org.freedesktop.resolve1(5) — Linux manual page
ORG.FREE....RESOLVE1(5) org.freedesktop.resolve1 ORG.FREE....RESOLVE1(5)
NAME
org.freedesktop.resolve1 - The D-Bus interface of
systemd-resolved
INTRODUCTION
systemd-resolved.service(8) is a system service that provides
hostname resolution and caching using DNS, LLMNR, and mDNS. It
also does DNSSEC validation. This page describes the resolve
semantics and the D-Bus interface.
This page contains an API reference only. If you are looking for
a longer explanation how to use this API, please consult Writing
Network Configuration Managers[1] and Writing Resolver
Clients[2].
THE MANAGER OBJECT
The service exposes the following interfaces on the Manager
object on the bus:
node /org/freedesktop/resolve1 {
interface org.freedesktop.resolve1.Manager {
methods:
ResolveHostname(in i ifindex,
in s name,
in i family,
in t flags,
out a(iiay) addresses,
out s canonical,
out t flags);
ResolveAddress(in i ifindex,
in i family,
in ay address,
in t flags,
out a(is) names,
out t flags);
ResolveRecord(in i ifindex,
in s name,
in q class,
in q type,
in t flags,
out a(iqqay) records,
out t flags);
ResolveService(in i ifindex,
in s name,
in s type,
in s domain,
in i family,
in t flags,
out a(qqqsa(iiay)s) srv_data,
out aay txt_data,
out s canonical_name,
out s canonical_type,
out s canonical_domain,
out t flags);
GetLink(in i ifindex,
out o path);
SetLinkDNS(in i ifindex,
in a(iay) addresses);
SetLinkDNSEx(in i ifindex,
in a(iayqs) addresses);
SetLinkDomains(in i ifindex,
in a(sb) domains);
SetLinkDefaultRoute(in i ifindex,
in b enable);
SetLinkLLMNR(in i ifindex,
in s mode);
SetLinkMulticastDNS(in i ifindex,
in s mode);
SetLinkDNSOverTLS(in i ifindex,
in s mode);
SetLinkDNSSEC(in i ifindex,
in s mode);
SetLinkDNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors(in i ifindex,
in as names);
RevertLink(in i ifindex);
RegisterService(in s id,
in s name_template,
in s type,
in q service_port,
in q service_priority,
in q service_weight,
in aa{say} txt_datas,
out o service_path);
UnregisterService(in o service_path);
ResetStatistics();
FlushCaches();
ResetServerFeatures();
properties:
readonly s LLMNRHostname = '...';
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s LLMNR = '...';
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s MulticastDNS = '...';
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s DNSOverTLS = '...';
readonly a(iiay) DNS = [...];
readonly a(iiayqs) DNSEx = [...];
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("const")
readonly a(iiay) FallbackDNS = [...];
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("const")
readonly a(iiayqs) FallbackDNSEx = [...];
readonly (iiay) CurrentDNSServer = ...;
readonly (iiayqs) CurrentDNSServerEx = ...;
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly a(isb) Domains = [...];
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly (tt) TransactionStatistics = ...;
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly (ttt) CacheStatistics = ...;
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s DNSSEC = '...';
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly (tttt) DNSSECStatistics = ...;
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly b DNSSECSupported = ...;
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly as DNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors = ['...', ...];
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s DNSStubListener = '...';
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s ResolvConfMode = '...';
};
interface org.freedesktop.DBus.Peer { ... };
interface org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable { ... };
interface org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties { ... };
};
Methods
ResolveHostname() takes a hostname and resolves it to one or more
IP addresses. As parameters it takes the Linux network interface
index to execute the query on, or 0 if it may be done on any
suitable interface. The name parameter specifies the hostname to
resolve. Note that if required, IDNA conversion is applied to
this name unless it is resolved via LLMNR or MulticastDNS. The
family parameter limits the results to a specific address family.
