TranslateProject/sources/tech/20220201 A toy DNS resolver.md
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sources/tech/20220201 A toy DNS resolver.md
2022-02-03 05:02:51 +08:00

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A toy DNS resolver

Hello! I wrote a comic last week called “life of a DNS query” that explains how DNS resolvers work.

In this post, I want to explain how DNS resolvers work in a different way with a short Go program that does the same thing described in the comic. The main function (resolve) is actually just 20 lines, including comments.

I usually find it easier to understand things work when they come in the form of programs that I can run and modify and poke at, so hopefully this program will be helpful to some of you.

The program is here: https://github.com/jvns/tiny-resolver/blob/main/resolve.go

whats a DNS resolver?

When your browser needs to make a DNS query, it asks a DNS resolvers. When they start, DNS resolvers dont know any DNS records (except the IP addresses of the root nameservers). But they do know how to find DNS records for you.

Heres the “life of a DNS query” comic, which explains how DNS resolvers find DNS records for you.

well use a library for parsing DNS packets.

Im not going to write this completely from scratch I think parsing DNS packets is really interesting, but its definitely more than 80 lines of code, and I find that it kind of distracts from the algorithm.

I really recommend writing a toy DNS resolver that actually does the parsing of DNS packets if you want to learn about binary protocols though, its really fun and its a totally doable to get something basic working in a weekend.

So Ive used https://github.com/miekg/dns for creating and parsing the DNS packets.

DNS responses contain 4 sections

You might think of DNS queries as just being a question and an answer (“whats the IP for example.com? its 93.184.216.34!). But actually DNS responses contain 4 sections, and we need to use all 4 sections to write our DNS resolver. So lets explain what they are.

Heres the Msg struct from the miekg/dns library, which lists the sections.


    type Msg struct {
            MsgHdr
            Compress bool       `json:"-"` // If true, the message will be compressed when converted to wire format.
            Question []Question // Holds the RR(s) of the question section.
            Answer   []RR       // Holds the RR(s) of the answer section.
            Ns       []RR       // Holds the RR(s) of the authority section.
            Extra    []RR       // Holds the RR(s) of the additional section.
    }

Section 1: Question. This is the section you use when youre creating a query. Theres not much to it it just has a query name (like jvns.ca.), a type (like A, but encoded as an integer), and a class (which is always the same these days, “internet”).

Heres what the Question struct miekg/dns looks like:


    type Question struct {
            Name   string `dns:"cdomain-name"` // "cdomain-name" specifies encoding (and may be compressed)
            Qtype  uint16
            Qclass uint16
    }

Section 2: Answer. When you make a request like this:


    $ dig +short google.com
    93.184.216.34

the IP address 93.184.216.34 comes from the Answer section.

The Answer, Authority, and Additional sections all contain DNS records. Different types of records have different formats, but they all contain a name, type, class, and TTL

Heres what the shared header looks like in miekg/dns:


    type RR_Header struct {
            Name     string `dns:"cdomain-name"`
            Rrtype   uint16
            Class    uint16
            Ttl      uint32
            Rdlength uint16 // Length of data after header.
    }

“RR” stands for “Resource Record”.

Section 3: Authority. When a nameserver redirects you to another server (“ask a.iana-servers.net instead!“), this is the section it uses. miekg/dns calls this section Ns instead of Authority, I guess because it contains NS records.

Heres an example of an record in the Authority section of a DNS response.


    $ dig +noall +authority @h.root-servers.net example.com
    com.            172800  IN  NS  a.gtld-servers.net.
    com.            172800  IN  NS  b.gtld-servers.net.

The Authority section can also contain SOA records but thats not relevant to this post so Im not going to talk about that.

Section 4: Additional. This is where “glue records” live. Whats a glue record? Well, basically when a nameserver redirects you to another server, often itll include the IP address of that server as well.

Here are the glue records from the same query above.


    $ dig +noall +additional @h.root-servers.net example.com
    a.gtld-servers.net. 172800  IN  A   192.5.6.30
    b.gtld-servers.net. 172800  IN  A   192.33.14.30

There are other things in the Additional section as well, not just glue records, but theyre not relevant to this blog post so Im not going to talk about them.

the basic resolve function is pretty short

Now that weve talked about the different sections in a DNS response, I can explain the resolver code.

Lets jump into the main function for resolving a name to an IP address.

name here is a domain name, like `example.com.``


    func resolve(name string) net.IP {
       // We always start with a root nameserver
       nameserver := net.ParseIP("198.41.0.4")
       for {
          reply := dnsQuery(name, nameserver)
          if ip := getAnswer(reply); ip != nil { // look in the "Answer" section
             // Best case: we get an answer to our query  and we're done
             return ip
          } else if nsIP := getGlue(reply); nsIP != nil { // look in the "Additional" section
                // Second best: we get a "glue record" with the *IP address* of
                // another nameserver to query
             nameserver = nsIP
          } else if domain := getNS(reply); domain != "" { // look in the "Authority" section
                // Third best: we get the *domain name* of another nameserver to
                // query, which we can look up the IP for
             nameserver = resolve(domain)
          } else {
             // If there's no A record we just panic, this is not a very good
             // resolver :)
             panic("something went wrong")
          }
       }
    }

Heres what that resolve function is doing: 1. We start with the root nameserver 2. Then we do a loop: a. Query the nameserver and parse the response a. Look in the “Answer” section for a response. If we find one, were done a. Look in the “Additional” section for a glue record. If we find one, use that as the nameserver for the next query a. Look in the “Authority” section for a nameserver domain. If we find one, look up its IP and then use that IP as the nameserver for the next query

Thats basically the whole program. There are a few helper functions to get records out of the DNS response and to make DNS queries but I dont think theyre that interesting so I wont explain them.

the output

The resolver prints out all DNS queries it made, and the record it used to figure out what query to make it next.

It prints out dig -r @SERVER DOMAIN for each query even though its not actually using dig to make the query because I liked being able to run the same query myself from the command line to see the response myself, for debugging purposes.

-r just means “ignore whats in .digrc”, its there because I have some options in my .digrc (+noall +answer) that I wanted to disable when debugging.

Lets look at 3 examples of the output.

example 1: jvns.ca


    $ go run resolve.go jvns.ca.
    dig -r @198.41.0.4 jvns.ca.
       any.ca-servers.ca.   172800  IN  A   199.4.144.2
    dig -r @199.4.144.2 jvns.ca.
       jvns.ca. 86400   IN  NS  art.ns.cloudflare.com.
    dig -r @198.41.0.4 art.ns.cloudflare.com.
       a.gtld-servers.net.  172800  IN  A   192.5.6.30
    dig -r @192.5.6.30 art.ns.cloudflare.com.
       ns3.cloudflare.com.  172800  IN  A   162.159.0.33
    dig -r @162.159.0.33 art.ns.cloudflare.com.
       art.ns.cloudflare.com.   900 IN  A   173.245.59.102
    dig -r @173.245.59.102 jvns.ca.
       jvns.ca. 256 IN  A   172.64.80.1

We can see it had to make 6 DNS queries, 3 to look up jvns.ca and 3 to look up jvns.cas nameserver, art.ns.cloudflare.com

example 2: archive.org


    $ go run resolve.go archive.org.
    dig -r @198.41.0.4 archive.org.
       a0.org.afilias-nst.info. 172800  IN  A   199.19.56.1
    dig -r @199.19.56.1 archive.org.
       ns1.archive.org. 86400   IN  A   208.70.31.236
    dig -r @208.70.31.236 archive.org.
       archive.org. 300 IN  A   207.241.224.2
    Result: 207.241.224.2

This one only had to make 3 DNS queries. This is because there was a glue record available for archive.orgs nameserver (ns1.archive.org.).

example 3: www.maths.ox.ac.uk

One last example: lets look up www.maths.ox.ac.uk. Theres a reason for this one, I promise!


    dig -r @198.41.0.4 www.maths.ox.ac.uk.
       dns1.nic.uk. 172800  IN  A   213.248.216.1
    dig -r @213.248.216.1 www.maths.ox.ac.uk.
       ac.uk.   172800  IN  NS  ns0.ja.net.
    dig -r @198.41.0.4 ns0.ja.net.
       e.gtld-servers.net.  172800  IN  A   192.12.94.30
    dig -r @192.12.94.30 ns0.ja.net.
       ns0.ja.net.  172800  IN  A   128.86.1.20
    dig -r @128.86.1.20 ns0.ja.net.
       ns0.ja.net.  86400   IN  A   128.86.1.20
    dig -r @128.86.1.20 www.maths.ox.ac.uk.
       ns2.ja.net.  86400   IN  A   193.63.105.17
    dig -r @193.63.105.17 www.maths.ox.ac.uk.
       www.maths.ox.ac.uk.  300 IN  A   129.67.184.128
    Result: 129.67.184.128

This makes 7 DNS queries, which is more than jvns.ca, which only needed 6. Why does it make 7 DNS queries instead of 6?

Well, its because there are 4 nameservers involved in resolving www.maths.ox.ac.uk instead of 3. They are:

  • the . nameserver
  • the uk. nameserver
  • the ac.uk. nameserver
  • the ox.ac.uk. nameserver

You could even imagine there being a 5th one (a maths.ox.ac.uk. nameserver), but there isnt in this case.

jvns.ca only involves 3 nameservers:

  • the . nameserver
  • the ca. nameserver
  • the jvns.ca. nameserver

real DNS resolvers actually make more queries than this

When my resolver resolves reddit.com., it only makes 3 DNS queries.


    $ go run resolve.go reddit.com.
    dig -r @198.41.0.4 reddit.com.
       e.gtld-servers.net.  172800  IN  A   192.12.94.30
    dig -r @192.12.94.30 reddit.com.
       ns-378.awsdns-47.com.    172800  IN  A   205.251.193.122
    dig -r @205.251.193.122 reddit.com.
       reddit.com.  300 IN  A   151.101.129.140
    Result: 151.101.129.140

But when unbound (the actual DNS resolver that I have running on my laptop) resolves reddit.com, it makes more DNS queries. I captured them with tcpdump to see what they were.

This tcpdump output might be a little illegible because well, thats how tcpdump is, but hopefully it makes some sense.

Unbound skips the first step, because it has the address of the com. nameserver cached. Then the next 2 queries unbound makes are exactly the same as my tiny Go resolver, except that it sends its first query to k.gtld-servers.net instead of e.gtld-servers.net:


    12:38:35.479222 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.19946 > k.gtld-servers.net.domain: 51686% [1au] A? reddit.com. (39)
    12:38:35.757033 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.29111 > ns-378.awsdns-47.com.domain: 8859% [1au] A? reddit.com. (39)

But then it keeps making DNS queries, even after its done resolving reddit.com:


    12:38:35.757033 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.29111 > ns-378.awsdns-47.com.domain: 8859% [1au] A? reddit.com. (39)
    12:38:35.757396 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.31913 > ns-1775.awsdns-29.co.uk.domain: 54236% [1au] A? ns-378.awsdns-47.com. (49)
    12:38:35.757761 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.62059 > g.gtld-servers.net.domain: 28793% [1au] A? awsdns-05.net. (42)
    12:38:35.757955 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.34743 > b0.org.afilias-nst.org.domain: 24975% [1au] A? awsdns-00.org. (42)
    12:38:35.758051 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.8977 > a0.org.afilias-nst.info.domain: 53387% [1au] A? awsdns-00.org. (42)
    12:38:35.758285 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.11376 > j.gtld-servers.net.domain: 41181% [1au] A? awsdns-05.net. (42)
    12:38:35.775497 wlp3s0 In  IP ns-378.awsdns-47.com.domain > pomegranate.29111: 8859*-$ 4/4/1 A 151.101.1.140, A 151.101.129.140, A 151.101.65.140, A 151.101.193.140 (240)
    12:38:35.775948 lo    In  IP localhost.domain > localhost.34429: 4033 4/0/1 A 151.101.1.140, A 151.101.129.140, A 151.101.65.140, A 151.101.193.140 (103)
    # now it's done -- it returned its DNS response!
    # but it keeps making queries about reddit.com's nameservers...
    12:38:35.843811 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.44738 > ns-706.awsdns-24.net.domain: 14817% [1au] A? ns-1029.awsdns-00.org. (50)
    12:38:35.845563 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.55655 > ns-1027.awsdns-00.org.domain: 3120% [1au] A? ns-1029.awsdns-00.org. (50)
    12:38:36.017618 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.53397 > ns-775.awsdns-32.net.domain: 32671% [1au] A? ns-557.awsdns-05.net. (49)
    12:38:36.045151 wlp3s0 Out IP pomegranate.40525 > ns-454.awsdns-56.com.domain: 20823% [1au] A? ns-557.awsdns-05.net. (49)

