D. J. Bernstein
Internet publication
djbdns

The dnsfilter program

dnsfilter reverse-resolves IP addresses, converting them to host names.

Interface

     dnsfilter opts

dnsfilter reads a series of lines from stdin, converts an IP address to a host name at the beginning of each line, and prints the results to stdout.

If a line does not begin with an IP address, dnsfilter leaves the line alone. If an IP address does not have a host name listed in DNS, dnsfilter leaves the line alone. If an IP address has a host name listed in DNS, dnsfilter inserts an equals sign and the host name before the first space or tab in the line. If a DNS lookup fails temporarily, dnsfilter inserts a colon and a dash-separated error message before the first space or tab in the line.

While dnsfilter is looking up an address in DNS, it reads ahead in the input and looks for more addresses to look up in parallel.

opts is a series of getopt-style options: