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5 - Recursive Resolve

Our server is working, but being reliant on another server to actually perform the lookup is annoying and less than useful. Now is a good time to delve into the details of how a name is really resolved.

Assuming that no information is known since before, the question is first issued to one of the Internet's 13 root servers. Why 13? Because that's how many that fits into a 512 byte DNS packet (strictly speaking, there's room for 14, but some margin was left). You might think that 13 seems a bit on the low side for handling all of the internet, and you'd be right -- there are 13 logical servers, but in reality many more. You can read more about it here. Any resolver will need to know of these 13 servers before hand. A file containing all of them, in bind format, is available and called named.root. These servers all contain the same information, and to get started we can pick one of them at random. Looking at named.root we see that the IP-address of a.root-servers.net is 198.41.0.4, so we'll go ahead and use that to perform our initial query for www.google.com.

# dig +norecurse @198.41.0.4 www.google.com

; <<>> DiG 9.10.3-P4-Ubuntu <<>> +norecurse @198.41.0.4 www.google.com
; (1 server found)
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 64866
;; flags: qr; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 0, AUTHORITY: 13, ADDITIONAL: 16

;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 4096
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;www.google.com.			IN	A

;; AUTHORITY SECTION:
com.			172800	IN	NS	e.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	b.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	j.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	m.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	i.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	f.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	a.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	g.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	h.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	l.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	k.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	c.gtld-servers.net.
com.			172800	IN	NS	d.gtld-servers.net.

;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:
e.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.12.94.30
b.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.33.14.30
b.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	AAAA	2001:503:231d::2:30
j.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.48.79.30
m.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.55.83.30
i.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.43.172.30
f.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.35.51.30
a.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.5.6.30
a.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	AAAA	2001:503:a83e::2:30
g.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.42.93.30
h.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.54.112.30
l.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.41.162.30
k.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.52.178.30
c.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.26.92.30
d.gtld-servers.net.	172800	IN	A	192.31.80.30

;; Query time: 24 msec
;; SERVER: 198.41.0.4#53(198.41.0.4)
;; WHEN: Fri Jul 08 14:09:20 CEST 2016
;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 531

The root servers don't know about www.google.com, but they do know about com, so our reply tells us where to go next. There are a few things to take note of:

  • We are provided with a set of NS records, which are in the authority section. NS records tells us the name of the name server handling a domain.
  • The server is being helpful by passing along A records corresponding to the NS records, so we don't have to perform a second lookup.
  • We didn't actually perform a query for com, but rather www.google.com. However, the NS records all refer to com.

Let's pick a server from the result and move on. 192.5.6.30 for a.gtld-servers.net seems as good as any.

# dig +norecurse @192.5.6.30 www.google.com

; <<>> DiG 9.10.3-P4-Ubuntu <<>> +norecurse @192.5.6.30 www.google.com
; (1 server found)
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 16229
;; flags: qr; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 0, AUTHORITY: 4, ADDITIONAL: 5

;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 4096
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;www.google.com.			IN	A

;; AUTHORITY SECTION:
google.com.		172800	IN	NS	ns2.google.com.
google.com.		172800	IN	NS	ns1.google.com.
google.com.		172800	IN	NS	ns3.google.com.
google.com.		172800	IN	NS	ns4.google.com.

;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:
ns2.google.com.		172800	IN	A	216.239.34.10
ns1.google.com.		172800	IN	A	216.239.32.10
ns3.google.com.		172800	IN	A	216.239.36.10
ns4.google.com.		172800	IN	A	216.239.38.10

;; Query time: 114 msec
;; SERVER: 192.5.6.30#53(192.5.6.30)
;; WHEN: Fri Jul 08 14:13:26 CEST 2016
;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 179

We're still not at www.google.com, but at least we have a set of servers that handle the google.com domain now. Let's give it another shot by sending our query to 216.239.32.10.

