DNS Resolve Application

Overview

The DNS resolver sample application implements a basic DNS resolver according to RFC 1035. Supported DNS answers are IPv4/IPv6 addresses and CNAME.

If a CNAME is received, the DNS resolver will create another DNS query. The number of additional queries is controlled by the DNS_RESOLVER_ADDITIONAL_QUERIES Kconfig variable.

For more information about DNS configuration variables, see: subsys/net/lib/dns/Kconfig. The DNS resolver API can be found at include/net/dns_resolve.h. The sample code can be found at: samples/net/dns_resolve.

Requirements

  • Networking with QEMU
  • screen terminal emulator or equivalent.
  • For the Arduino 101 board, the ENC28J60 Ethernet module is required.
  • dnsmasq application. The dnsmasq version used in this sample is:
dnsmasq -v
Dnsmasq version 2.76  Copyright (c) 2000-2016 Simon Kelley

Wiring

The ENC28J60 module is an Ethernet device with SPI interface. The following pins must be connected from the ENC28J60 device to the Arduino 101 board:

Arduino 101 ENC28J60 (pin numbers on the board)
D13 SCK (1)
D12 SO (3)
D11 SI (2)
D10 CS (7)
D04 INT (5)
3.3V VCC (10)
GDN GND (9)

Building and Running

Network Configuration

Open the project configuration file for your platform, for example: prj_frdm_k64f.conf is the configuration file for the NXP FRDM-K64F board.

In this sample application, both static or DHCPv4 IP addresses are supported. Static IP addresses are specified in the project configuration file, for example:

CONFIG_NET_APP_MY_IPV6_ADDR="2001:db8::1"
CONFIG_NET_APP_PEER_IPV6_ADDR="2001:db8::2"

are the IPv6 addresses for the DNS client running Zephyr and the DNS server, respectively.

DNS server

The dnsmasq tool may be used for testing purposes. Sample dnsmasq start script can be downloaded from the zephyrproject-rtos/net-tools project area: https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/net-tools

Open a terminal window and type:

$ cd net-tools
$ ./dnsmasq.sh

(‘su’ or ‘sudo’ may be required.)

The default project configurations settings for this sample uses the public Google DNS servers. In order to use the local dnsmasq server, please edit the appropriate ‘prj.conf’ file and update the DNS server addresses. For instance, if using the usual IP addresses assigned to testing, update them to the following values:

CONFIG_DNS_SERVER1="192.0.2.2:5353"
CONFIG_DNS_SERVER2="[2001:db8::2]:5353"

Note

DNS uses port 53 by default, but the dnsmasq.conf file provided by net-tools uses port 5353 to allow executing the daemon without superuser privileges.

If dnsmasq fails to start with an error like this:

dnsmasq: failed to create listening socket for port 5353: Address already in use

Open a terminal window and type:

$ killall -s KILL dnsmasq

Try to launch the dnsmasq application again.

QEMU x86

To use QEMU for testing, follow the Networking with QEMU guide.

FRDM K64F

Open a terminal window and type:

$ make BOARD=frdm_k64f

The FRDM K64F board is detected as a USB storage device. The board must be mounted (i.e. to /mnt) to ‘flash’ the binary:

$ cp outdir/frdm_k64f/zephyr.bin /mnt

See Freedom-K64F board documentation for more information about this board.

Open a terminal window and type:

$ screen /dev/ttyACM0 115200

Use ‘dmesg’ to find the right USB device.

Once the binary is loaded into the FRDM board, press the RESET button.

Arduino 101

Open a terminal window and type:

$ make BOARD=arduino_101

To load the binary in the development board follow the steps in Arduino/Genuino 101.

Open a terminal window and type:

$ screen /dev/ttyUSB0 115200

Use ‘dmesg’ to find the right USB device.

Once the binary is loaded into the Arduino 101 board, press the RESET button.