | * | |
886 | * For example, Mac OS X 10.4.9 has API version 1080400. | |
887 | * This allows applications to do simple greater-than and less-than comparisons: | |
888 | * e.g. an application that requires at least API version 1080400 can check: | |
889 | * if (version >= 1080400) ... | |
890 | * | |
891 | * Example usage: | |
892 | * uint32_t version; | |
893 | * uint32_t size = sizeof(version); | |
894 | * DNSServiceErrorType err = DNSServiceGetProperty(kDNSServiceProperty_DaemonVersion, &version, &size); | |
895 | * if (!err) printf("DNS_SD API version is %d.%d\n", version / 10000, version / 100 % 100); | |
896 | */ | |
897 | ||
898 | #define kDNSServiceProperty_DaemonVersion "DaemonVersion" | |
899 | ||
900 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
901 | * | |
902 | * Unix Domain Socket access, DNSServiceRef deallocation, and data processing functions | |
903 | * | |
904 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
905 | ||
906 | /* DNSServiceRefSockFD() | |
907 | * | |
908 | * Access underlying Unix domain socket for an initialized DNSServiceRef. | |
909 | * The DNS Service Discovery implementation uses this socket to communicate between the client and | |
910 | * the daemon. The application MUST NOT directly read from or write to this socket. | |
911 | * Access to the socket is provided so that it can be used as a kqueue event source, a CFRunLoop | |
912 | * event source, in a select() loop, etc. When the underlying event management subsystem (kqueue/ | |
913 | * select/CFRunLoop etc.) indicates to the client that data is available for reading on the | |
914 | * socket, the client should call DNSServiceProcessResult(), which will extract the daemon's | |
915 | * reply from the socket, and pass it to the appropriate application callback. By using a run | |
916 | * loop or select(), results from the daemon can be processed asynchronously. Alternatively, | |
917 | * a client can choose to fork a thread and have it loop calling "DNSServiceProcessResult(ref);" | |
918 | * If DNSServiceProcessResult() is called when no data is available for reading on the socket, it | |
919 | * will block until data does become available, and then process the data and return to the caller. | |
920 | * The application is responsible for checking the return value of DNSServiceProcessResult() | |
921 | * to determine if the socket is valid and if it should continue to process data on the socket. | |
922 | * When data arrives on the socket, the client is responsible for calling DNSServiceProcessResult(ref) | |
923 | * in a timely fashion -- if the client allows a large backlog of data to build up the daemon | |
924 | * may terminate the connection. | |
925 | * | |
926 | * sdRef: A DNSServiceRef initialized by any of the DNSService calls. | |
927 | * | |
928 | * return value: The DNSServiceRef's underlying socket descriptor, or -1 on | |
929 | * error. | |
930 | */ | |
931 | ||
932 | dnssd_sock_t DNSSD_API DNSServiceRefSockFD(DNSServiceRef sdRef); | |
933 | ||
934 | ||
935 | /* DNSServiceProcessResult() | |
936 | * | |
937 | * Read a reply from the daemon, calling the appropriate application callback. This call will | |
938 | * block until the daemon's response is received. Use DNSServiceRefSockFD() in | |
939 | * conjunction with a run loop or select() to determine the presence of a response from the | |
940 | * server before calling this function to process the reply without blocking. Call this function | |
941 | * at any point if it is acceptable to block until the daemon's response arrives. Note that the | |
942 | * client is responsible for ensuring that DNSServiceProcessResult() is called whenever there is | |
943 | * a reply from the daemon - the daemon may terminate its connection with a client that does not | |
944 | * process the daemon's responses. | |
945 | * | |
946 | * sdRef: A DNSServiceRef initialized by any of the DNSService calls | |
947 | * that take a callback parameter. | |
948 | * | |
949 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, otherwise returns | |
950 | * an error code indicating the specific failure that occurred. | |
951 | */ | |
952 | ||
953 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceProcessResult(DNSServiceRef sdRef); | |
954 | ||
955 | ||
956 | /* DNSServiceRefDeallocate() | |
957 | * | |
958 | * Terminate a connection with the daemon and free memory associated with the DNSServiceRef. | |
959 | * Any services or records registered with this DNSServiceRef will be deregistered. Any | |
960 | * Browse, Resolve, or Query operations called with this reference will be terminated. | |
961 | * | |
962 | * Note: If the reference's underlying socket is used in a run loop or select() call, it should | |
963 | * be removed BEFORE DNSServiceRefDeallocate() is called, as this function closes the reference's | |
964 | * socket. | |
965 | * | |
966 | * Note: If the reference was initialized with DNSServiceCreateConnection(), any DNSRecordRefs | |
967 | * created via this reference will be invalidated by this call - the resource records are | |
968 | * deregistered, and their DNSRecordRefs may not be used in subsequent functions. Similarly, | |
969 | * if the reference was initialized with DNSServiceRegister, and an extra resource record was | |
970 | * added to the service via DNSServiceAddRecord(), the DNSRecordRef created by the Add() call | |
971 | * is invalidated when this function is called - the DNSRecordRef may not be used in subsequent | |
972 | * functions. | |
973 | * | |
974 | * Note: This call is to be used only with the DNSServiceRef defined by this API. | |
975 | * | |
976 | * sdRef: A DNSServiceRef initialized by any of the DNSService calls. | |
977 | * | |
978 | */ | |
979 | ||
980 | void DNSSD_API DNSServiceRefDeallocate(DNSServiceRef sdRef); | |
981 | ||
982 | ||
983 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
984 | * | |
985 | * Domain Enumeration | |
986 | * | |
987 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
988 | ||
989 | /* DNSServiceEnumerateDomains() | |
990 | * | |
991 | * Asynchronously enumerate domains available for browsing and registration. | |
992 | * | |
993 | * The enumeration MUST be cancelled via DNSServiceRefDeallocate() when no more domains | |
994 | * are to be found. | |
995 | * | |
996 | * Note that the names returned are (like all of DNS-SD) UTF-8 strings, | |
997 | * and are escaped using standard DNS escaping rules. | |
998 | * (See "Notes on DNS Name Escaping" earlier in this file for more details.) | |
999 | * A graphical browser displaying a hierarchical tree-structured view should cut | |
1000 | * the names at the bare dots to yield individual labels, then de-escape each | |
1001 | * label according to the escaping rules, and then display the resulting UTF-8 text. | |
1002 | * | |
1003 | * DNSServiceDomainEnumReply Callback Parameters: | |
1004 | * | |
1005 | * sdRef: The DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceEnumerateDomains(). | |
1006 | * | |
1007 | * flags: Possible values are: | |
1008 | * kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing | |
1009 | * kDNSServiceFlagsAdd | |
1010 | * kDNSServiceFlagsDefault | |
1011 | * | |
1012 | * interfaceIndex: Specifies the interface on which the domain exists. (The index for a given | |
1013 | * interface is determined via the if_nametoindex() family of calls.) | |
1014 | * | |
1015 | * errorCode: Will be kDNSServiceErr_NoError (0) on success, otherwise indicates | |
1016 | * the failure that occurred (other parameters are undefined if errorCode is nonzero). | |
1017 | * | |
1018 | * replyDomain: The name of the domain. | |
1019 | * | |
1020 | * context: The context pointer passed to DNSServiceEnumerateDomains. | |
1021 | * | |
1022 | */ | |
1023 | ||
1024 | typedef void (DNSSD_API *DNSServiceDomainEnumReply) | |
1025 | ( | |
1026 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1027 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1028 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1029 | DNSServiceErrorType errorCode, | |
1030 | const char *replyDomain, | |
1031 | void *context | |
1032 | ); | |
1033 | ||
1034 | ||
1035 | /* DNSServiceEnumerateDomains() Parameters: | |
1036 | * | |
1037 | * sdRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSServiceRef. If the call succeeds | |
1038 | * then it initializes the DNSServiceRef, returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError, | |
1039 | * and the enumeration operation will run indefinitely until the client | |
1040 | * terminates it by passing this DNSServiceRef to DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
1041 | * | |
1042 | * flags: Possible values are: | |
1043 | * kDNSServiceFlagsBrowseDomains to enumerate domains recommended for browsing. | |
1044 | * kDNSServiceFlagsRegistrationDomains to enumerate domains recommended | |
1045 | * for registration. | |
1046 | * | |
1047 | * interfaceIndex: If non-zero, specifies the interface on which to look for domains. | |
1048 | * (the index for a given interface is determined via the if_nametoindex() | |
1049 | * family of calls.) Most applications will pass 0 to enumerate domains on | |
1050 | * all interfaces. See "Constants for specifying an interface index" for more details. | |
1051 | * | |
1052 | * callBack: The function to be called when a domain is found or the call asynchronously | |
1053 | * fails. | |
1054 | * | |
1055 | * context: An application context pointer which is passed to the callback function | |
1056 | * (may be NULL). | |
1057 | * | |
1058 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success (any subsequent, asynchronous | |
1059 | * errors are delivered to the callback), otherwise returns an error code indicating | |
1060 | * the error that occurred (the callback is not invoked and the DNSServiceRef | |
1061 | * is not initialized). | |
1062 | */ | |
1063 | ||
1064 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceEnumerateDomains | |
1065 | ( | |
1066 | DNSServiceRef *sdRef, | |
1067 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1068 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1069 | DNSServiceDomainEnumReply callBack, | |
1070 | void *context /* may be NULL */ | |
1071 | ); | |
1072 | ||
1073 | ||
1074 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
1075 | * | |
1076 | * Service Registration | |
1077 | * | |
1078 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
1079 | ||
1080 | /* Register a service that is discovered via Browse() and Resolve() calls. | |
1081 | * | |
1082 | * DNSServiceRegisterReply() Callback Parameters: | |
1083 | * | |
1084 | * sdRef: The DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceRegister(). | |
1085 | * | |
1086 | * flags: When a name is successfully registered, the callback will be | |
1087 | * invoked with the kDNSServiceFlagsAdd flag set. When Wide-Area | |
1088 | * DNS-SD is in use, it is possible for a single service to get | |
1089 | * more than one success callback (e.g. one in the "local" multicast | |
1090 | * DNS domain, and another in a wide-area unicast DNS domain). | |
1091 | * If a successfully-registered name later suffers a name conflict | |
1092 | * or similar problem and has to be deregistered, the callback will | |
1093 | * be invoked with the kDNSServiceFlagsAdd flag not set. The callback | |
1094 | * is *not* invoked in the case where the caller explicitly terminates | |
1095 | * the service registration by calling DNSServiceRefDeallocate(ref); | |
1096 | * | |
1097 | * errorCode: Will be kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, otherwise will | |