# dig +norecurse @216.239.32.10 www.google.com

; <<>> DiG 9.10.3-P4-Ubuntu <<>> +norecurse @216.239.32.10 www.google.com
; (1 server found)
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 20432
;; flags: qr aa; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 0

;; QUESTION SECTION:
;www.google.com.            IN  A

;; ANSWER SECTION:
www.google.com.     300 IN  A   216.58.211.132

;; Query time: 10 msec
;; SERVER: 216.239.32.10#53(216.239.32.10)
;; WHEN: Fri Jul 08 14:15:11 CEST 2016
;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 48

And here we go! The IP of www.google.com as we desired. Let's recap:

  • a.root-servers.net tells us to check a.gtld-servers.net which handles com
  • a.gtld-servers.net tells us to check ns1.google.com which handles google.com
  • ns1.google.com tells us the IP of www.google.com

This is rather typical, and most lookups will only ever require three steps, even without caching. It's still possible to have name servers for subdomains, and further ones for sub-subdomains, though. In practice, a DNS server will maintain a cache, and most TLD's will be known since before. That means that most queries will only ever require two lookups by the server, and commonly one or zero.

Extending DnsPacket for recursive lookups

Before we can get on, we'll need a few utility functions on DnsPacket.

impl DnsPacket {

    - snip -

    /// It's useful to be able to pick a random A record from a packet. When we
    /// get multiple IP's for a single name, it doesn't matter which one we
    /// choose, so in those cases we can now pick one at random.
    pub fn get_random_a(&self) -> Option<Ipv4Addr> {
        self.answers
            .iter()
            .filter_map(|record| match record {
                DnsRecord::A { addr, .. } => Some(*addr),
                _ => None,
            })
            .next()
    }

    /// A helper function which returns an iterator over all name servers in
    /// the authorities section, represented as (domain, host) tuples
    fn get_ns<'a>(&'a self, qname: &'a str) -> impl Iterator<Item = (&'a str, &'a str)> {
        self.authorities
            .iter()
            // In practice, these are always NS records in well formed packages.
            // Convert the NS records to a tuple which has only the data we need
            // to make it easy to work with.
            .filter_map(|record| match record {
                DnsRecord::NS { domain, host, .. } => Some((domain.as_str(), host.as_str())),
                _ => None,
            })
            // Discard servers which aren't authoritative to our query
            .filter(move |(domain, _)| qname.ends_with(*domain))
    }

    /// We'll use the fact that name servers often bundle the corresponding
    /// A records when replying to an NS query to implement a function that
    /// returns the actual IP for an NS record if possible.
    pub fn get_resolved_ns(&self, qname: &str) -> Option<Ipv4Addr> {
        // Get an iterator over the nameservers in the authorities section
        self.get_ns(qname)
            // Now we need to look for a matching A record in the additional
            // section. Since we just want the first valid record, we can just
            // build a stream of matching records.
            .flat_map(|(_, host)| {
                self.resources
                    .iter()
                    // Filter for A records where the domain match the host
                    // of the NS record that we are currently processing
                    .filter_map(move |record| match record {
                        DnsRecord::A { domain, addr, .. } if domain == host => Some(addr),
                        _ => None,
                    })
            })
            .map(|addr| *addr)
            // Finally, pick the first valid entry
            .next()
    }

    /// However, not all name servers are as that nice. In certain cases there won't
    /// be any A records in the additional section, and we'll have to perform *another*
    /// lookup in the midst. For this, we introduce a method for returning the host
    /// name of an appropriate name server.
    pub fn get_unresolved_ns<'a>(&'a self, qname: &'a str) -> Option<&'a str> {
        // Get an iterator over the nameservers in the authorities section
        self.get_ns(qname)
            .map(|(_, host)| host)
            // Finally, pick the first valid entry
            .next()
    }

} // End of DnsPacket

Implementing recursive lookup

We move swiftly on to our new recursive_lookup function:

fn recursive_lookup(qname: &str, qtype: QueryType) -> Result<DnsPacket> {
    // For now we're always starting with *a.root-servers.net*.
    let mut ns = "198.41.0.4".parse::<Ipv4Addr>().unwrap();

