I need to get the DNS address, for example "http://stackoverflow.com/questions/ask". I used the following code and able to get in the form of 192.X.X.X.
Hashtable env = new Hashtable();
env.put(Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY, "co开发者_Go百科m.sun.jndi.dns.DnsContextFactory");
DirContext ictx = new InitialDirContext(env);
String dnsServers = (String) ictx.getEnvironment().get("java.naming.provider.url");
System.out.println("DNS Servers: " + dnsServers );
InetAddress ia = InetAddress.getByAddress(new byte[] {74,125,127,106});
// or
ia = InetAddress.getByName("74.125.127.106");
System.out.println(ia.getCanonicalHostName());
I have taken the code linked to by @Sam DeHaan, cleaned it up a bit and tested it.
/**
* Do a reverse DNS lookup to find the host name associated with an IP address. Gets results more often than
* {@link java.net.InetAddress#getCanonicalHostName()}, but also tries the Inet implementation if reverse DNS does
* not work.
*
* Based on code found at http://www.codingforums.com/showpost.php?p=892349&postcount=5
*
* @param ip The IP address to look up
* @return The host name, if one could be found, or the IP address
*/
private static String getHostName(final String ip)
{
String retVal = null;
final String[] bytes = ip.split("\\.");
if (bytes.length == 4)
{
try
{
final java.util.Hashtable<String, String> env = new java.util.Hashtable<String, String>();
env.put("java.naming.factory.initial", "com.sun.jndi.dns.DnsContextFactory");
final javax.naming.directory.DirContext ctx = new javax.naming.directory.InitialDirContext(env);
final String reverseDnsDomain = bytes[3] + "." + bytes[2] + "." + bytes[1] + "." + bytes[0] + ".in-addr.arpa";
final javax.naming.directory.Attributes attrs = ctx.getAttributes(reverseDnsDomain, new String[]
{
"PTR",
});
for (final javax.naming.NamingEnumeration<? extends javax.naming.directory.Attribute> ae = attrs.getAll(); ae.hasMoreElements();)
{
final javax.naming.directory.Attribute attr = ae.next();
final String attrId = attr.getID();
for (final java.util.Enumeration<?> vals = attr.getAll(); vals.hasMoreElements();)
{
String value = vals.nextElement().toString();
// System.out.println(attrId + ": " + value);
if ("PTR".equals(attrId))
{
final int len = value.length();
if (value.charAt(len - 1) == '.')
{
// Strip out trailing period
value = value.substring(0, len - 1);
}
retVal = value;
}
}
}
ctx.close();
}
catch (final javax.naming.NamingException e)
{
// No reverse DNS that we could find, try with InetAddress
System.out.print(""); // NO-OP
}
}
if (null == retVal)
{
try
{
retVal = java.net.InetAddress.getByName(ip).getCanonicalHostName();
}
catch (final java.net.UnknownHostException e1)
{
retVal = ip;
}
}
return retVal;
}
CodingForums similar question -- see post #5 (DISCLAIMER: Code is not mine, not tested by me)
Code from linked source:
/**
* 25 Nov 2009 REVERSE DNS LOOKUP USING JNDI
* In this example the IP being looked up is 211.21.152.4
* The octets are reversed (4.152.21.211)
* and appended to the in-addr.arpa zone:
* 4.152.21.211.in-addr.arpa
*/
import javax.naming.*;
import javax.naming.directory.*;
import java.util.*;
public class dns {
public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
Hashtable env = new Hashtable();
env.put("java.naming.factory.initial","com.sun.jndi.dns.DnsContextFactory");
DirContext ctx = new InitialDirContext(env);
Attributes attrs = ctx.getAttributes("4.152.21.211.in-addr.arpa",new String[] {"PTR"});
for (NamingEnumeration ae = attrs.getAll();ae.hasMoreElements();) {
Attribute attr = (Attribute)ae.next();
String attrId = attr.getID();
for (Enumeration vals = attr.getAll();vals.hasMoreElements();
System.out.println(attrId + ": " + vals.nextElement()));
}
ctx.close();
}
catch(Exception e) {
System.out.println("NO REVERSE DNS");
}
}
}
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