1098 | * indicate the failure that occurred (including name conflicts, | |
1099 | * if the kDNSServiceFlagsNoAutoRename flag was used when registering.) | |
1100 | * Other parameters are undefined if errorCode is nonzero. | |
1101 | * | |
1102 | * name: The service name registered (if the application did not specify a name in | |
1103 | * DNSServiceRegister(), this indicates what name was automatically chosen). | |
1104 | * | |
1105 | * regtype: The type of service registered, as it was passed to the callout. | |
1106 | * | |
1107 | * domain: The domain on which the service was registered (if the application did not | |
1108 | * specify a domain in DNSServiceRegister(), this indicates the default domain | |
1109 | * on which the service was registered). | |
1110 | * | |
1111 | * context: The context pointer that was passed to the callout. | |
1112 | * | |
1113 | */ | |
1114 | ||
1115 | typedef void (DNSSD_API *DNSServiceRegisterReply) | |
1116 | ( | |
1117 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1118 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1119 | DNSServiceErrorType errorCode, | |
1120 | const char *name, | |
1121 | const char *regtype, | |
1122 | const char *domain, | |
1123 | void *context | |
1124 | ); | |
1125 | ||
1126 | ||
1127 | /* DNSServiceRegister() Parameters: | |
1128 | * | |
1129 | * sdRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSServiceRef. If the call succeeds | |
1130 | * then it initializes the DNSServiceRef, returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError, | |
1131 | * and the registration will remain active indefinitely until the client | |
1132 | * terminates it by passing this DNSServiceRef to DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
1133 | * | |
1134 | * interfaceIndex: If non-zero, specifies the interface on which to register the service | |
1135 | * (the index for a given interface is determined via the if_nametoindex() | |
1136 | * family of calls.) Most applications will pass 0 to register on all | |
1137 | * available interfaces. See "Constants for specifying an interface index" for more details. | |
1138 | * | |
1139 | * flags: Indicates the renaming behavior on name conflict (most applications | |
1140 | * will pass 0). See flag definitions above for details. | |
1141 | * | |
1142 | * name: If non-NULL, specifies the service name to be registered. | |
1143 | * Most applications will not specify a name, in which case the computer | |
1144 | * name is used (this name is communicated to the client via the callback). | |
1145 | * If a name is specified, it must be 1-63 bytes of UTF-8 text. | |
1146 | * If the name is longer than 63 bytes it will be automatically truncated | |
1147 | * to a legal length, unless the NoAutoRename flag is set, | |
1148 | * in which case kDNSServiceErr_BadParam will be returned. | |
1149 | * | |
1150 | * regtype: The service type followed by the protocol, separated by a dot | |
1151 | * (e.g. "_ftp._tcp"). The service type must be an underscore, followed | |
1152 | * by 1-15 characters, which may be letters, digits, or hyphens. | |
1153 | * The transport protocol must be "_tcp" or "_udp". New service types | |
1154 | * should be registered at <http://www.dns-sd.org/ServiceTypes.html>. | |
1155 | * | |
1156 | * Additional subtypes of the primary service type (where a service | |
1157 | * type has defined subtypes) follow the primary service type in a | |
1158 | * comma-separated list, with no additional spaces, e.g. | |
1159 | * "_primarytype._tcp,_subtype1,_subtype2,_subtype3" | |
1160 | * Subtypes provide a mechanism for filtered browsing: A client browsing | |
1161 | * for "_primarytype._tcp" will discover all instances of this type; | |
1162 | * a client browsing for "_primarytype._tcp,_subtype2" will discover only | |
1163 | * those instances that were registered with "_subtype2" in their list of | |
1164 | * registered subtypes. | |
1165 | * | |
1166 | * The subtype mechanism can be illustrated with some examples using the | |
1167 | * dns-sd command-line tool: | |
1168 | * | |
1169 | * % dns-sd -R Simple _test._tcp "" 1001 & | |
1170 | * % dns-sd -R Better _test._tcp,HasFeatureA "" 1002 & | |
1171 | * % dns-sd -R Best _test._tcp,HasFeatureA,HasFeatureB "" 1003 & | |
1172 | * | |
1173 | * Now: | |
1174 | * % dns-sd -B _test._tcp # will find all three services | |
1175 | * % dns-sd -B _test._tcp,HasFeatureA # finds "Better" and "Best" | |
1176 | * % dns-sd -B _test._tcp,HasFeatureB # finds only "Best" | |
1177 | * | |
1178 | * Subtype labels may be up to 63 bytes long, and may contain any eight- | |
1179 | * bit byte values, including zero bytes. However, due to the nature of | |
1180 | * using a C-string-based API, conventional DNS escaping must be used for | |
1181 | * dots ('.'), commas (','), backslashes ('\') and zero bytes, as shown below: | |
1182 | * | |
1183 | * % dns-sd -R Test '_test._tcp,s\.one,s\,two,s\\three,s\000four' local 123 | |
1184 | * | |
1185 | * When a service is registered, all the clients browsing for the registered | |
1186 | * type ("regtype") will discover it. If the discovery should be | |
1187 | * restricted to a smaller set of well known peers, the service can be | |
1188 | * registered with additional data (group identifier) that is known | |
1189 | * only to a smaller set of peers. The group identifier should follow primary | |
1190 | * service type using a colon (":") as a delimeter. If subtypes are also present, | |
1191 | * it should be given before the subtype as shown below. | |
1192 | * | |
1193 | * % dns-sd -R _test1 _http._tcp:mygroup1 local 1001 | |
1194 | * % dns-sd -R _test2 _http._tcp:mygroup2 local 1001 | |
1195 | * % dns-sd -R _test3 _http._tcp:mygroup3,HasFeatureA local 1001 | |
1196 | * | |
1197 | * Now: | |
1198 | * % dns-sd -B _http._tcp:"mygroup1" # will discover only test1 | |
1199 | * % dns-sd -B _http._tcp:"mygroup2" # will discover only test2 | |
1200 | * % dns-sd -B _http._tcp:"mygroup3",HasFeatureA # will discover only test3 | |
1201 | * | |
1202 | * By specifying the group information, only the members of that group are | |
1203 | * discovered. | |
1204 | * | |
1205 | * The group identifier itself is not sent in clear. Only a hash of the group | |
1206 | * identifier is sent and the clients discover them anonymously. The group identifier | |
1207 | * may be up to 256 bytes long and may contain any eight bit values except comma which | |
1208 | * should be escaped. | |
1209 | * | |
1210 | * domain: If non-NULL, specifies the domain on which to advertise the service. | |
1211 | * Most applications will not specify a domain, instead automatically | |
1212 | * registering in the default domain(s). | |
1213 | * | |
1214 | * host: If non-NULL, specifies the SRV target host name. Most applications | |
1215 | * will not specify a host, instead automatically using the machine's | |
1216 | * default host name(s). Note that specifying a non-NULL host does NOT | |
1217 | * create an address record for that host - the application is responsible | |
1218 | * for ensuring that the appropriate address record exists, or creating it | |
1219 | * via DNSServiceRegisterRecord(). | |
1220 | * | |
1221 | * port: The port, in network byte order, on which the service accepts connections. | |
1222 | * Pass 0 for a "placeholder" service (i.e. a service that will not be discovered | |
1223 | * by browsing, but will cause a name conflict if another client tries to | |
1224 | * register that same name). Most clients will not use placeholder services. | |
1225 | * | |
1226 | * txtLen: The length of the txtRecord, in bytes. Must be zero if the txtRecord is NULL. | |
1227 | * | |
1228 | * txtRecord: The TXT record rdata. A non-NULL txtRecord MUST be a properly formatted DNS | |
1229 | * TXT record, i.e. <length byte> <data> <length byte> <data> ... | |
1230 | * Passing NULL for the txtRecord is allowed as a synonym for txtLen=1, txtRecord="", | |
1231 | * i.e. it creates a TXT record of length one containing a single empty string. | |
1232 | * RFC 1035 doesn't allow a TXT record to contain *zero* strings, so a single empty | |
1233 | * string is the smallest legal DNS TXT record. | |
1234 | * As with the other parameters, the DNSServiceRegister call copies the txtRecord | |
1235 | * data; e.g. if you allocated the storage for the txtRecord parameter with malloc() | |
1236 | * then you can safely free that memory right after the DNSServiceRegister call returns. | |
1237 | * | |
1238 | * callBack: The function to be called when the registration completes or asynchronously | |
1239 | * fails. The client MAY pass NULL for the callback - The client will NOT be notified | |
1240 | * of the default values picked on its behalf, and the client will NOT be notified of any | |
1241 | * asynchronous errors (e.g. out of memory errors, etc.) that may prevent the registration | |
1242 | * of the service. The client may NOT pass the NoAutoRename flag if the callback is NULL. | |
1243 | * The client may still deregister the service at any time via DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
1244 | * | |
1245 | * context: An application context pointer which is passed to the callback function | |
1246 | * (may be NULL). | |
1247 | * | |
1248 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success (any subsequent, asynchronous | |
1249 | * errors are delivered to the callback), otherwise returns an error code indicating | |
1250 | * the error that occurred (the callback is never invoked and the DNSServiceRef | |
1251 | * is not initialized). | |
1252 | */ | |
1253 | ||
1254 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceRegister | |
1255 | ( | |
1256 | DNSServiceRef *sdRef, | |
1257 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1258 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1259 | const char *name, /* may be NULL */ | |
1260 | const char *regtype, | |
1261 | const char *domain, /* may be NULL */ | |
1262 | const char *host, /* may be NULL */ | |
1263 | uint16_t port, /* In network byte order */ | |
1264 | uint16_t txtLen, | |
1265 | const void *txtRecord, /* may be NULL */ | |
1266 | DNSServiceRegisterReply callBack, /* may be NULL */ | |
1267 | void *context /* may be NULL */ | |
1268 | ); | |
1269 | ||
1270 | ||
1271 | /* DNSServiceAddRecord() | |
1272 | * | |
1273 | * Add a record to a registered service. The name of the record will be the same as the | |
1274 | * registered service's name. | |
1275 | * The record can later be updated or deregistered by passing the RecordRef initialized | |
1276 | * by this function to DNSServiceUpdateRecord() or DNSServiceRemoveRecord(). | |
1277 | * | |
1278 | * Note that the DNSServiceAddRecord/UpdateRecord/RemoveRecord are *NOT* thread-safe | |
1279 | * with respect to a single DNSServiceRef. If you plan to have multiple threads | |
1280 | * in your program simultaneously add, update, or remove records from the same | |
1281 | * DNSServiceRef, then it's the caller's responsibility to use a mutex lock | |
1282 | * or take similar appropriate precautions to serialize those calls. | |
1283 | * | |
1284 | * Parameters; | |
1285 | * | |
1286 | * sdRef: A DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceRegister(). | |
1287 | * | |
1288 | * RecordRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSRecordRef. Upon succesfull completion of this | |
1289 | * call, this ref may be passed to DNSServiceUpdateRecord() or DNSServiceRemoveRecord(). | |
1290 | * If the above DNSServiceRef is passed to DNSServiceRefDeallocate(), RecordRef is also | |