So thats kind of interesting. I guess it makes sense that unbound would want to cache more nameserver addresses in case it needs them in the future. Or maybe thats what the DNS specification says to do?

is this a “recursive” program?

DNS resolvers are often called “recursive nameservers”. Ive stopped using that terminology myself in explanations, but as far as I can tell, this is because the resolve function is often a recursive function.

And the resolve function I wrote is definitely recursive! But I ran this program on 500 different domains, and these are the number of times it recursed:

  1. Sometimes 0 times (the function never calls itself)
  2. Sometimes 1 time (the function calls itself once, to look up the IP address of one nameserver)
  3. Very rarely 2 times (like for example to resolve abc.net.au. right now it needs to look up r.au., then eur2.akam.net. then abc.net.au.)
  4. So far, never 3 times

Maybe theres a domain that this function would recurse more than 2 times on, but I dont know.

You definitely could write this program in a way that recurses more, by replacing the loop with more recursion. And then it would recurse 3 or 6 or 7 or 9 times, depending on the domain. But to me the loop feels easier to read so I wrote it with a loop instead.

a bash version of this resolver

I wanted to see if it was possible to write a DNS resolver in 10-15 lines of bash, similarly to this short “run a container” script

The program I came up with was kind of too long in the end (its about 36 lines), but here it is anyway. It uses the exact same algorithm as the Go program.

https://github.com/jvns/tiny-resolver/blob/main/resolver.sh

The bash version is even more janky and uses grep in very questionable ways but it did resolve every domain I tried which is cool.

It actually helped me write the Go resolver (which I actually started back in November but got stuck on) because bashs limitations forced me to simplify the design and simplifying it fixed a bug I was running into.

how is this different from a “real” DNS resolver?

Obviously this is only 80 lines so there are a lot of differences between this an a “real” DNS resolver. Here are a few:

  • it only handles A records, not other record types
  • specifically it doesnt handle CNAME records (though you can easily add CNAME support with just another 12 lines of code)
  • it always only returns one A record even if there are more
  • it has absolutely no ability to handle errors like “there were no A records” (the Go program just panics)
  • the way it handles the glue records is a bit sketchy, probably it should check that they match the nameservers in the “Authority” section or something. It seems to work though.
  • DNS resolvers are usually servers, this is a command line program
  • it doesnt validate DNSSEC or whatever
  • it doesnt do caching
  • it doesnt try a different nameserver if one of the domains nameservers isnt working and times out the DNS query
  • like we mentioned above, unbound seems to look up the addresses of all the nameservers for a domain
  • probably there are other bugs and ways it violates the DNS spec that I dont know about

tiny versions of real programs are fun

As usual I always learn something from writing tiny versions of real programs. Ive written this program before but I think this version is better than the first version I wrote.

In 2020 I ran a 2-day workshop with my friend Allison called “Domain Name Saturday” where all the participants wrote DNS resolvers. Basically the idea was that you implement the algorithm described in this post, as well as the binary parsing pieces that the miekg/dns library handles here. At some point I want to write up that workshop so that other people could run it, because it was really fun.

One question I still have is are there domains where the resolve function would recurse 3 times or more on? Obviously you could manufacture such a domain by making it intentionally have to go through a bunch of hoops, but.. do they exist in the real world?


via: https://jvns.ca/blog/2022/02/01/a-dns-resolver-in-80-lines-of-go/

作者:Julia Evans 选题:lujun9972 译者:译者ID 校对:校对者ID

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