It may be AF_INET, AF_INET6 or AF_UNSPEC. If AF_UNSPEC is
specified (recommended), both kinds are retrieved, subject to
local network configuration (i.e. if no local, routable IPv6
address is found, no IPv6 address is retrieved; and similarly for
IPv4). A 64-bit flags field may be used to alter the behaviour of
the resolver operation (see below). The method returns an array
of address records. Each address record consists of the interface
index the address belongs to, an address family as well as a byte
array with the actual IP address data (which either has 4 or 16
elements, depending on the address family). The returned address
family will be one of AF_INET or AF_INET6. For IPv6, the returned
address interface index should be used to initialize the
.sin6_scope_id field of a struct sockaddr_in6 instance to permit
support for resolution to link-local IP addresses. The address
array is followed by the canonical name of the host, which may or
may not be identical to the resolved hostname. Finally, a 64-bit
flags field is returned that is defined similarly to the flags
field that was passed in, but contains information about the
resolved data (see below). If the hostname passed in is an IPv4
or IPv6 address formatted as string, it is parsed, and the result
is returned. In this case, no network communication is done.
ResolveAddress() executes the reverse operation: it takes an IP
address and acquires one or more hostnames for it. As parameters
it takes the interface index to execute the query on, or 0 if all
suitable interfaces are OK. The family parameter indicates the
address family of the IP address to resolve. It may be either
AF_INET or AF_INET6. The address parameter takes the raw IP
address data (as either a 4 or 16 byte array). The flags input
parameter may be used to alter the resolver operation (see
below). The method returns an array of name records, each
consisting of an interface index and a hostname. The flags output
field contains additional information about the resolver
operation (see below).
ResolveRecord() takes a DNS resource record (RR) type, class and
name, and retrieves the full resource record set (RRset),
including the RDATA, for it. As parameter it takes the Linux
network interface index to execute the query on, or 0 if it may
be done on any suitable interface. The name parameter specifies
the RR domain name to look up (no IDNA conversion is applied),
followed by the 16-bit class and type fields (which may be ANY).
Finally, a flags field may be passed in to alter behaviour of the
look-up (see below). On completion, an array of RR items is
returned. Each array entry consists of the network interface
index the RR was discovered on, the type and class field of the
RR found, and a byte array of the raw RR discovered. The raw RR
data starts with the RR's domain name, in the original casing,
followed by the RR type, class, TTL and RDATA, in the binary
format documented in RFC 1035[3]. For RRs that support name
compression in the payload (such as MX or PTR), the compression
is expanded in the returned data.
Note that currently, the class field has to be specified as IN or
ANY. Specifying a different class will return an error indicating
that look-ups of this kind are unsupported. Similarly, some
special types are not supported either (AXFR, OPT, ...). While
systemd-resolved parses and validates resource records of many
types, it is crucial that clients using this API understand that
the RR data originates from the network and should be thoroughly
validated before use.
ResolveService() may be used to resolve a DNS SRV service record,
as well as the hostnames referenced in it, and possibly an
accompanying DNS-SD TXT record containing additional service
metadata. The primary benefit of using this method over
ResolveRecord() specifying the SRV type is that it will resolve
the SRV and TXT RRs as well as the hostnames referenced in the
SRV in a single operation. As parameters it takes a Linux network
interface index, a service name, a service type and a service
domain. This method may be invoked in three different modes:
1. To resolve a DNS-SD service, specify the service name (e.g.
"Lennart's Files"), the service type (e.g. "_webdav._tcp")
and the domain to search in (e.g. "local") as the three
service parameters. The service name must be in UTF-8 format,
and no IDNA conversion is applied to it in this mode (as
mandated by the DNS-SD specifications). However, if
necessary, IDNA conversion is applied to the domain
parameter.
2. To resolve a plain SRV record, set the service name parameter
to the empty string and set the service type and domain
properly. (IDNA conversion is applied to the domain, if
necessary.)
3. Alternatively, leave both the service name and type empty and
specify the full domain name of the SRV record (i.e. prefixed
with the service type) in the domain parameter. (No IDNA
conversion is applied in this mode.)