1291 | * invalidated and may not be used further. | |
1292 | * | |
1293 | * flags: Currently ignored, reserved for future use. | |
1294 | * | |
1295 | * rrtype: The type of the record (e.g. kDNSServiceType_TXT, kDNSServiceType_SRV, etc) | |
1296 | * | |
1297 | * rdlen: The length, in bytes, of the rdata. | |
1298 | * | |
1299 | * rdata: The raw rdata to be contained in the added resource record. | |
1300 | * | |
1301 | * ttl: The time to live of the resource record, in seconds. | |
1302 | * Most clients should pass 0 to indicate that the system should | |
1303 | * select a sensible default value. | |
1304 | * | |
1305 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, otherwise returns an | |
1306 | * error code indicating the error that occurred (the RecordRef is not initialized). | |
1307 | */ | |
1308 | ||
1309 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceAddRecord | |
1310 | ( | |
1311 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1312 | DNSRecordRef *RecordRef, | |
1313 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1314 | uint16_t rrtype, | |
1315 | uint16_t rdlen, | |
1316 | const void *rdata, | |
1317 | uint32_t ttl | |
1318 | ); | |
1319 | ||
1320 | ||
1321 | /* DNSServiceUpdateRecord | |
1322 | * | |
1323 | * Update a registered resource record. The record must either be: | |
1324 | * - The primary txt record of a service registered via DNSServiceRegister() | |
1325 | * - A record added to a registered service via DNSServiceAddRecord() | |
1326 | * - An individual record registered by DNSServiceRegisterRecord() | |
1327 | * | |
1328 | * Parameters: | |
1329 | * | |
1330 | * sdRef: A DNSServiceRef that was initialized by DNSServiceRegister() | |
1331 | * or DNSServiceCreateConnection(). | |
1332 | * | |
1333 | * RecordRef: A DNSRecordRef initialized by DNSServiceAddRecord, or NULL to update the | |
1334 | * service's primary txt record. | |
1335 | * | |
1336 | * flags: Currently ignored, reserved for future use. | |
1337 | * | |
1338 | * rdlen: The length, in bytes, of the new rdata. | |
1339 | * | |
1340 | * rdata: The new rdata to be contained in the updated resource record. | |
1341 | * | |
1342 | * ttl: The time to live of the updated resource record, in seconds. | |
1343 | * Most clients should pass 0 to indicate that the system should | |
1344 | * select a sensible default value. | |
1345 | * | |
1346 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, otherwise returns an | |
1347 | * error code indicating the error that occurred. | |
1348 | */ | |
1349 | ||
1350 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceUpdateRecord | |
1351 | ( | |
1352 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1353 | DNSRecordRef RecordRef, /* may be NULL */ | |
1354 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1355 | uint16_t rdlen, | |
1356 | const void *rdata, | |
1357 | uint32_t ttl | |
1358 | ); | |
1359 | ||
1360 | ||
1361 | /* DNSServiceRemoveRecord | |
1362 | * | |
1363 | * Remove a record previously added to a service record set via DNSServiceAddRecord(), or deregister | |
1364 | * an record registered individually via DNSServiceRegisterRecord(). | |
1365 | * | |
1366 | * Parameters: | |
1367 | * | |
1368 | * sdRef: A DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceRegister() (if the | |
1369 | * record being removed was registered via DNSServiceAddRecord()) or by | |
1370 | * DNSServiceCreateConnection() (if the record being removed was registered via | |
1371 | * DNSServiceRegisterRecord()). | |
1372 | * | |
1373 | * recordRef: A DNSRecordRef initialized by a successful call to DNSServiceAddRecord() | |
1374 | * or DNSServiceRegisterRecord(). | |
1375 | * | |
1376 | * flags: Currently ignored, reserved for future use. | |
1377 | * | |
1378 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, otherwise returns an | |
1379 | * error code indicating the error that occurred. | |
1380 | */ | |
1381 | ||
1382 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceRemoveRecord | |
1383 | ( | |
1384 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1385 | DNSRecordRef RecordRef, | |
1386 | DNSServiceFlags flags | |
1387 | ); | |
1388 | ||
1389 | ||
1390 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
1391 | * | |
1392 | * Service Discovery | |
1393 | * | |
1394 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
1395 | ||
1396 | /* Browse for instances of a service. | |
1397 | * | |
1398 | * DNSServiceBrowseReply() Parameters: | |
1399 | * | |
1400 | * sdRef: The DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceBrowse(). | |
1401 | * | |
1402 | * flags: Possible values are kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing and kDNSServiceFlagsAdd. | |
1403 | * See flag definitions for details. | |
1404 | * | |
1405 | * interfaceIndex: The interface on which the service is advertised. This index should | |
1406 | * be passed to DNSServiceResolve() when resolving the service. | |
1407 | * | |
1408 | * errorCode: Will be kDNSServiceErr_NoError (0) on success, otherwise will | |
1409 | * indicate the failure that occurred. Other parameters are undefined if | |
1410 | * the errorCode is nonzero. | |
1411 | * | |
1412 | * serviceName: The discovered service name. This name should be displayed to the user, | |
1413 | * and stored for subsequent use in the DNSServiceResolve() call. | |
1414 | * | |
1415 | * regtype: The service type, which is usually (but not always) the same as was passed | |
1416 | * to DNSServiceBrowse(). One case where the discovered service type may | |
1417 | * not be the same as the requested service type is when using subtypes: | |
1418 | * The client may want to browse for only those ftp servers that allow | |
1419 | * anonymous connections. The client will pass the string "_ftp._tcp,_anon" | |
1420 | * to DNSServiceBrowse(), but the type of the service that's discovered | |
1421 | * is simply "_ftp._tcp". The regtype for each discovered service instance | |
1422 | * should be stored along with the name, so that it can be passed to | |
1423 | * DNSServiceResolve() when the service is later resolved. | |
1424 | * | |
1425 | * domain: The domain of the discovered service instance. This may or may not be the | |
1426 | * same as the domain that was passed to DNSServiceBrowse(). The domain for each | |
1427 | * discovered service instance should be stored along with the name, so that | |
1428 | * it can be passed to DNSServiceResolve() when the service is later resolved. | |
1429 | * | |
1430 | * context: The context pointer that was passed to the callout. | |
1431 | * | |
1432 | */ | |
1433 | ||
1434 | typedef void (DNSSD_API *DNSServiceBrowseReply) | |
1435 | ( | |
1436 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1437 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1438 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1439 | DNSServiceErrorType errorCode, | |
1440 | const char *serviceName, | |
1441 | const char *regtype, | |
1442 | const char *replyDomain, | |
1443 | void *context | |
1444 | ); | |
1445 | ||
1446 | ||
1447 | /* DNSServiceBrowse() Parameters: | |
1448 | * | |
1449 | * sdRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSServiceRef. If the call succeeds | |
1450 | * then it initializes the DNSServiceRef, returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError, | |
1451 | * and the browse operation will run indefinitely until the client | |
1452 | * terminates it by passing this DNSServiceRef to DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
1453 | * | |
1454 | * flags: Currently ignored, reserved for future use. | |
1455 | * | |
1456 | * interfaceIndex: If non-zero, specifies the interface on which to browse for services | |
1457 | * (the index for a given interface is determined via the if_nametoindex() | |
1458 | * family of calls.) Most applications will pass 0 to browse on all available | |
1459 | * interfaces. See "Constants for specifying an interface index" for more details. | |
1460 | * | |
1461 | * regtype: The service type being browsed for followed by the protocol, separated by a | |
1462 | * dot (e.g. "_ftp._tcp"). The transport protocol must be "_tcp" or "_udp". | |
1463 | * A client may optionally specify a single subtype to perform filtered browsing: | |
1464 | * e.g. browsing for "_primarytype._tcp,_subtype" will discover only those | |
1465 | * instances of "_primarytype._tcp" that were registered specifying "_subtype" | |
1466 | * in their list of registered subtypes. Additionally, a group identifier may | |
1467 | * also be specified before the subtype e.g., _primarytype._tcp:GroupID, which | |
1468 | * will discover only the members that register the service with GroupID. See | |
1469 | * DNSServiceRegister for more details. | |
1470 | * | |
1471 | * domain: If non-NULL, specifies the domain on which to browse for services. | |
1472 | * Most applications will not specify a domain, instead browsing on the | |
1473 | * default domain(s). | |
1474 | * | |
1475 | * callBack: The function to be called when an instance of the service being browsed for | |
1476 | * is found, or if the call asynchronously fails. | |
1477 | * | |
1478 | * context: An application context pointer which is passed to the callback function | |
1479 | * (may be NULL). | |
1480 | * | |
1481 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success (any subsequent, asynchronous | |
1482 | * errors are delivered to the callback), otherwise returns an error code indicating | |
1483 | * the error that occurred (the callback is not invoked and the DNSServiceRef | |
1484 | * is not initialized). | |
1485 | */ | |
1486 | ||
1487 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceBrowse | |
1488 | ( | |
1489 | DNSServiceRef *sdRef, | |
1490 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1491 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1492 | const char *regtype, | |
1493 | const char *domain, /* may be NULL */ | |
1494 | DNSServiceBrowseReply callBack, | |
1495 | void *context /* may be NULL */ | |
1496 | ); | |
1497 | ||
1498 | ||
1499 | /* DNSServiceResolve() | |
1500 | * | |
1501 | * Resolve a service name discovered via DNSServiceBrowse() to a target host name, port number, and | |
1502 | * txt record. | |
1503 | * | |
1504 | * Note: Applications should NOT use DNSServiceResolve() solely for txt record monitoring - use | |
1505 | * DNSServiceQueryRecord() instead, as it is more efficient for this task. | |
1506 | * | |
1507 | * Note: When the desired results have been returned, the client MUST terminate the resolve by calling | |
1508 | * DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
1509 | * | |
1510 | * Note: DNSServiceResolve() behaves correctly for typical services that have a single SRV record | |
1511 | * and a single TXT record. To resolve non-standard services with multiple SRV or TXT records, | |
1512 | * DNSServiceQueryRecord() should be used. | |
1513 | * | |
1514 | * DNSServiceResolveReply Callback Parameters: | |
1515 | * | |
1516 | * sdRef: The DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceResolve(). | |
1517 | * | |
1518 | * flags: Possible values: kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing | |
1519 | * | |
1520 | * interfaceIndex: The interface on which the service was resolved. | |
1521 | * | |
1522 | * errorCode: Will be kDNSServiceErr_NoError (0) on success, otherwise will | |
1523 | * indicate the failure that occurred. Other parameters are undefined if | |
1524 | * the errorCode is nonzero. | |
1525 | * | |
