unbound-host man page on DragonFly

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unbound-host(1)			 unbound 1.5.5		       unbound-host(1)

NAME
       unbound-host - unbound DNS lookup utility

SYNOPSIS
       unbound-host [-vdhr46D] [-c class] [-t type] hostname [-y key] [-f key‐
       file] [-F namedkeyfile] [-C configfile]

DESCRIPTION
       Unbound-host uses the unbound validating	 resolver  to  query  for  the
       hostname and display results. With the -v option it displays validation
       status: secure, insecure, bogus (security failure).

       By default it reads no configuration file whatsoever.  It  attempts  to
       reach  the  internet  root servers.  With -C an unbound config file and
       with -r resolv.conf can be read.

       The available options are:

       hostname
	      This name is resolved (looked up in the DNS).  If a IPv4 or IPv6
	      address is given, a reverse lookup is performed.

       -h     Show the version and commandline option help.

       -v     Enable  verbose output and it shows validation results, on every
	      line.  Secure means that the NXDOMAIN  (no  such	domain	name),
	      nodata  (no  such data) or positive data response validated cor‐
	      rectly with one of the keys.  Insecure means  that  that	domain
	      name  has	 no  security set up for it.  Bogus (security failure)
	      means that the response failed one or more checks, it is	likely
	      wrong, outdated, tampered with, or broken.

       -d     Enable  debug  output  to stderr. One -d shows what the resolver
	      and validator are doing and may tell you what is going on.  More
	      times,  -d -d, gives a lot of output, with every packet sent and
	      received.

       -c class
	      Specify the class to lookup for, the default is IN the  internet
	      class.

       -t type
	      Specify  the type of data to lookup. The default looks for IPv4,
	      IPv6 and mail handler data, or domain name pointers for  reverse
	      queries.

       -y key Specify  a  public  key to use as trust anchor. This is the base
	      for a chain of trust that is built up from the trust  anchor  to
	      the  response, in order to validate the response message. Can be
	      given as a DS or DNSKEY record.  For example -y "example.com  DS
	      31560 5 1 1CFED84787E6E19CCF9372C1187325972FE546CD".

       -D     Enables  DNSSEC  validation.   Reads  the	 root  anchor from the
	      default  configured  root	 anchor	 at  the   default   location,
	      /usr/local/etc/unbound/root.key.

       -f keyfile
	      Reads keys from a file. Every line has a DS or DNSKEY record, in
	      the format as for -y. The zone file format, the same as dig  and
	      drill produce.

       -F namedkeyfile
	      Reads   keys   from  a  BIND-style  named.conf  file.  Only  the
	      trusted-key {}; entries are read.

       -C configfile
	      Uses the specified unbound.conf to prime libunbound(3).

       -r     Read /etc/resolv.conf, and use  the  forward  DNS	 servers  from
	      there  (those  could  have  been	set  by	 DHCP).	  More info in
	      resolv.conf(5).  Breaks validation if those servers do not  sup‐
	      port DNSSEC.

       -4     Use solely the IPv4 network for sending packets.

       -6     Use solely the IPv6 network for sending packets.

EXAMPLES
       Some  examples  of use. The keys shown below are fakes, thus a security
       failure is encountered.

       $ unbound-host www.example.com

       $    unbound-host    -v	  -y	"example.com	DS    31560    5     1
       1CFED84787E6E19CCF9372C1187325972FE546CD" www.example.com

       $     unbound-host    -v	   -y	 "example.com	 DS    31560	5    1
       1CFED84787E6E19CCF9372C1187325972FE546CD" 192.0.2.153

EXIT CODE
       The unbound-host program exits with status code 1 on  error,  0	on  no
       error.  The data may not be available on exit code 0, exit code 1 means
       the lookup encountered a fatal error.

SEE ALSO
       unbound.conf(5), unbound(8).

NLnet Labs			 Oct  6, 2015		       unbound-host(1)
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