The family parameter of the ResolveService() method encodes the
desired family of the addresses to resolve (use AF_INET,
AF_INET6, or AF_UNSPEC). If this is enabled (Use the NO_ADDRESS
flag to turn address resolution off, see below). The flags
parameter takes a couple of flags that may be used to alter the
resolver operation.
On completion, ResolveService() returns an array of SRV record
structures. Each items consisting of the priority, weight and
port fields as well as the hostname to contact, as encoded in the
SRV record. Immediately following is an array of the addresses of
this hostname, with each item consisting of the interface index,
the address family and the address data in a byte array. This
address array is followed by the canonicalized hostname. After
this array of SRV record structures an array of byte arrays
follows that encodes the TXT RR strings, in case DNS-SD look-ups
are enabled. The next parameters are the canonical service name,
type and domain. This may or may not be identical to the
parameters passed in. Finally, a flags field is returned that
contains information about the resolver operation performed.
The ResetStatistics() method resets the various statistics
counters that systemd-resolved maintains to zero. (For details,
see the statistics properties below.)
The GetLink() method takes a network interface index and returns
the object path to the org.freedesktop.resolve1.Link object
corresponding to it.
The SetLinkDNS() method sets the DNS servers to use on a specific
interface. This method (and the following ones) may be used by
network management software to configure per-interface DNS
settings. It takes a network interface index as well as an array
of DNS server IP address records. Each array item consists of an
address family (either AF_INET or AF_INET6), followed by a 4-byte
or 16-byte array with the raw address data. This method is a
one-step shortcut for retrieving the Link object for a network
interface using GetLink() (see above) and then invoking the
SetDNS() method (see below) on it.
SetLinkDNSEx() is similar to SetLinkDNS(), but allows an IP port
(instead of the default 53) and DNS name to be specified for each
DNS server. The server name is used for Server Name Indication
(SNI), which is useful when DNS-over-TLS is used. C.f. DNS= in
resolved.conf(5).
SetLinkDefaultRoute() specifies whether the link shall be used as
the default route for name queries. See the description of name
routing in systemd-resolved.service(8) for details.
The SetLinkDomains() method sets the search and routing domains
to use on a specific network interface for DNS look-ups. It takes
a network interface index and an array of domains, each with a
boolean parameter indicating whether the specified domain shall
be used as a search domain (false), or just as a routing domain
(true). Search domains are used for qualifying single-label names
into FQDN when looking up hostnames, as well as for making
routing decisions on which interface to send queries ending in
the domain to. Routing domains are only used for routing
decisions and not used for single-label name qualification. Pass
the search domains in the order they should be used.
The SetLinkLLMNR() method enables or disables LLMNR support on a
specific network interface. It takes a network interface index as
well as a string that may either be empty or one of "yes", "no"
or "resolve". If empty, the systemd-wide default LLMNR setting is
used. If "yes", LLMNR is used for resolution of single-label
names and the local hostname is registered on all local LANs for
LLMNR resolution by peers. If "no", LLMNR is turned off fully on
this interface. If "resolve", LLMNR is only enabled for resolving
names, but the local hostname is not registered for other peers
to use.
Similarly, the SetLinkMulticastDNS() method enables or disables
MulticastDNS support on a specific interface. It takes the same
parameters as SetLinkLLMNR() described above.
The SetLinkDNSSEC() method enables or disables DNSSEC validation
on a specific network interface. It takes a network interface
index as well as a string that may either be empty or one of
"yes", "no", or "allow-downgrade". When empty, the system-wide
default DNSSEC setting is used. If "yes", full DNSSEC validation
is done for all look-ups. If the selected DNS server does not
support DNSSEC, look-ups will fail if this mode is used. If "no",
DNSSEC validation is fully disabled. If "allow-downgrade", DNSSEC
validation is enabled, but is turned off automatically if the
selected server does not support it (thus opening up behaviour to
downgrade attacks). Note that DNSSEC only applies to traditional
DNS, not to LLMNR or MulticastDNS.
The SetLinkDNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors() method may be used to
configure DNSSEC Negative Trust Anchors (NTAs) for a specific
network interface. It takes a network interface index and a list
of domains as arguments.
The SetLinkDNSOverTLS() method enables or disables DNS-over-TLS.
C.f. DNSOverTLS= in systemd-resolved.service(8) for details.
Network management software integrating with systemd-resolved
should call SetLinkDNS() or SetLinkDNSEx(),
SetLinkDefaultRoute(), SetLinkDomains() and others after the
interface appeared in the kernel (and thus after a network
interface index has been assigned), but before the network
interfaces is activated (IFF_UP set) so that all settings take
effect during the full time the network interface is up. It is
safe to alter settings while the interface is up, however. Use
RevertLink() (described below) to reset all per-interface
settings.
The RevertLink() method may be used to revert all per-link
settings described above to the defaults.
The FlushCaches() flushes all resource record caches maintained
by the resolver, and ensures that any subsequent lookups
re-request their responses from their sources.
The ResetServerFeatures() flushes any feature information learned
about remote DNS servers. This ensures that subsequent lookups
will be initially attempted at the highest DNS protocol feature
level again, possibly requiring a (potentially slow) downgrade
cycle to recognize the supported feature level again.
The RegisterService() method may be used to register a DNS-SD
service on the host. This functionality is closely related to the
functionality provided by systemd.dnssd(5) files. It takes a
server identifier string as first parameter (this is just a local
identifier, and should be chosen so that it neither collides with
the basename of *.dnssd files nor with names chosen by other IPC
clients). It also takes a name template string for the DNS-SD
service name visible on the network. This string is subject to
specifier expansation, as documented for the Name= setting in
*.dnssd files. It also takes a service type string containing the
DNS-SD service type, as well as an IP port, a priority/weight
pair for the DNS-SD SRV record. Finally, it takes an array of TXT
record data. It returns an object path which may be used as
handle to the registered service.
The UnregisterService() method undoes the effect of
RegisterService() and deletes a DNS-SD service previously created
via IPC again.
The Flags Parameter
The four methods above accept and return a 64-bit flags
value. In most cases passing 0 is sufficient and recommended.
However, the following flags are defined to alter the
look-up:
/* Input+Output: Protocol/scope */
#define SD_RESOLVED_DNS (UINT64_C(1) << 0)
#define SD_RESOLVED_LLMNR_IPV4 (UINT64_C(1) << 1)
#define SD_RESOLVED_LLMNR_IPV6 (UINT64_C(1) << 2)
#define SD_RESOLVED_MDNS_IPV4 (UINT64_C(1) << 3)
#define SD_RESOLVED_MDNS_IPV6 (UINT64_C(1) << 4)
/* Input: Restrictions */
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_CNAME (UINT64_C(1) << 5)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_TXT (UINT64_C(1) << 6)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_ADDRESS (UINT64_C(1) << 7)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_SEARCH (UINT64_C(1) << 8)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_VALIDATE (UINT64_C(1) << 10)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_SYNTHESIZE (UINT64_C(1) << 11)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_CACHE (UINT64_C(1) << 12)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_ZONE (UINT64_C(1) << 13)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_TRUST_ANCHOR (UINT64_C(1) << 14)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_NETWORK (UINT64_C(1) << 15)
#define SD_RESOLVED_NO_STALE (UINT64_C(1) << 24)
#define SD_RESOLVED_RELAX_SINGLE_LABEL (UINT64_C(1) << 25)
/* Output: Security */
#define SD_RESOLVED_AUTHENTICATED (UINT64_C(1) << 9)
#define SD_RESOLVED_CONFIDENTIAL (UINT64_C(1) << 18)
/* Output: Origin */
#define SD_RESOLVED_SYNTHETIC (UINT64_C(1) << 19)
#define SD_RESOLVED_FROM_CACHE (UINT64_C(1) << 20)
#define SD_RESOLVED_FROM_ZONE (UINT64_C(1) << 21)
#define SD_RESOLVED_FROM_TRUST_ANCHOR (UINT64_C(1) << 22)
#define SD_RESOLVED_FROM_NETWORK (UINT64_C(1) << 23)
On input, the first five flags control the protocols to use
for the look-up. They refer to classic unicast DNS, LLMNR via
IPv4/UDP and IPv6/UDP respectively, as well as MulticastDNS
via IPv4/UDP and IPv6/UDP. If all of these five bits are off
on input (which is strongly recommended) the look-up will be
done via all suitable protocols for the specific look-up.