1526 | * fullname: The full service domain name, in the form <servicename>.<protocol>.<domain>. | |
1527 | * (This name is escaped following standard DNS rules, making it suitable for | |
1528 | * passing to standard system DNS APIs such as res_query(), or to the | |
1529 | * special-purpose functions included in this API that take fullname parameters. | |
1530 | * See "Notes on DNS Name Escaping" earlier in this file for more details.) | |
1531 | * | |
1532 | * hosttarget: The target hostname of the machine providing the service. This name can | |
1533 | * be passed to functions like gethostbyname() to identify the host's IP address. | |
1534 | * | |
1535 | * port: The port, in network byte order, on which connections are accepted for this service. | |
1536 | * | |
1537 | * txtLen: The length of the txt record, in bytes. | |
1538 | * | |
1539 | * txtRecord: The service's primary txt record, in standard txt record format. | |
1540 | * | |
1541 | * context: The context pointer that was passed to the callout. | |
1542 | * | |
1543 | * NOTE: In earlier versions of this header file, the txtRecord parameter was declared "const char *" | |
1544 | * This is incorrect, since it contains length bytes which are values in the range 0 to 255, not -128 to +127. | |
1545 | * Depending on your compiler settings, this change may cause signed/unsigned mismatch warnings. | |
1546 | * These should be fixed by updating your own callback function definition to match the corrected | |
1547 | * function signature using "const unsigned char *txtRecord". Making this change may also fix inadvertent | |
1548 | * bugs in your callback function, where it could have incorrectly interpreted a length byte with value 250 | |
1549 | * as being -6 instead, with various bad consequences ranging from incorrect operation to software crashes. | |
1550 | * If you need to maintain portable code that will compile cleanly with both the old and new versions of | |
1551 | * this header file, you should update your callback function definition to use the correct unsigned value, | |
1552 | * and then in the place where you pass your callback function to DNSServiceResolve(), use a cast to eliminate | |
1553 | * the compiler warning, e.g.: | |
1554 | * DNSServiceResolve(sd, flags, index, name, regtype, domain, (DNSServiceResolveReply)MyCallback, context); | |
1555 | * This will ensure that your code compiles cleanly without warnings (and more importantly, works correctly) | |
1556 | * with both the old header and with the new corrected version. | |
1557 | * | |
1558 | */ | |
1559 | ||
1560 | typedef void (DNSSD_API *DNSServiceResolveReply) | |
1561 | ( | |
1562 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1563 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1564 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1565 | DNSServiceErrorType errorCode, | |
1566 | const char *fullname, | |
1567 | const char *hosttarget, | |
1568 | uint16_t port, /* In network byte order */ | |
1569 | uint16_t txtLen, | |
1570 | const unsigned char *txtRecord, | |
1571 | void *context | |
1572 | ); | |
1573 | ||
1574 | ||
1575 | /* DNSServiceResolve() Parameters | |
1576 | * | |
1577 | * sdRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSServiceRef. If the call succeeds | |
1578 | * then it initializes the DNSServiceRef, returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError, | |
1579 | * and the resolve operation will run indefinitely until the client | |
1580 | * terminates it by passing this DNSServiceRef to DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
1581 | * | |
1582 | * flags: Specifying kDNSServiceFlagsForceMulticast will cause query to be | |
1583 | * performed with a link-local mDNS query, even if the name is an | |
1584 | * apparently non-local name (i.e. a name not ending in ".local.") | |
1585 | * | |
1586 | * interfaceIndex: The interface on which to resolve the service. If this resolve call is | |
1587 | * as a result of a currently active DNSServiceBrowse() operation, then the | |
1588 | * interfaceIndex should be the index reported in the DNSServiceBrowseReply | |
1589 | * callback. If this resolve call is using information previously saved | |
1590 | * (e.g. in a preference file) for later use, then use interfaceIndex 0, because | |
1591 | * the desired service may now be reachable via a different physical interface. | |
1592 | * See "Constants for specifying an interface index" for more details. | |
1593 | * | |
1594 | * name: The name of the service instance to be resolved, as reported to the | |
1595 | * DNSServiceBrowseReply() callback. | |
1596 | * | |
1597 | * regtype: The type of the service instance to be resolved, as reported to the | |
1598 | * DNSServiceBrowseReply() callback. | |
1599 | * | |
1600 | * domain: The domain of the service instance to be resolved, as reported to the | |
1601 | * DNSServiceBrowseReply() callback. | |
1602 | * | |
1603 | * callBack: The function to be called when a result is found, or if the call | |
1604 | * asynchronously fails. | |
1605 | * | |
1606 | * context: An application context pointer which is passed to the callback function | |
1607 | * (may be NULL). | |
1608 | * | |
1609 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success (any subsequent, asynchronous | |
1610 | * errors are delivered to the callback), otherwise returns an error code indicating | |
1611 | * the error that occurred (the callback is never invoked and the DNSServiceRef | |
1612 | * is not initialized). | |
1613 | */ | |
1614 | ||
1615 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceResolve | |
1616 | ( | |
1617 | DNSServiceRef *sdRef, | |
1618 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1619 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1620 | const char *name, | |
1621 | const char *regtype, | |
1622 | const char *domain, | |
1623 | DNSServiceResolveReply callBack, | |
1624 | void *context /* may be NULL */ | |
1625 | ); | |
1626 | ||
1627 | ||
1628 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
1629 | * | |
1630 | * Querying Individual Specific Records | |
1631 | * | |
1632 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
1633 | ||
1634 | /* DNSServiceQueryRecord | |
1635 | * | |
1636 | * Query for an arbitrary DNS record. | |
1637 | * | |
1638 | * DNSServiceQueryRecordReply() Callback Parameters: | |
1639 | * | |
1640 | * sdRef: The DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceQueryRecord(). | |
1641 | * | |
1642 | * flags: Possible values are kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing and | |
1643 | * kDNSServiceFlagsAdd. The Add flag is NOT set for PTR records | |
1644 | * with a ttl of 0, i.e. "Remove" events. | |
1645 | * | |
1646 | * interfaceIndex: The interface on which the query was resolved (the index for a given | |
1647 | * interface is determined via the if_nametoindex() family of calls). | |
1648 | * See "Constants for specifying an interface index" for more details. | |
1649 | * | |
1650 | * errorCode: Will be kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, otherwise will | |
1651 | * indicate the failure that occurred. Other parameters are undefined if | |
1652 | * errorCode is nonzero. | |
1653 | * | |
1654 | * fullname: The resource record's full domain name. | |
1655 | * | |
1656 | * rrtype: The resource record's type (e.g. kDNSServiceType_PTR, kDNSServiceType_SRV, etc) | |
1657 | * | |
1658 | * rrclass: The class of the resource record (usually kDNSServiceClass_IN). | |
1659 | * | |
1660 | * rdlen: The length, in bytes, of the resource record rdata. | |
1661 | * | |
1662 | * rdata: The raw rdata of the resource record. | |
1663 | * | |
1664 | * ttl: If the client wishes to cache the result for performance reasons, | |
1665 | * the TTL indicates how long the client may legitimately hold onto | |
1666 | * this result, in seconds. After the TTL expires, the client should | |
1667 | * consider the result no longer valid, and if it requires this data | |
1668 | * again, it should be re-fetched with a new query. Of course, this | |
1669 | * only applies to clients that cancel the asynchronous operation when | |
1670 | * they get a result. Clients that leave the asynchronous operation | |
1671 | * running can safely assume that the data remains valid until they | |
1672 | * get another callback telling them otherwise. | |
1673 | * | |
1674 | * context: The context pointer that was passed to the callout. | |
1675 | * | |
1676 | */ | |
1677 | ||
1678 | typedef void (DNSSD_API *DNSServiceQueryRecordReply) | |
1679 | ( | |
1680 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1681 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1682 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1683 | DNSServiceErrorType errorCode, | |
1684 | const char *fullname, | |
1685 | uint16_t rrtype, | |
1686 | uint16_t rrclass, | |
1687 | uint16_t rdlen, | |
1688 | const void *rdata, | |
1689 | uint32_t ttl, | |
1690 | void *context | |
1691 | ); | |
1692 | ||
1693 | ||
1694 | /* DNSServiceQueryRecord() Parameters: | |
1695 | * | |
1696 | * sdRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSServiceRef. If the call succeeds | |
1697 | * then it initializes the DNSServiceRef, returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError, | |
1698 | * and the query operation will run indefinitely until the client | |
1699 | * terminates it by passing this DNSServiceRef to DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
1700 | * | |
1701 | * flags: kDNSServiceFlagsForceMulticast or kDNSServiceFlagsLongLivedQuery. | |
1702 | * Pass kDNSServiceFlagsLongLivedQuery to create a "long-lived" unicast | |
1703 | * query to a unicast DNS server that implements the protocol. This flag | |
1704 | * has no effect on link-local multicast queries. | |
1705 | * | |
1706 | * interfaceIndex: If non-zero, specifies the interface on which to issue the query | |
1707 | * (the index for a given interface is determined via the if_nametoindex() | |
1708 | * family of calls.) Passing 0 causes the name to be queried for on all | |
1709 | * interfaces. See "Constants for specifying an interface index" for more details. | |
1710 | * | |
1711 | * fullname: The full domain name of the resource record to be queried for. | |
1712 | * | |
1713 | * rrtype: The numerical type of the resource record to be queried for | |
1714 | * (e.g. kDNSServiceType_PTR, kDNSServiceType_SRV, etc) | |
1715 | * | |
1716 | * rrclass: The class of the resource record (usually kDNSServiceClass_IN). | |
1717 | * | |
1718 | * callBack: The function to be called when a result is found, or if the call | |
1719 | * asynchronously fails. | |
1720 | * | |
1721 | * context: An application context pointer which is passed to the callback function | |
1722 | * (may be NULL). | |
1723 | * | |
1724 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success (any subsequent, asynchronous | |
1725 | * errors are delivered to the callback), otherwise returns an error code indicating | |
1726 | * the error that occurred (the callback is never invoked and the DNSServiceRef | |
1727 | * is not initialized). | |
1728 | */ | |
1729 | ||
1730 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceQueryRecord | |
1731 | ( | |
1732 | DNSServiceRef *sdRef, | |
1733 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1734 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1735 | const char *fullname, | |
1736 | uint16_t rrtype, | |
1737 | uint16_t rrclass, | |
1738 | DNSServiceQueryRecordReply callBack, | |
1739 | void *context /* may be NULL */ | |
1740 | ); | |
1741 | ||
1742 | ||
