JDRESOLVE(1) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | JDRESOLVE(1) |
jdresolve - resolves IP addresses into hostnames
jdresolve [-h] [-v] [-n] [-r] [-a] [-d <level>] [-m <mask>] [-l <line cache>] [-t <timeout>] [-p] [-s <number of sockets>] [--database=<db path>] <LOG FILE>
jdresolve [--help] [--version] [--nostats] [--recursive] [--anywhere] [--debug=<level>] [--mask=<mask>] [--linecache=<line cache>] [--timeout=<timeout>] [--sockets=<number of sockets>] [--database=<db path>] [--dbfirst] [--dbonly] [--dumpdb] [--mergedb] [--expiredb=<hours>] [--unresolved] [--progress] <LOG FILE>
jdresolve resolves IP addresses to hostnames. Any file format is supported, including those where the line does not begin with the IP address. One of the strongest features of the program is the support for recursion, which can drastically reduce the number of unresolved hosts by faking a hostname based on the network that the IP belongs to. DNS queries are sent in parallel, which means that you can decrease run time by increasing the number of simultaneous sockets used (given a fast enough machine and available bandwidth ). By using the database support, performance can be increased even further, by using cached data from previous runs.
jdresolve access_log > resolved_log jdresolve -r -s 128 access_log > resolved_log jdresolve -r --database hosts.db access_log > res_log
rhost(1)
jdresolve was written by John D. Rowell <me@jdrowell.com>, and is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
The original version of this man page was written by Craig Sanders <cas@taz.net.au>, for the Debian GNU/Linux package of jdresolve, and is also licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL.
perl 5.005, patch 03 | 3rd Berkeley Distribution |