Note that these flags operate as filter only, but cannot
force a look-up to be done via a protocol. Specifically,
systemd-resolved will only route look-ups within the .local
TLD to MulticastDNS (plus some reverse look-up address
domains), and single-label names to LLMNR (plus some reverse
address lookup domains). It will route neither of these to
Unicast DNS servers. Also, it will do LLMNR and Multicast DNS
only on interfaces suitable for multicast.
On output, these five flags indicate which protocol was used
to execute the operation, and hence where the data was found.
The primary use cases for these five flags are follow-up
look-ups based on DNS data retrieved earlier. In this case it
is often a good idea to limit the follow-up look-up to the
protocol that was used to discover the first DNS result.
The NO_CNAME flag controls whether CNAME/DNAME resource
records shall be followed during the look-up. This flag is
only available at input, none of the functions will return it
on output. If a CNAME/DNAME RR is discovered while resolving
a hostname, an error is returned instead. By default, when
the flag is off, CNAME/DNAME RRs are followed.
The NO_TXT and NO_ADDRESS flags only influence operation of
the ResolveService() method. They are only defined for input,
not output. If NO_TXT is set, the DNS-SD TXT RR look-up is
not done in the same operation. If NO_ADDRESS is set, the
discovered hostnames are not implicitly translated to their
addresses.
The NO_SEARCH flag turns off the search domain logic. It is
only defined for input in ResolveHostname(). When specified,
single-label hostnames are not qualified using defined search
domains, if any are configured. Note that ResolveRecord()
will never qualify single-label domain names using search
domains. Also note that multi-label hostnames are never
subject to search list expansion.
NO_VALIDATE can be set to disable validation via DNSSEC even
if it would normally be used.
The next six flags allow disabling certain sources during
resolution. NO_SYNTHESIZE disables synthetic records, e.g.
the local host name, see section SYNTHETIC RECORDS in
systemd-resolved.service(8) for more information. NO_CACHE
disables the use of the cache of previously resolved records.
NO_ZONE disables answers using locally registered public
LLMNR/mDNS resource records. NO_TRUST_ANCHOR disables answers
using locally configured trust anchors. NO_NETWORK requires
all answers to be provided without using the network, i.e.
either from local sources or the cache. NO_STALE flag can be
set to disable answering request with stale records.
The AUTHENTICATED bit is defined only in the output flags of
the four functions. If set, the returned data has been fully
authenticated. Specifically, this bit is set for all
DNSSEC-protected data for which a full trust chain may be
established to a trusted domain anchor. It is also set for
locally synthesized data, such as "localhost" or data from
/etc/hosts. Moreover, it is set for all LLMNR or mDNS RRs
which originate from the local host. Applications that
require authenticated RR data for operation should check this
flag before trusting the data. Note that systemd-resolved
will never return invalidated data, hence this flag simply
allows one to discern the cases where data is known to be
trusted, or where there is proof that the data is
"rightfully" unauthenticated (which includes cases where the
underlying protocol or server does not support authenticating
data).
CONFIDENTIAL means the query was resolved via encrypted
channels or never left this system.
The next five bits flags are used in output and provide
information about the origin of the answer. FROM_SYNTHETIC
means the query was (at least partially) synthesized locally.