1743 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
1744 | * | |
1745 | * Unified lookup of both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses for a fully qualified hostname | |
1746 | * | |
1747 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
1748 | ||
1749 | /* DNSServiceGetAddrInfo | |
1750 | * | |
1751 | * Queries for the IP address of a hostname by using either Multicast or Unicast DNS. | |
1752 | * | |
1753 | * DNSServiceGetAddrInfoReply() parameters: | |
1754 | * | |
1755 | * sdRef: The DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceGetAddrInfo(). | |
1756 | * | |
1757 | * flags: Possible values are kDNSServiceFlagsMoreComing and | |
1758 | * kDNSServiceFlagsAdd. | |
1759 | * | |
1760 | * interfaceIndex: The interface to which the answers pertain. | |
1761 | * | |
1762 | * errorCode: Will be kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, otherwise will | |
1763 | * indicate the failure that occurred. Other parameters are | |
1764 | * undefined if errorCode is nonzero. | |
1765 | * | |
1766 | * hostname: The fully qualified domain name of the host to be queried for. | |
1767 | * | |
1768 | * address: IPv4 or IPv6 address. | |
1769 | * | |
1770 | * ttl: If the client wishes to cache the result for performance reasons, | |
1771 | * the TTL indicates how long the client may legitimately hold onto | |
1772 | * this result, in seconds. After the TTL expires, the client should | |
1773 | * consider the result no longer valid, and if it requires this data | |
1774 | * again, it should be re-fetched with a new query. Of course, this | |
1775 | * only applies to clients that cancel the asynchronous operation when | |
1776 | * they get a result. Clients that leave the asynchronous operation | |
1777 | * running can safely assume that the data remains valid until they | |
1778 | * get another callback telling them otherwise. | |
1779 | * | |
1780 | * context: The context pointer that was passed to the callout. | |
1781 | * | |
1782 | */ | |
1783 | ||
1784 | typedef void (DNSSD_API *DNSServiceGetAddrInfoReply) | |
1785 | ( | |
1786 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1787 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1788 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1789 | DNSServiceErrorType errorCode, | |
1790 | const char *hostname, | |
1791 | const struct sockaddr *address, | |
1792 | uint32_t ttl, | |
1793 | void *context | |
1794 | ); | |
1795 | ||
1796 | ||
1797 | /* DNSServiceGetAddrInfo() Parameters: | |
1798 | * | |
1799 | * sdRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSServiceRef. If the call succeeds then it | |
1800 | * initializes the DNSServiceRef, returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError, and the query | |
1801 | * begins and will last indefinitely until the client terminates the query | |
1802 | * by passing this DNSServiceRef to DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
1803 | * | |
1804 | * flags: kDNSServiceFlagsForceMulticast | |
1805 | * | |
1806 | * interfaceIndex: The interface on which to issue the query. Passing 0 causes the query to be | |
1807 | * sent on all active interfaces via Multicast or the primary interface via Unicast. | |
1808 | * | |
1809 | * protocol: Pass in kDNSServiceProtocol_IPv4 to look up IPv4 addresses, or kDNSServiceProtocol_IPv6 | |
1810 | * to look up IPv6 addresses, or both to look up both kinds. If neither flag is | |
1811 | * set, the system will apply an intelligent heuristic, which is (currently) | |
1812 | * that it will attempt to look up both, except: | |
1813 | * | |
1814 | * * If "hostname" is a wide-area unicast DNS hostname (i.e. not a ".local." name) | |
1815 | * but this host has no routable IPv6 address, then the call will not try to | |
1816 | * look up IPv6 addresses for "hostname", since any addresses it found would be | |
1817 | * unlikely to be of any use anyway. Similarly, if this host has no routable | |
1818 | * IPv4 address, the call will not try to look up IPv4 addresses for "hostname". | |
1819 | * | |
1820 | * hostname: The fully qualified domain name of the host to be queried for. | |
1821 | * | |
1822 | * callBack: The function to be called when the query succeeds or fails asynchronously. | |
1823 | * | |
1824 | * context: An application context pointer which is passed to the callback function | |
1825 | * (may be NULL). | |
1826 | * | |
1827 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success (any subsequent, asynchronous | |
1828 | * errors are delivered to the callback), otherwise returns an error code indicating | |
1829 | * the error that occurred. | |
1830 | */ | |
1831 | ||
1832 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceGetAddrInfo | |
1833 | ( | |
1834 | DNSServiceRef *sdRef, | |
1835 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1836 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1837 | DNSServiceProtocol protocol, | |
1838 | const char *hostname, | |
1839 | DNSServiceGetAddrInfoReply callBack, | |
1840 | void *context /* may be NULL */ | |
1841 | ); | |
1842 | ||
1843 | ||
1844 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
1845 | * | |
1846 | * Special Purpose Calls: | |
1847 | * DNSServiceCreateConnection(), DNSServiceRegisterRecord(), DNSServiceReconfirmRecord() | |
1848 | * (most applications will not use these) | |
1849 | * | |
1850 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
1851 | ||
1852 | /* DNSServiceCreateConnection() | |
1853 | * | |
1854 | * Create a connection to the daemon allowing efficient registration of | |
1855 | * multiple individual records. | |
1856 | * | |
1857 | * Parameters: | |
1858 | * | |
1859 | * sdRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSServiceRef. Deallocating | |
1860 | * the reference (via DNSServiceRefDeallocate()) severs the | |
1861 | * connection and deregisters all records registered on this connection. | |
1862 | * | |
1863 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, otherwise returns | |
1864 | * an error code indicating the specific failure that occurred (in which | |
1865 | * case the DNSServiceRef is not initialized). | |
1866 | */ | |
1867 | ||
1868 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceCreateConnection(DNSServiceRef *sdRef); | |
1869 | ||
1870 | /* DNSServiceRegisterRecord | |
1871 | * | |
1872 | * Register an individual resource record on a connected DNSServiceRef. | |
1873 | * | |
1874 | * Note that name conflicts occurring for records registered via this call must be handled | |
1875 | * by the client in the callback. | |
1876 | * | |
1877 | * DNSServiceRegisterRecordReply() parameters: | |
1878 | * | |
1879 | * sdRef: The connected DNSServiceRef initialized by | |
1880 | * DNSServiceCreateConnection(). | |
1881 | * | |
1882 | * RecordRef: The DNSRecordRef initialized by DNSServiceRegisterRecord(). If the above | |
1883 | * DNSServiceRef is passed to DNSServiceRefDeallocate(), this DNSRecordRef is | |
1884 | * invalidated, and may not be used further. | |
1885 | * | |
1886 | * flags: Currently unused, reserved for future use. | |
1887 | * | |
1888 | * errorCode: Will be kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success, otherwise will | |
1889 | * indicate the failure that occurred (including name conflicts.) | |
1890 | * Other parameters are undefined if errorCode is nonzero. | |
1891 | * | |
1892 | * context: The context pointer that was passed to the callout. | |
1893 | * | |
1894 | */ | |
1895 | ||
1896 | typedef void (DNSSD_API *DNSServiceRegisterRecordReply) | |
1897 | ( | |
1898 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1899 | DNSRecordRef RecordRef, | |
1900 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1901 | DNSServiceErrorType errorCode, | |
1902 | void *context | |
1903 | ); | |
1904 | ||
1905 | ||
1906 | /* DNSServiceRegisterRecord() Parameters: | |
1907 | * | |
1908 | * sdRef: A DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceCreateConnection(). | |
1909 | * | |
1910 | * RecordRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSRecordRef. Upon succesfull completion of this | |
1911 | * call, this ref may be passed to DNSServiceUpdateRecord() or DNSServiceRemoveRecord(). | |
1912 | * (To deregister ALL records registered on a single connected DNSServiceRef | |
1913 | * and deallocate each of their corresponding DNSServiceRecordRefs, call | |
1914 | * DNSServiceRefDeallocate()). | |
1915 | * | |
1916 | * flags: Possible values are kDNSServiceFlagsShared or kDNSServiceFlagsUnique | |
1917 | * (see flag type definitions for details). | |
1918 | * | |
1919 | * interfaceIndex: If non-zero, specifies the interface on which to register the record | |
1920 | * (the index for a given interface is determined via the if_nametoindex() | |
1921 | * family of calls.) Passing 0 causes the record to be registered on all interfaces. | |
1922 | * See "Constants for specifying an interface index" for more details. | |
1923 | * | |
1924 | * fullname: The full domain name of the resource record. | |
1925 | * | |
1926 | * rrtype: The numerical type of the resource record (e.g. kDNSServiceType_PTR, kDNSServiceType_SRV, etc) | |
1927 | * | |
1928 | * rrclass: The class of the resource record (usually kDNSServiceClass_IN) | |
1929 | * | |
1930 | * rdlen: Length, in bytes, of the rdata. | |
1931 | * | |
1932 | * rdata: A pointer to the raw rdata, as it is to appear in the DNS record. | |
1933 | * | |
1934 | * ttl: The time to live of the resource record, in seconds. | |
1935 | * Most clients should pass 0 to indicate that the system should | |
1936 | * select a sensible default value. | |
1937 | * | |
1938 | * callBack: The function to be called when a result is found, or if the call | |
1939 | * asynchronously fails (e.g. because of a name conflict.) | |
1940 | * | |
1941 | * context: An application context pointer which is passed to the callback function | |
1942 | * (may be NULL). | |
1943 | * | |
1944 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success (any subsequent, asynchronous | |
1945 | * errors are delivered to the callback), otherwise returns an error code indicating | |
1946 | * the error that occurred (the callback is never invoked and the DNSRecordRef is | |
1947 | * not initialized). | |
1948 | */ | |
1949 | ||
1950 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceRegisterRecord | |
1951 | ( | |
1952 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
1953 | DNSRecordRef *RecordRef, | |
1954 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
1955 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
1956 | const char *fullname, | |
1957 | uint16_t rrtype, | |
1958 | uint16_t rrclass, | |
1959 | uint16_t rdlen, | |
1960 | const void *rdata, | |
1961 | uint32_t ttl, | |
1962 | DNSServiceRegisterRecordReply callBack, | |
1963 | void *context /* may be NULL */ | |
1964 | ); | |
1965 | ||
1966 | ||
1967 | /* DNSServiceReconfirmRecord | |
1968 | * | |
1969 | * Instruct the daemon to verify the validity of a resource record that appears | |
1970 | * to be out of date (e.g. because TCP connection to a service's target failed.) | |
1971 | * Causes the record to be flushed from the daemon's cache (as well as all other | |
1972 | * daemons' caches on the network) if the record is determined to be invalid. | |
1973 | * Use this routine conservatively. Reconfirming a record necessarily consumes | |
1974 | * network bandwidth, so this should not be done indiscriminately. | |
1975 | * | |
1976 | * Parameters: | |
1977 | * | |
1978 | * flags: Not currently used. | |
1979 | * | |
