`amphp/dns` automatically detects the system configuration and uses it. On Unix-like systems it reads `/etc/resolv.conf` and respects settings for nameservers, timeouts, and attempts. On Windows it looks up the correct entries in the Windows Registry and takes the listed nameservers. You can pass a custom `ConfigLoader` instance to `Rfc1035StubResolver` to load another configuration, such as a static config.
It respects the system's hosts file on Unix and Windows based systems, so it works just fine in environments like Docker with named containers.
The package uses a global default resolver with can be accessed and changed via `Amp\Dns\resolver()`. If an argument other than `null` is given, the given resolver is used as global instance. The instance is automatically bound to the current event loop. If you replace the event loop via `Amp\Loop::set()`, then you have to set a new global resolver.
Usually you don't have to change the resolver. If you want to use a custom configuration for a certain request, you can create a new resolver instance and use that instead of changing the global one.
`Amp\Dns\resolve` provides hostname to IP address resolution. It returns an array of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses by default. The type of IP addresses returned can be restricted by passing a second argument with the respective type.
`Amp\Dns\query` supports the various other DNS record types such as `MX`, `PTR`, or `TXT`. It automatically rewrites passed IP addresses for `PTR` lookups.
The `Rfc1035StubResolver` caches responses by default in an `Amp\Cache\ArrayCache`. You can set any other `Amp\Cache\Cache` implementation by creating a custom instance of `Rfc1035StubResolver` and setting that via `Amp\Dns\resolver()`, but it's usually unnecessary. If you have a lot of very short running scripts, you might want to consider using a local DNS resolver with a cache instead of setting a custom cache implementation, such as `dnsmasq`.
The `Rfc1035StubResolver` (which is the default resolver shipping with that package) will cache the configuration of `/etc/resolv.conf` / the Windows Registry and the read host files by default. If you wish to reload them, you can set a periodic timer that requests a background reload of the configuration.
> The above code relies on the resolver not being changed. `reloadConfig` is specific to `Rfc1035StubResolver` and is not part of the `Resolver` interface. You might want to guard the reloading with an `instanceof` check or manually set a `Rfc1035StubResolver` instance on startup to be sure it's an instance of `Rfc1035StubResolver`.