FROM_CACHE means the query was answered (at least partially)
using the cache. FROM_ZONE means the query was answered (at
least partially) based on public, locally registered records.
FROM_TRUST_ANCHOR means the query was answered (at least
partially) using local trust anchors. FROM_NETWORK means the
query was answered (at least partially) using the network.
Properties
The LLMNR and MulticastDNS properties report whether LLMNR and
MulticastDNS are (globally) enabled. Each may be one of "yes",
"no", and "resolve". See SetLinkLLMNR() and SetLinkMulticastDNS()
above.
LLMNRHostname contains the hostname currently exposed on the
network via LLMNR. It usually follows the system hostname as may
be queried via gethostname(3), but may differ if a conflict is
detected on the network.
DNS and DNSEx contain arrays of all DNS servers currently used by
systemd-resolved. DNS contains information similar to the DNS
server data in /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf. Each structure
in the array consists of a numeric network interface index, an
address family, and a byte array containing the DNS server
address (either 4 bytes in length for IPv4 or 16 bytes in lengths
for IPv6). DNSEx is similar, but additionally contains the IP
port and server name (used for Server Name Indication, SNI). Both
arrays contain DNS servers configured system-wide, including
those possibly read from a foreign /etc/resolv.conf or the DNS=
setting in /etc/systemd/resolved.conf, as well as per-interface
DNS server information either retrieved from systemd-networkd(8),
or configured by external software via SetLinkDNS() or
SetLinkDNSEx() (see above). The network interface index will be 0
for the system-wide configured services and non-zero for the
per-link servers.
FallbackDNS and FallbackDNSEx contain arrays of all DNS servers
configured as fallback servers, if any, using the same format as
DNS and DNSEx described above. See the description of
FallbackDNS= in resolved.conf(5) for the description of when
those servers are used.
CurrentDNSServer and CurrentDNSServerEx specify the server that
is currently used for query resolution, in the same format as a
single entry in the DNS and DNSEx arrays described above.
Similarly, the Domains property contains an array of all search
and routing domains currently used by systemd-resolved. Each
entry consists of a network interface index (again, 0 encodes
system-wide entries), the actual domain name, and whether the
entry is used only for routing (true) or for both routing and
searching (false).
The TransactionStatistics property contains information about the
number of transactions systemd-resolved has processed. It
contains a pair of unsigned 64-bit counters, the first containing
the number of currently ongoing transactions, the second the
number of total transactions systemd-resolved is processing or
has processed. The latter value may be reset using the
ResetStatistics() method described above. Note that the number of
transactions does not directly map to the number of issued
resolver bus method calls. While simple look-ups usually require
a single transaction only, more complex look-ups might result in
more, for example when CNAMEs or DNSSEC are in use.
The CacheStatistics property contains information about the
executed cache operations so far. It exposes three 64-bit
counters: the first being the total number of current cache
entries (both positive and negative), the second the number of
cache hits, and the third the number of cache misses. The latter
counters may be reset using ResetStatistics() (see above).
The DNSSEC property specifies current status of DNSSEC
validation. It is one of "yes" (validation is enforced), "no" (no
validation is done), "allow-downgrade" (validation is done if the
current DNS server supports it). See the description of DNSSEC=
in resolved.conf(5).
The DNSSECStatistics property contains information about the
DNSSEC validations executed so far. It contains four 64-bit
counters: the number of secure, insecure, bogus, and
indeterminate DNSSEC validations so far. The counters are
increased for each validated RRset, and each non-existence proof.
The secure counter is increased for each operation that
successfully verified a signed reply, the insecure counter is
increased for each operation that successfully verified that an
unsigned reply is rightfully unsigned. The bogus counter is
increased for each operation where the validation did not check
out and the data is likely to have been tempered with. Finally
the indeterminate counter is increased for each operation which
did not complete because the necessary keys could not be acquired
or the cryptographic algorithms were unknown.