1980 | * interfaceIndex: Specifies the interface of the record in question. | |
1981 | * The caller must specify the interface. | |
1982 | * This API (by design) causes increased network traffic, so it requires | |
1983 | * the caller to be precise about which record should be reconfirmed. | |
1984 | * It is not possible to pass zero for the interface index to perform | |
1985 | * a "wildcard" reconfirmation, where *all* matching records are reconfirmed. | |
1986 | * | |
1987 | * fullname: The resource record's full domain name. | |
1988 | * | |
1989 | * rrtype: The resource record's type (e.g. kDNSServiceType_PTR, kDNSServiceType_SRV, etc) | |
1990 | * | |
1991 | * rrclass: The class of the resource record (usually kDNSServiceClass_IN). | |
1992 | * | |
1993 | * rdlen: The length, in bytes, of the resource record rdata. | |
1994 | * | |
1995 | * rdata: The raw rdata of the resource record. | |
1996 | * | |
1997 | */ | |
1998 | ||
1999 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceReconfirmRecord | |
2000 | ( | |
2001 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
2002 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
2003 | const char *fullname, | |
2004 | uint16_t rrtype, | |
2005 | uint16_t rrclass, | |
2006 | uint16_t rdlen, | |
2007 | const void *rdata | |
2008 | ); | |
2009 | ||
2010 | ||
2011 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
2012 | * | |
2013 | * NAT Port Mapping | |
2014 | * | |
2015 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
2016 | ||
2017 | /* DNSServiceNATPortMappingCreate | |
2018 | * | |
2019 | * Request a port mapping in the NAT gateway, which maps a port on the local machine | |
2020 | * to an external port on the NAT. The NAT should support either PCP, NAT-PMP or the | |
2021 | * UPnP/IGD protocol for this API to create a successful mapping. Note that this API | |
2022 | * currently supports IPv4 addresses/mappings only. If the NAT gateway supports PCP and | |
2023 | * returns an IPv6 address (incorrectly, since this API specifically requests IPv4 | |
2024 | * addresses), the DNSServiceNATPortMappingReply callback will be invoked with errorCode | |
2025 | * kDNSServiceErr_NATPortMappingUnsupported. | |
2026 | * | |
2027 | * The port mapping will be renewed indefinitely until the client process exits, or | |
2028 | * explicitly terminates the port mapping request by calling DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
2029 | * The client callback will be invoked, informing the client of the NAT gateway's | |
2030 | * external IP address and the external port that has been allocated for this client. | |
2031 | * The client should then record this external IP address and port using whatever | |
2032 | * directory service mechanism it is using to enable peers to connect to it. | |
2033 | * (Clients advertising services using Wide-Area DNS-SD DO NOT need to use this API | |
2034 | * -- when a client calls DNSServiceRegister() NAT mappings are automatically created | |
2035 | * and the external IP address and port for the service are recorded in the global DNS. | |
2036 | * Only clients using some directory mechanism other than Wide-Area DNS-SD need to use | |
2037 | * this API to explicitly map their own ports.) | |
2038 | * | |
2039 | * It's possible that the client callback could be called multiple times, for example | |
2040 | * if the NAT gateway's IP address changes, or if a configuration change results in a | |
2041 | * different external port being mapped for this client. Over the lifetime of any long-lived | |
2042 | * port mapping, the client should be prepared to handle these notifications of changes | |
2043 | * in the environment, and should update its recorded address and/or port as appropriate. | |
2044 | * | |
2045 | * NOTE: There are two unusual aspects of how the DNSServiceNATPortMappingCreate API works, | |
2046 | * which were intentionally designed to help simplify client code: | |
2047 | * | |
2048 | * 1. It's not an error to request a NAT mapping when the machine is not behind a NAT gateway. | |
2049 | * In other NAT mapping APIs, if you request a NAT mapping and the machine is not behind a NAT | |
2050 | * gateway, then the API returns an error code -- it can't get you a NAT mapping if there's no | |
2051 | * NAT gateway. The DNSServiceNATPortMappingCreate API takes a different view. Working out | |
2052 | * whether or not you need a NAT mapping can be tricky and non-obvious, particularly on | |
2053 | * a machine with multiple active network interfaces. Rather than make every client recreate | |
2054 | * this logic for deciding whether a NAT mapping is required, the PortMapping API does that | |
2055 | * work for you. If the client calls the PortMapping API when the machine already has a | |
2056 | * routable public IP address, then instead of complaining about it and giving an error, | |
2057 | * the PortMapping API just invokes your callback, giving the machine's public address | |
2058 | * and your own port number. This means you don't need to write code to work out whether | |
2059 | * your client needs to call the PortMapping API -- just call it anyway, and if it wasn't | |
2060 | * necessary, no harm is done: | |
2061 | * | |
2062 | * - If the machine already has a routable public IP address, then your callback | |
2063 | * will just be invoked giving your own address and port. | |
2064 | * - If a NAT mapping is required and obtained, then your callback will be invoked | |
2065 | * giving you the external address and port. | |
2066 | * - If a NAT mapping is required but not obtained from the local NAT gateway, | |
2067 | * or the machine has no network connectivity, then your callback will be | |
2068 | * invoked giving zero address and port. | |
2069 | * | |
2070 | * 2. In other NAT mapping APIs, if a laptop computer is put to sleep and woken up on a new | |
2071 | * network, it's the client's job to notice this, and work out whether a NAT mapping | |
2072 | * is required on the new network, and make a new NAT mapping request if necessary. | |
2073 | * The DNSServiceNATPortMappingCreate API does this for you, automatically. | |
2074 | * The client just needs to make one call to the PortMapping API, and its callback will | |
2075 | * be invoked any time the mapping state changes. This property complements point (1) above. | |
2076 | * If the client didn't make a NAT mapping request just because it determined that one was | |
2077 | * not required at that particular moment in time, the client would then have to monitor | |
2078 | * for network state changes to determine if a NAT port mapping later became necessary. | |
2079 | * By unconditionally making a NAT mapping request, even when a NAT mapping not to be | |
2080 | * necessary, the PortMapping API will then begin monitoring network state changes on behalf of | |
2081 | * the client, and if a NAT mapping later becomes necessary, it will automatically create a NAT | |
2082 | * mapping and inform the client with a new callback giving the new address and port information. | |
2083 | * | |
2084 | * DNSServiceNATPortMappingReply() parameters: | |
2085 | * | |
2086 | * sdRef: The DNSServiceRef initialized by DNSServiceNATPortMappingCreate(). | |
2087 | * | |
2088 | * flags: Currently unused, reserved for future use. | |
2089 | * | |
2090 | * interfaceIndex: The interface through which the NAT gateway is reached. | |
2091 | * | |
2092 | * errorCode: Will be kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success. | |
2093 | * Will be kDNSServiceErr_DoubleNAT when the NAT gateway is itself behind one or | |
2094 | * more layers of NAT, in which case the other parameters have the defined values. | |
2095 | * For other failures, will indicate the failure that occurred, and the other | |
2096 | * parameters are undefined. | |
2097 | * | |
2098 | * externalAddress: Four byte IPv4 address in network byte order. | |
2099 | * | |
2100 | * protocol: Will be kDNSServiceProtocol_UDP or kDNSServiceProtocol_TCP or both. | |
2101 | * | |
2102 | * internalPort: The port on the local machine that was mapped. | |
2103 | * | |
2104 | * externalPort: The actual external port in the NAT gateway that was mapped. | |
2105 | * This is likely to be different than the requested external port. | |
2106 | * | |
2107 | * ttl: The lifetime of the NAT port mapping created on the gateway. | |
2108 | * This controls how quickly stale mappings will be garbage-collected | |
2109 | * if the client machine crashes, suffers a power failure, is disconnected | |
2110 | * from the network, or suffers some other unfortunate demise which | |
2111 | * causes it to vanish without explicitly removing its NAT port mapping. | |
2112 | * It's possible that the ttl value will differ from the requested ttl value. | |
2113 | * | |
2114 | * context: The context pointer that was passed to the callout. | |
2115 | * | |
2116 | */ | |
2117 | ||
2118 | typedef void (DNSSD_API *DNSServiceNATPortMappingReply) | |
2119 | ( | |
2120 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
2121 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
2122 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
2123 | DNSServiceErrorType errorCode, | |
2124 | uint32_t externalAddress, /* four byte IPv4 address in network byte order */ | |
2125 | DNSServiceProtocol protocol, | |
2126 | uint16_t internalPort, /* In network byte order */ | |
2127 | uint16_t externalPort, /* In network byte order and may be different than the requested port */ | |
2128 | uint32_t ttl, /* may be different than the requested ttl */ | |
2129 | void *context | |
2130 | ); | |
2131 | ||
2132 | ||
2133 | /* DNSServiceNATPortMappingCreate() Parameters: | |
2134 | * | |
2135 | * sdRef: A pointer to an uninitialized DNSServiceRef. If the call succeeds then it | |
2136 | * initializes the DNSServiceRef, returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError, and the nat | |
2137 | * port mapping will last indefinitely until the client terminates the port | |
2138 | * mapping request by passing this DNSServiceRef to DNSServiceRefDeallocate(). | |
2139 | * | |
2140 | * flags: Currently ignored, reserved for future use. | |
2141 | * | |
2142 | * interfaceIndex: The interface on which to create port mappings in a NAT gateway. Passing 0 causes | |
2143 | * the port mapping request to be sent on the primary interface. | |
2144 | * | |
2145 | * protocol: To request a port mapping, pass in kDNSServiceProtocol_UDP, or kDNSServiceProtocol_TCP, | |
2146 | * or (kDNSServiceProtocol_UDP | kDNSServiceProtocol_TCP) to map both. | |
2147 | * The local listening port number must also be specified in the internalPort parameter. | |
2148 | * To just discover the NAT gateway's external IP address, pass zero for protocol, | |
2149 | * internalPort, externalPort and ttl. | |
2150 | * | |
2151 | * internalPort: The port number in network byte order on the local machine which is listening for packets. | |
2152 | * | |
2153 | * externalPort: The requested external port in network byte order in the NAT gateway that you would | |
2154 | * like to map to the internal port. Pass 0 if you don't care which external port is chosen for you. | |
2155 | * | |
2156 | * ttl: The requested renewal period of the NAT port mapping, in seconds. | |
2157 | * If the client machine crashes, suffers a power failure, is disconnected from | |
2158 | * the network, or suffers some other unfortunate demise which causes it to vanish | |
2159 | * unexpectedly without explicitly removing its NAT port mappings, then the NAT gateway | |
2160 | * will garbage-collect old stale NAT port mappings when their lifetime expires. | |