    // Since it might take an arbitrary number of steps, we enter an unbounded loop.
    loop {
        println!("attempting lookup of {:?} {} with ns {}", qtype, qname, ns);

        // The next step is to send the query to the active server.
        let ns_copy = ns;

        let server = (ns_copy, 53);
        let response = lookup(qname, qtype, server)?;

        // If there are entries in the answer section, and no errors, we are done!
        if !response.answers.is_empty() && response.header.rescode == ResultCode::NOERROR {
            return Ok(response);
        }

        // We might also get a `NXDOMAIN` reply, which is the authoritative name servers
        // way of telling us that the name doesn't exist.
        if response.header.rescode == ResultCode::NXDOMAIN {
            return Ok(response);
        }

        // Otherwise, we'll try to find a new nameserver based on NS and a corresponding A
        // record in the additional section. If this succeeds, we can switch name server
        // and retry the loop.
        if let Some(new_ns) = response.get_resolved_ns(qname) {
            ns = new_ns;

            continue;
        }

        // If not, we'll have to resolve the ip of a NS record. If no NS records exist,
        // we'll go with what the last server told us.
        let new_ns_name = match response.get_unresolved_ns(qname) {
            Some(x) => x,
            None => return Ok(response),
        };

        // Here we go down the rabbit hole by starting _another_ lookup sequence in the
        // midst of our current one. Hopefully, this will give us the IP of an appropriate
        // name server.
        let recursive_response = recursive_lookup(&new_ns_name, QueryType::A)?;

        // Finally, we pick a random ip from the result, and restart the loop. If no such
        // record is available, we again return the last result we got.
        if let Some(new_ns) = recursive_response.get_random_a() {
            ns = new_ns;
        } else {
            return Ok(response);
        }
    }
}

This also requires a small change to the lookup function, as we need to pass which server to use. We add a server parameter to the function signature, and remove the hardcoded server variable we used in chapter 4:

fn lookup(qname: &str, qtype: QueryType, server: (Ipv4Addr, u16)) -> Result<DnsPacket> {

Trying out recursive lookup

The only thing remaining is to change our handle_query function to use recursive_lookup:

fn handle_query(socket: &UdpSocket) -> Result<()> {

    - snip -

            println!("Received query: {:?}", question);
            if let Ok(result) = recursive_lookup(&question.name, question.qtype) {
                packet.questions.push(question.clone());
                packet.header.rescode = result.header.rescode;

    - snip -

}

Let's try it!

# dig @127.0.0.1 -p 2053 www.google.com

; <<>> DiG 9.10.3-P4-Ubuntu <<>> @127.0.0.1 -p 2053 www.google.com
; (1 server found)
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 41892
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 0

;; QUESTION SECTION:
;www.google.com.			IN	A

;; ANSWER SECTION:
www.google.com.		300	IN	A	216.58.211.132

;; Query time: 76 msec
;; SERVER: 127.0.0.1#2053(127.0.0.1)
;; WHEN: Fri Jul 08 14:31:39 CEST 2016
;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 62

Looking at our server window, we see:

Received query: DnsQuestion { name: "www.google.com", qtype: A }
attempting lookup of A www.google.com with ns 198.41.0.4
attempting lookup of A www.google.com with ns 192.12.94.30
attempting lookup of A www.google.com with ns 216.239.34.10
Answer: A { domain: "www.google.com", addr: 216.58.211.132, ttl: 300 }

This mirrors our manual process earlier. We can now successfully resolve a domain starting from the list of root servers. We've now got a fully functional, albeit suboptimal, DNS server.

There are many things that we could do better. For instance, there is no true concurrency in this server. We can neither send nor receive queries over TCP. We cannot use it to host our own zones, and allow it to act as an authorative server. The lack of support for DNSSEC leaves us open to DNS poisoning attacks where a malicious server can return records relating to somebody else's domain.

Many of these problems have been fixed in my own project hermes, so you can head over there to investigate how I did it, or continue on your own from here. Or maybe you've had enough of DNS for now... :) Regardless, I hope you've gained some new insight into how DNS works.