The DNSSECSupported boolean property reports whether DNSSEC is
enabled and the selected DNS servers support it. It combines
information about system-wide and per-link DNS settings (see
below), and only reports true if DNSSEC is enabled and supported
on every interface for which DNS is configured and for the
system-wide settings if there are any. Note that systemd-resolved
assumes DNSSEC is supported by DNS servers until it verifies that
this is not the case. Thus, the reported value may initially be
true, until the first transactions are executed.
The DNSOverTLS boolean property reports whether DNS-over-TLS is
enabled.
The ResolvConfMode property exposes how /etc/resolv.conf is
managed on the host. Currently, the values "uplink", "stub",
"static" (these three correspond to the three different files
systemd-resolved.service provides), "foreign" (the file is
managed by admin or another service, systemd-resolved.service
just consumes it), "missing" (/etc/resolv.conf is missing).
The DNSStubListener property reports whether the stub listener on
port 53 is enabled. Possible values are "yes" (enabled), "no"
(disabled), "udp" (only the UDP listener is enabled), and "tcp"
(only the TCP listener is enabled).
The DNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors property contains a list of
recognized DNSSEC negative trust anchors and contains a list of
domains.
LINK OBJECT
node /org/freedesktop/resolve1/link/_1 {
interface org.freedesktop.resolve1.Link {
methods:
SetDNS(in a(iay) addresses);
SetDNSEx(in a(iayqs) addresses);
SetDomains(in a(sb) domains);
SetDefaultRoute(in b enable);
SetLLMNR(in s mode);
SetMulticastDNS(in s mode);
SetDNSOverTLS(in s mode);
SetDNSSEC(in s mode);
SetDNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors(in as names);
Revert();
properties:
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly t ScopesMask = ...;
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly a(iay) DNS = [...];
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly a(iayqs) DNSEx = [...];
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly (iay) CurrentDNSServer = ...;
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly (iayqs) CurrentDNSServerEx = ...;
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly a(sb) Domains = [...];
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly b DefaultRoute = ...;
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s LLMNR = '...';
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s MulticastDNS = '...';
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s DNSOverTLS = '...';
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly s DNSSEC = '...';
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly as DNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors = ['...', ...];
@org.freedesktop.DBus.Property.EmitsChangedSignal("false")
readonly b DNSSECSupported = ...;
};
interface org.freedesktop.DBus.Peer { ... };
interface org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable { ... };
interface org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties { ... };
};
For each Linux network interface a "Link" object is created which
exposes per-link DNS configuration and state. Use GetLink() on
the Manager interface to retrieve the object path for a link
object given the network interface index (see above).
Methods
The various methods exposed by the Link interface are equivalent
to their similarly named counterparts on the Manager interface.
e.g. SetDNS() on the Link object maps to SetLinkDNS() on the
Manager object, the main difference being that the later expects
an interface index to be specified. Invoking the methods on the
Manager interface has the benefit of reducing roundtrips, as it
is not necessary to first request the Link object path via
GetLink() before invoking the methods. The same relationship
holds for SetDNSEx(), SetDomains(), SetDefaultRoute(),
SetLLMNR(), SetMulticastDNS(), SetDNSOverTLS(), SetDNSSEC(),
SetDNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors(), and Revert(). For further
details on these methods see the Manager documentation above.
Properties
ScopesMask defines which resolver scopes are currently active on
this interface. This 64-bit unsigned integer field is a bit mask
consisting of a subset of the bits of the flags parameter
describe above. Specifically, it may have the DNS, LLMNR and MDNS
bits (the latter in IPv4 and IPv6 flavours) set. Each individual
bit is set when the protocol applies to a specific interface and
is enabled for it. It is unset otherwise. Specifically, a
multicast-capable interface in the "UP" state with an IP address
is suitable for LLMNR or MulticastDNS, and any interface that is
UP and has an IP address is suitable for DNS. Note the
relationship of the bits exposed here with the LLMNR and
MulticastDNS properties also exposed on the Link interface. The
latter expose what is *configured* to be used on the interface,
the former expose what is actually used on the interface, taking
into account the abilities of the interface.