2161 | * Requesting a short TTL causes such orphaned mappings to be garbage-collected | |
2162 | * more promptly, but consumes system resources and network bandwidth with | |
2163 | * frequent renewal packets to keep the mapping from expiring. | |
2164 | * Requesting a long TTL is more efficient on the network, but in the event of the | |
2165 | * client vanishing, stale NAT port mappings will not be garbage-collected as quickly. | |
2166 | * Most clients should pass 0 to use a system-wide default value. | |
2167 | * | |
2168 | * callBack: The function to be called when the port mapping request succeeds or fails asynchronously. | |
2169 | * | |
2170 | * context: An application context pointer which is passed to the callback function | |
2171 | * (may be NULL). | |
2172 | * | |
2173 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success (any subsequent, asynchronous | |
2174 | * errors are delivered to the callback), otherwise returns an error code indicating | |
2175 | * the error that occurred. | |
2176 | * | |
2177 | * If you don't actually want a port mapped, and are just calling the API | |
2178 | * because you want to find out the NAT's external IP address (e.g. for UI | |
2179 | * display) then pass zero for protocol, internalPort, externalPort and ttl. | |
2180 | */ | |
2181 | ||
2182 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceNATPortMappingCreate | |
2183 | ( | |
2184 | DNSServiceRef *sdRef, | |
2185 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
2186 | uint32_t interfaceIndex, | |
2187 | DNSServiceProtocol protocol, /* TCP and/or UDP */ | |
2188 | uint16_t internalPort, /* network byte order */ | |
2189 | uint16_t externalPort, /* network byte order */ | |
2190 | uint32_t ttl, /* time to live in seconds */ | |
2191 | DNSServiceNATPortMappingReply callBack, | |
2192 | void *context /* may be NULL */ | |
2193 | ); | |
2194 | ||
2195 | ||
2196 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
2197 | * | |
2198 | * General Utility Functions | |
2199 | * | |
2200 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
2201 | ||
2202 | /* DNSServiceConstructFullName() | |
2203 | * | |
2204 | * Concatenate a three-part domain name (as returned by the above callbacks) into a | |
2205 | * properly-escaped full domain name. Note that callbacks in the above functions ALREADY ESCAPE | |
2206 | * strings where necessary. | |
2207 | * | |
2208 | * Parameters: | |
2209 | * | |
2210 | * fullName: A pointer to a buffer that where the resulting full domain name is to be written. | |
2211 | * The buffer must be kDNSServiceMaxDomainName (1009) bytes in length to | |
2212 | * accommodate the longest legal domain name without buffer overrun. | |
2213 | * | |
2214 | * service: The service name - any dots or backslashes must NOT be escaped. | |
2215 | * May be NULL (to construct a PTR record name, e.g. | |
2216 | * "_ftp._tcp.apple.com."). | |
2217 | * | |
2218 | * regtype: The service type followed by the protocol, separated by a dot | |
2219 | * (e.g. "_ftp._tcp"). | |
2220 | * | |
2221 | * domain: The domain name, e.g. "apple.com.". Literal dots or backslashes, | |
2222 | * if any, must be escaped, e.g. "1st\. Floor.apple.com." | |
2223 | * | |
2224 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError (0) on success, kDNSServiceErr_BadParam on error. | |
2225 | * | |
2226 | */ | |
2227 | ||
2228 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceConstructFullName | |
2229 | ( | |
2230 | char * const fullName, | |
2231 | const char * const service, /* may be NULL */ | |
2232 | const char * const regtype, | |
2233 | const char * const domain | |
2234 | ); | |
2235 | ||
2236 | ||
2237 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
2238 | * | |
2239 | * TXT Record Construction Functions | |
2240 | * | |
2241 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
2242 | ||
2243 | /* | |
2244 | * A typical calling sequence for TXT record construction is something like: | |
2245 | * | |
2246 | * Client allocates storage for TXTRecord data (e.g. declare buffer on the stack) | |
2247 | * TXTRecordCreate(); | |
2248 | * TXTRecordSetValue(); | |
2249 | * TXTRecordSetValue(); | |
2250 | * TXTRecordSetValue(); | |
2251 | * ... | |
2252 | * DNSServiceRegister( ... TXTRecordGetLength(), TXTRecordGetBytesPtr() ... ); | |
2253 | * TXTRecordDeallocate(); | |
2254 | * Explicitly deallocate storage for TXTRecord data (if not allocated on the stack) | |
2255 | */ | |
2256 | ||
2257 | ||
2258 | /* TXTRecordRef | |
2259 | * | |
2260 | * Opaque internal data type. | |
2261 | * Note: Represents a DNS-SD TXT record. | |
2262 | */ | |
2263 | ||
2264 | typedef union _TXTRecordRef_t { char PrivateData[16]; char *ForceNaturalAlignment; } TXTRecordRef; | |
2265 | ||
2266 | ||
2267 | /* TXTRecordCreate() | |
2268 | * | |
2269 | * Creates a new empty TXTRecordRef referencing the specified storage. | |
2270 | * | |
2271 | * If the buffer parameter is NULL, or the specified storage size is not | |
2272 | * large enough to hold a key subsequently added using TXTRecordSetValue(), | |
2273 | * then additional memory will be added as needed using malloc(). | |
2274 | * | |
2275 | * On some platforms, when memory is low, malloc() may fail. In this | |
2276 | * case, TXTRecordSetValue() will return kDNSServiceErr_NoMemory, and this | |
2277 | * error condition will need to be handled as appropriate by the caller. | |
2278 | * | |
2279 | * You can avoid the need to handle this error condition if you ensure | |
2280 | * that the storage you initially provide is large enough to hold all | |
2281 | * the key/value pairs that are to be added to the record. | |
2282 | * The caller can precompute the exact length required for all of the | |
2283 | * key/value pairs to be added, or simply provide a fixed-sized buffer | |
2284 | * known in advance to be large enough. | |
2285 | * A no-value (key-only) key requires (1 + key length) bytes. | |
2286 | * A key with empty value requires (1 + key length + 1) bytes. | |
2287 | * A key with non-empty value requires (1 + key length + 1 + value length). | |
2288 | * For most applications, DNS-SD TXT records are generally | |
2289 | * less than 100 bytes, so in most cases a simple fixed-sized | |
2290 | * 256-byte buffer will be more than sufficient. | |
2291 | * Recommended size limits for DNS-SD TXT Records are discussed in RFC 6763 | |
2292 | * <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6763#section-6.2> | |
2293 | * | |
2294 | * Note: When passing parameters to and from these TXT record APIs, | |
2295 | * the key name does not include the '=' character. The '=' character | |
2296 | * is the separator between the key and value in the on-the-wire | |
2297 | * packet format; it is not part of either the key or the value. | |
2298 | * | |
2299 | * txtRecord: A pointer to an uninitialized TXTRecordRef. | |
2300 | * | |
2301 | * bufferLen: The size of the storage provided in the "buffer" parameter. | |
2302 | * | |
2303 | * buffer: Optional caller-supplied storage used to hold the TXTRecord data. | |
2304 | * This storage must remain valid for as long as | |
2305 | * the TXTRecordRef. | |
2306 | */ | |
2307 | ||
2308 | void DNSSD_API TXTRecordCreate | |
2309 | ( | |
2310 | TXTRecordRef *txtRecord, | |
2311 | uint16_t bufferLen, | |
2312 | void *buffer | |
2313 | ); | |
2314 | ||
2315 | ||
2316 | /* TXTRecordDeallocate() | |
2317 | * | |
2318 | * Releases any resources allocated in the course of preparing a TXT Record | |
2319 | * using TXTRecordCreate()/TXTRecordSetValue()/TXTRecordRemoveValue(). | |
2320 | * Ownership of the buffer provided in TXTRecordCreate() returns to the client. | |
2321 | * | |
2322 | * txtRecord: A TXTRecordRef initialized by calling TXTRecordCreate(). | |
2323 | * | |
2324 | */ | |
2325 | ||
2326 | void DNSSD_API TXTRecordDeallocate | |
2327 | ( | |
2328 | TXTRecordRef *txtRecord | |
2329 | ); | |
2330 | ||
2331 | ||
2332 | /* TXTRecordSetValue() | |
2333 | * | |
2334 | * Adds a key (optionally with value) to a TXTRecordRef. If the "key" already | |
2335 | * exists in the TXTRecordRef, then the current value will be replaced with | |
2336 | * the new value. | |
2337 | * Keys may exist in four states with respect to a given TXT record: | |
2338 | * - Absent (key does not appear at all) | |
2339 | * - Present with no value ("key" appears alone) | |
2340 | * - Present with empty value ("key=" appears in TXT record) | |
2341 | * - Present with non-empty value ("key=value" appears in TXT record) | |
2342 | * For more details refer to "Data Syntax for DNS-SD TXT Records" in RFC 6763 | |
2343 | * <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6763#section-6> | |
2344 | * | |
2345 | * txtRecord: A TXTRecordRef initialized by calling TXTRecordCreate(). | |
2346 | * | |
2347 | * key: A null-terminated string which only contains printable ASCII | |
2348 | * values (0x20-0x7E), excluding '=' (0x3D). Keys should be | |
2349 | * 9 characters or fewer (not counting the terminating null). | |
2350 | * | |
2351 | * valueSize: The size of the value. | |
2352 | * | |
2353 | * value: Any binary value. For values that represent | |
2354 | * textual data, UTF-8 is STRONGLY recommended. | |
2355 | * For values that represent textual data, valueSize | |
2356 | * should NOT include the terminating null (if any) | |
2357 | * at the end of the string. | |
2358 | * If NULL, then "key" will be added with no value. | |
2359 | * If non-NULL but valueSize is zero, then "key=" will be | |
2360 | * added with empty value. | |
2361 | * | |
2362 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success. | |
2363 | * Returns kDNSServiceErr_Invalid if the "key" string contains | |
2364 | * illegal characters. | |
2365 | * Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoMemory if adding this key would | |
2366 | * exceed the available storage. | |
2367 | */ | |
2368 | ||
2369 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API TXTRecordSetValue | |
2370 | ( | |
2371 | TXTRecordRef *txtRecord, | |
2372 | const char *key, | |
2373 | uint8_t valueSize, /* may be zero */ | |
2374 | const void *value /* may be NULL */ | |
2375 | ); | |
2376 | ||
2377 | ||
2378 | /* TXTRecordRemoveValue() | |
2379 | * | |
2380 | * Removes a key from a TXTRecordRef. The "key" must be an | |
2381 | * ASCII string which exists in the TXTRecordRef. | |
2382 | * | |
2383 | * txtRecord: A TXTRecordRef initialized by calling TXTRecordCreate(). | |
2384 | * | |
2385 | * key: A key name which exists in the TXTRecordRef. | |
2386 | * | |
2387 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success. | |
2388 | * Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoSuchKey if the "key" does not | |
2389 | * exist in the TXTRecordRef. | |
2390 | */ | |
2391 | ||
2392 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API TXTRecordRemoveValue | |
2393 | ( | |
2394 | TXTRecordRef *txtRecord, | |
2395 | const char *key | |
2396 | ); | |
2397 | ||
2398 | ||
2399 | /* TXTRecordGetLength() | |
2400 | * | |
2401 | * Allows you to determine the length of the raw bytes within a TXTRecordRef. | |
2402 | * | |
2403 | * txtRecord: A TXTRecordRef initialized by calling TXTRecordCreate(). | |
2404 | * | |
2405 | * return value: Returns the size of the raw bytes inside a TXTRecordRef | |
2406 | * which you can pass directly to DNSServiceRegister() or | |
2407 | * to DNSServiceUpdateRecord(). | |
2408 | * Returns 0 if the TXTRecordRef is empty. | |
2409 | */ | |
2410 | ||
2411 | uint16_t DNSSD_API TXTRecordGetLength | |
2412 | ( | |
