ZDNS is a command-line utility that provides high-speed DNS lookups. For example, the following will perform MX lookups and a secondary A lookup for the IPs of MX servers for the domains in the Alexa Top Million:
cat top-1m.csv | zdns MX --lookup-ipv4 --alexa
ZDNS is written in golang and is primarily based on https://github.com/miekg/dns.
ZDNS can be installed by running:
go get github.com/zmap/zdns/zdns
ZDNS provides several types of modules.
The A
, AAAA
, ANY
, AXFR
, CAA
, CNAME
, DMARC
, MX
, NS
, PTR
, TXT
,
SOA
, and SPF
modules provide the raw DNS response in JSON form, similar to dig.
For example, the command:
echo "censys.io" | zdns A
returns:
{
"name": "censys.io",
"status": "NOERROR",
"data": {
"answers": [
{
"ttl": 300,
"type": "A",
"name": "censys.io",
"data": "216.239.38.21"
}
],
"additionals": [
{
"ttl": 34563,
"type": "A",
"name": "ns-cloud-e1.googledomains.com",
"data": "216.239.32.110"
},
],
"authorities": [
{
"ttl": 53110,
"type": "NS",
"name": "censys.io",
"data": "ns-cloud-e1.googledomains.com."
},
],
"protocol": "udp"
}
}
Raw DNS responses frequently do not provide the data you want. For example,
an MX response may not include the associated A records in the additionals
section requiring an additional lookup. To address this gap and provide a
friendlier interface, we also provide several lookup modules: alookup
and
mxlookup
.
mxlookup
will additionally do an A lookup for the IP addresses that
correspond with an exchange record. alookup
acts similar to nslookup and will
follow CNAME records.
For example,
echo "censys.io" | ./zdns mxlookup --ipv4-lookup
returns:
{
"name": "censys.io",
"status": "NOERROR",
"data": {
"exchanges": [
{
"name": "aspmx.l.google.com",
"type": "MX",
"preference": 1,
"ipv4_addresses": [
"74.125.28.26"
],
"ttl": 288
},
{
"name": "alt1.aspmx.l.google.com",
"type": "MX",
"preference": 5,
"ipv4_addresses": [
"64.233.182.26"
],
"ttl": 288
}
]
}
}
The above modules are useful when we only have a list of domain names to perform queries
for. However, in some instances we have a root zone file that indicates all domains in a
zone, and their nameservers. For this instance, we have the zone
module.
The zone
module performs an alookup
for each domain in the specified zone file,
skipping as much of the recursive lookup as is possible. This entails utilization of the
glue records in the zone file to go directly to the domain's authoritative nameserver,
as well as caching nameserver locations when lookups must be performed.
For example, if the following two records are in a zonefile,
foo.com. NS ns.foo.com.
ns.foo.com. A XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX
then the resulting lookup for foo.com will utilize the nameserver at XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX
This is useful for performing many alookup
calls without hammering the local and root
nameservers.
Note: the zone
module requires the --input-file flag be set, in order to allow it to
make two passes over the input.
By default, ZDNS will operate with 1,000 light-weight go routines. If you're
not careful, this will overwhelm many upstream DNS providers. We suggest that
users coordinate with local network administrators before performing any scans.
You can control the number of concurrent connections with the --threads
and
--go-processes
command line arguments. Alternate name servers can be
specified with --name-servers
. ZDNS will rotate through these servers when
making requests.
If zdns encounters a record type it does not support it will generate an output
record with the type
field set correctly and a representation of the
underlying data structure in the unparsed_rr
field. Do not rely on the
presence or structure of this field. This field (and its existence) may change
at any time as we expand support for additional record types. If you find
yourself using this field, please consider submitting a pull-request adding
parser support.
ZDNS Copyright 2016 Regents of the University of Michigan
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See LICENSE for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.