Compendium of generic DNS utilities. The 'dig' command line tool must be installed in order to use this module.
salt.modules.dig.
A
(host, nameserver=None)¶Return the A record for host
.
Always returns a list.
CLI Example:
salt ns1 dig.A www.google.com
salt.modules.dig.
AAAA
(host, nameserver=None)¶Return the AAAA record for host
.
Always returns a list.
CLI Example:
salt ns1 dig.AAAA www.google.com
salt.modules.dig.
MX
(domain, resolve=False, nameserver=None)¶Return a list of lists for the MX of domain
.
If the resolve
argument is True, resolve IPs for the servers.
It's limited to one IP, because although in practice it's very rarely a round robin, it is an acceptable configuration and pulling just one IP lets the data be similar to the non-resolved version. If you think an MX has multiple IPs, don't use the resolver here, resolve them in a separate step.
CLI Example:
salt ns1 dig.MX google.com
salt.modules.dig.
NS
(domain, resolve=True, nameserver=None)¶Return a list of IPs of the nameservers for domain
If resolve
is False, don't resolve names.
CLI Example:
salt ns1 dig.NS google.com
salt.modules.dig.
SPF
(domain, record='SPF', nameserver=None)¶Return the allowed IPv4 ranges in the SPF record for domain
.
If record is SPF
and the SPF record is empty, the TXT record will be
searched automatically. If you know the domain uses TXT and not SPF,
specifying that will save a lookup.
CLI Example:
salt ns1 dig.SPF google.com
salt.modules.dig.
TXT
(host, nameserver=None)¶Return the TXT record for host
.
Always returns a list.
CLI Example:
salt ns1 dig.TXT google.com
salt.modules.dig.
check_ip
(addr)¶Check if address is a valid IP. returns True if valid, otherwise False.
CLI Example:
salt ns1 dig.check_ip 127.0.0.1
salt ns1 dig.check_ip 1111:2222:3333:4444:5555:6666:7777:8888