2413 | const TXTRecordRef *txtRecord | |
2414 | ); | |
2415 | ||
2416 | ||
2417 | /* TXTRecordGetBytesPtr() | |
2418 | * | |
2419 | * Allows you to retrieve a pointer to the raw bytes within a TXTRecordRef. | |
2420 | * | |
2421 | * txtRecord: A TXTRecordRef initialized by calling TXTRecordCreate(). | |
2422 | * | |
2423 | * return value: Returns a pointer to the raw bytes inside the TXTRecordRef | |
2424 | * which you can pass directly to DNSServiceRegister() or | |
2425 | * to DNSServiceUpdateRecord(). | |
2426 | */ | |
2427 | ||
2428 | const void * DNSSD_API TXTRecordGetBytesPtr | |
2429 | ( | |
2430 | const TXTRecordRef *txtRecord | |
2431 | ); | |
2432 | ||
2433 | ||
2434 | /********************************************************************************************* | |
2435 | * | |
2436 | * TXT Record Parsing Functions | |
2437 | * | |
2438 | *********************************************************************************************/ | |
2439 | ||
2440 | /* | |
2441 | * A typical calling sequence for TXT record parsing is something like: | |
2442 | * | |
2443 | * Receive TXT record data in DNSServiceResolve() callback | |
2444 | * if (TXTRecordContainsKey(txtLen, txtRecord, "key")) then do something | |
2445 | * val1ptr = TXTRecordGetValuePtr(txtLen, txtRecord, "key1", &len1); | |
2446 | * val2ptr = TXTRecordGetValuePtr(txtLen, txtRecord, "key2", &len2); | |
2447 | * ... | |
2448 | * memcpy(myval1, val1ptr, len1); | |
2449 | * memcpy(myval2, val2ptr, len2); | |
2450 | * ... | |
2451 | * return; | |
2452 | * | |
2453 | * If you wish to retain the values after return from the DNSServiceResolve() | |
2454 | * callback, then you need to copy the data to your own storage using memcpy() | |
2455 | * or similar, as shown in the example above. | |
2456 | * | |
2457 | * If for some reason you need to parse a TXT record you built yourself | |
2458 | * using the TXT record construction functions above, then you can do | |
2459 | * that using TXTRecordGetLength and TXTRecordGetBytesPtr calls: | |
2460 | * TXTRecordGetValue(TXTRecordGetLength(x), TXTRecordGetBytesPtr(x), key, &len); | |
2461 | * | |
2462 | * Most applications only fetch keys they know about from a TXT record and | |
2463 | * ignore the rest. | |
2464 | * However, some debugging tools wish to fetch and display all keys. | |
2465 | * To do that, use the TXTRecordGetCount() and TXTRecordGetItemAtIndex() calls. | |
2466 | */ | |
2467 | ||
2468 | /* TXTRecordContainsKey() | |
2469 | * | |
2470 | * Allows you to determine if a given TXT Record contains a specified key. | |
2471 | * | |
2472 | * txtLen: The size of the received TXT Record. | |
2473 | * | |
2474 | * txtRecord: Pointer to the received TXT Record bytes. | |
2475 | * | |
2476 | * key: A null-terminated ASCII string containing the key name. | |
2477 | * | |
2478 | * return value: Returns 1 if the TXT Record contains the specified key. | |
2479 | * Otherwise, it returns 0. | |
2480 | */ | |
2481 | ||
2482 | int DNSSD_API TXTRecordContainsKey | |
2483 | ( | |
2484 | uint16_t txtLen, | |
2485 | const void *txtRecord, | |
2486 | const char *key | |
2487 | ); | |
2488 | ||
2489 | ||
2490 | /* TXTRecordGetValuePtr() | |
2491 | * | |
2492 | * Allows you to retrieve the value for a given key from a TXT Record. | |
2493 | * | |
2494 | * txtLen: The size of the received TXT Record | |
2495 | * | |
2496 | * txtRecord: Pointer to the received TXT Record bytes. | |
2497 | * | |
2498 | * key: A null-terminated ASCII string containing the key name. | |
2499 | * | |
2500 | * valueLen: On output, will be set to the size of the "value" data. | |
2501 | * | |
2502 | * return value: Returns NULL if the key does not exist in this TXT record, | |
2503 | * or exists with no value (to differentiate between | |
2504 | * these two cases use TXTRecordContainsKey()). | |
2505 | * Returns pointer to location within TXT Record bytes | |
2506 | * if the key exists with empty or non-empty value. | |
2507 | * For empty value, valueLen will be zero. | |
2508 | * For non-empty value, valueLen will be length of value data. | |
2509 | */ | |
2510 | ||
2511 | const void * DNSSD_API TXTRecordGetValuePtr | |
2512 | ( | |
2513 | uint16_t txtLen, | |
2514 | const void *txtRecord, | |
2515 | const char *key, | |
2516 | uint8_t *valueLen | |
2517 | ); | |
2518 | ||
2519 | ||
2520 | /* TXTRecordGetCount() | |
2521 | * | |
2522 | * Returns the number of keys stored in the TXT Record. The count | |
2523 | * can be used with TXTRecordGetItemAtIndex() to iterate through the keys. | |
2524 | * | |
2525 | * txtLen: The size of the received TXT Record. | |
2526 | * | |
2527 | * txtRecord: Pointer to the received TXT Record bytes. | |
2528 | * | |
2529 | * return value: Returns the total number of keys in the TXT Record. | |
2530 | * | |
2531 | */ | |
2532 | ||
2533 | uint16_t DNSSD_API TXTRecordGetCount | |
2534 | ( | |
2535 | uint16_t txtLen, | |
2536 | const void *txtRecord | |
2537 | ); | |
2538 | ||
2539 | ||
2540 | /* TXTRecordGetItemAtIndex() | |
2541 | * | |
2542 | * Allows you to retrieve a key name and value pointer, given an index into | |
2543 | * a TXT Record. Legal index values range from zero to TXTRecordGetCount()-1. | |
2544 | * It's also possible to iterate through keys in a TXT record by simply | |
2545 | * calling TXTRecordGetItemAtIndex() repeatedly, beginning with index zero | |
2546 | * and increasing until TXTRecordGetItemAtIndex() returns kDNSServiceErr_Invalid. | |
2547 | * | |
2548 | * On return: | |
2549 | * For keys with no value, *value is set to NULL and *valueLen is zero. | |
2550 | * For keys with empty value, *value is non-NULL and *valueLen is zero. | |
2551 | * For keys with non-empty value, *value is non-NULL and *valueLen is non-zero. | |
2552 | * | |
2553 | * txtLen: The size of the received TXT Record. | |
2554 | * | |
2555 | * txtRecord: Pointer to the received TXT Record bytes. | |
2556 | * | |
2557 | * itemIndex: An index into the TXT Record. | |
2558 | * | |
2559 | * keyBufLen: The size of the string buffer being supplied. | |
2560 | * | |
2561 | * key: A string buffer used to store the key name. | |
2562 | * On return, the buffer contains a null-terminated C string | |
2563 | * giving the key name. DNS-SD TXT keys are usually | |
2564 | * 9 characters or fewer. To hold the maximum possible | |
2565 | * key name, the buffer should be 256 bytes long. | |
2566 | * | |
2567 | * valueLen: On output, will be set to the size of the "value" data. | |
2568 | * | |
2569 | * value: On output, *value is set to point to location within TXT | |
2570 | * Record bytes that holds the value data. | |
2571 | * | |
2572 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success. | |
2573 | * Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoMemory if keyBufLen is too short. | |
2574 | * Returns kDNSServiceErr_Invalid if index is greater than | |
2575 | * TXTRecordGetCount()-1. | |
2576 | */ | |
2577 | ||
2578 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API TXTRecordGetItemAtIndex | |
2579 | ( | |
2580 | uint16_t txtLen, | |
2581 | const void *txtRecord, | |
2582 | uint16_t itemIndex, | |
2583 | uint16_t keyBufLen, | |
2584 | char *key, | |
2585 | uint8_t *valueLen, | |
2586 | const void **value | |
2587 | ); | |
2588 | ||
2589 | #if _DNS_SD_LIBDISPATCH | |
2590 | /* | |
2591 | * DNSServiceSetDispatchQueue | |
2592 | * | |
2593 | * Allows you to schedule a DNSServiceRef on a serial dispatch queue for receiving asynchronous | |
2594 | * callbacks. It's the clients responsibility to ensure that the provided dispatch queue is running. | |
2595 | * | |
2596 | * A typical application that uses CFRunLoopRun or dispatch_main on its main thread will | |
2597 | * usually schedule DNSServiceRefs on its main queue (which is always a serial queue) | |
2598 | * using "DNSServiceSetDispatchQueue(sdref, dispatch_get_main_queue());" | |
2599 | * | |
2600 | * If there is any error during the processing of events, the application callback will | |
2601 | * be called with an error code. For shared connections, each subordinate DNSServiceRef | |
2602 | * will get its own error callback. Currently these error callbacks only happen | |
2603 | * if the daemon is manually terminated or crashes, and the error | |
2604 | * code in this case is kDNSServiceErr_ServiceNotRunning. The application must call | |
2605 | * DNSServiceRefDeallocate to free the DNSServiceRef when it gets such an error code. | |
2606 | * These error callbacks are rare and should not normally happen on customer machines, | |
2607 | * but application code should be written defensively to handle such error callbacks | |
2608 | * gracefully if they occur. | |
2609 | * | |
2610 | * After using DNSServiceSetDispatchQueue on a DNSServiceRef, calling DNSServiceProcessResult | |
2611 | * on the same DNSServiceRef will result in undefined behavior and should be avoided. | |
2612 | * | |
2613 | * Once the application successfully schedules a DNSServiceRef on a serial dispatch queue using | |
2614 | * DNSServiceSetDispatchQueue, it cannot remove the DNSServiceRef from the dispatch queue, or use | |
2615 | * DNSServiceSetDispatchQueue a second time to schedule the DNSServiceRef onto a different serial dispatch | |
2616 | * queue. Once scheduled onto a dispatch queue a DNSServiceRef will deliver events to that queue until | |
2617 | * the application no longer requires that operation and terminates it using DNSServiceRefDeallocate. | |
2618 | * | |
2619 | * service: DNSServiceRef that was allocated and returned to the application, when the | |
2620 | * application calls one of the DNSService API. | |
2621 | * | |
2622 | * queue: dispatch queue where the application callback will be scheduled | |
2623 | * | |
2624 | * return value: Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoError on success. | |
2625 | * Returns kDNSServiceErr_NoMemory if it cannot create a dispatch source | |
2626 | * Returns kDNSServiceErr_BadParam if the service param is invalid or the | |
2627 | * queue param is invalid | |
2628 | */ | |
2629 | ||
2630 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceSetDispatchQueue | |
2631 | ( | |
2632 | DNSServiceRef service, | |
2633 | dispatch_queue_t queue | |
2634 | ); | |
2635 | #endif //_DNS_SD_LIBDISPATCH | |
2636 | ||
2637 | #if !defined(_WIN32) | |
2638 | typedef void (DNSSD_API *DNSServiceSleepKeepaliveReply) | |
2639 | ( | |
2640 | DNSServiceRef sdRef, | |
2641 | DNSServiceErrorType errorCode, | |
2642 | void *context | |
2643 | ); | |
2644 | DNSServiceErrorType DNSSD_API DNSServiceSleepKeepalive | |
2645 | ( | |
2646 | DNSServiceRef *sdRef, | |
2647 | DNSServiceFlags flags, | |
2648 | int fd, | |
2649 | unsigned int timeout, | |
2650 | DNSServiceSleepKeepaliveReply callBack, | |
2651 | void *context | |
2652 | ); | |
2653 | #endif | |
2654 | ||
2655 | /* Some C compiler cleverness. We can make the compiler check certain things for us, | |
2656 | * and report errors at compile-time if anything is wrong. The usual way to do this would | |
2657 | * be to use a run-time "if" statement or the conventional run-time "assert" mechanism, but | |
2658 | * then you don't find out what's wrong until you run the software. This way, if the assertion | |
2659 | * condition is false, the array size is negative, and the complier complains immediately. | |
2660 | */ | |
2661 | ||
2662 | struct CompileTimeAssertionChecks_DNS_SD | |
2663 | { | |
2664 | char assert0[(sizeof(union _TXTRecordRef_t) == 16) ? 1 : -1]; | |
2665 | }; | |
2666 | ||
2667 | #ifdef __cplusplus | |
2668 | } | |
2669 | #endif | |
2670 | ||
2671 | #endif /* _DNS_SD_H */ |