DNSSECSupported exposes a boolean field that indicates whether
DNSSEC is currently configured and in use on the interface. Note
that if DNSSEC is enabled on an interface, it is assumed
available until it is detected that the configured server does
not actually support it. Thus, this property may initially report
that DNSSEC is supported on an interface.
DefaultRoute exposes a boolean field that indicates whether the
interface will be used as default route for name queries. See
SetLinkDefaultRoute() above.
The other properties reflect the state of the various
configuration settings for the link which may be set with the
various methods calls such as SetDNS() or SetLLMNR().
COMMON ERRORS
Many bus methods systemd-resolved exposes (in particular the
resolver methods such as ResolveHostname() on the Manager
interface) may return some of the following errors:
org.freedesktop.resolve1.NoNameServers
No suitable DNS servers were found to resolve a request.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.InvalidReply
A response from the selected DNS server was not understood.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.NoSuchRR
The requested name exists, but there is no resource record of
the requested type for it. (This is the DNS NODATA case).
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.CNameLoop
The look-up failed because a CNAME or DNAME loop was
detected.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.Aborted
The look-up was aborted because the selected protocol became
unavailable while the operation was ongoing.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.NoSuchService
A service look-up was successful, but the SRV record reported
that the service is not available.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.DnssecFailed
The acquired response did not pass DNSSEC validation.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.NoTrustAnchor
No chain of trust could be established for the response to a
configured DNSSEC trust anchor.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.ResourceRecordTypeUnsupported
The requested resource record type is not supported on the
selected DNS servers. This error is generated for example
when an RRSIG record is requested from a DNS server that does
not support DNSSEC.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.NoSuchLink
No network interface with the specified network interface
index exists.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.LinkBusy
The requested configuration change could not be made because
systemd-networkd(8), already took possession of the interface
and supplied configuration data for it.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.NetworkDown
The requested look-up failed because the system is currently
not connected to any suitable network.
Added in version 246.
org.freedesktop.resolve1.DnsError.NXDOMAIN,
org.freedesktop.resolve1.DnsError.REFUSED, ...
The look-up failed with a DNS return code reporting a
failure. The error names used as suffixes here are defined in
by IANA in DNS RCODEs[4].
Added in version 246.
EXAMPLES
Example 1. Introspect org.freedesktop.resolve1.Manager on the bus
$ gdbus introspect --system \
--dest org.freedesktop.resolve1 \
--object-path /org/freedesktop/resolve1
Example 2. Introspect org.freedesktop.resolve1.Link on the bus
$ gdbus introspect --system \
--dest org.freedesktop.resolve1 \
--object-path /org/freedesktop/resolve1/link/_11
VERSIONING
These D-Bus interfaces follow the usual interface versioning
guidelines[5].
NOTES
1. Writing Network Configuration Managers
https://wiki.freedesktop.org/www/Software/systemd/writing-network-configuration-managers
2. Writing Resolver Clients
https://wiki.freedesktop.org/www/Software/systemd/writing-resolver-clients
3. RFC 1035
https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1035.txt
4. DNS RCODEs
https://www.iana.org/assignments/dns-parameters/dns-parameters.xhtml#dns-parameters-6
5. the usual interface versioning guidelines
https://0pointer.de/blog/projects/versioning-dbus.html
COLOPHON
This page is part of the systemd (systemd system and service
manager) project. Information about the project can be found at
⟨http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd⟩. If you have
a bug report for this manual page, see
⟨http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/#bugreports⟩.
This page was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://github.com/systemd/systemd.git⟩ on 2024-06-14. (At that
time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in the
repository was 2024-06-13.) If you discover any rendering
problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there
is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
(which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
man-pages@man7.org
systemd 257~devel ORG.FREE....RESOLVE1(5)
Pages that refer to this page: systemd.directives(7), systemd.index(7), systemd-resolved.service(8)