Provided by: dnsdbq_2.6.4-2build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       dnsdbq — DNSDB query tool

SYNOPSIS

       dnsdbq  [-acdfgGhIjmqSsUv468]  [-A  timestamp]  [-B  timestamp]  [-b  bailiwick]  [-D asn_domain] [-i ip]
              [-J   input_file]   [-k   sort_keys]   [-L   output_limit]   [-l   query_limit]   [-M   max_count]
              [-N    hex[/rrtype[,...]]]    [-n    name[/rrtype[,...]]]    [-O    offset]    [-p    output_type]
              [-R  hex[/rrtype[,...][/bailiwick]]]  [-r  name[/rrtype[,...][/bailiwick]]]  [-T  transform[,...]]
              [-t rrtype[,...]] [-u server_sys] [-V verb] [-0 function=thing]

DESCRIPTION

       dnsdbq  constructs  and  issues  queries to Passive DNS systems which return data in the IETF Passive DNS
       Common Output Format.  It is commonly used as a production command line interface to such systems.

       dnsdbq displays responses in various formats.  Its default query type is a "lookup" query.  As an option,
       it can issue a "summarize" query type.  Different Passive DNS systems or versions of  those  systems  may
       implement different query features.

FARSIGHT SECURITY'S DNSDB

       Farsight  Security's  "DNSDB"  is  one  such  Passive  DNS  system which is accessed by specifying system
       "dnsdb".

       You'll need to get an API key from Farsight to use dnsdbq with DNSDB.

       Farsight's passive DNS infrastructure performs a complex process of "bailiwick reconstruction"  where  an
       RRset's position within the DNS hierarchy is approximated. This serves two purposes:

             1.   Provide context of the location of a given DNS record within the DNS hierarchy.

             2.   Prevent  "untrustworthy"  records  that  are  a  result  of intentional or unintentional cache
                  poisoning attempts from being replicated by downstream consumers.

       For example, given the fully qualified domain name www.dachshund.example.com, valid bailiwicks  would  be
       dachshund.example.com, example.com, or com.

OPTIONS

       -a   enables  ASINFO/CIDR  annotation  for  IP  addresses  in A (IPv4 address) RRsets.  The metadata thus
            appended depends on which data source is given by -D.

       -A timestamp
            Specify a forward time fence. Only results seen by the passive DNS on or after  this  time  will  be
            selected. See also -c.  See the TIMESTAMP FORMATS section for more information about this.

       -B timestamp
            Specify a backward time fence. Only results seen by the passive DNS sensor network on or before this
            time  will  be  selected. See also -c.  See the TIMESTAMP FORMATS section for more information about
            this.

       -b bailiwick
            specify bailiwick (only valid with -r queries).

       -c   by default, -A and -B (separately or together) will select partial overlaps of database  tuples  and
            time  search  criteria.  To match only completely bracketed tuples, add the -c ("completeness") flag
            (this is also known as "strict" mode). Can only be specified once,  and  for  reasons  of  geometry,
            affects both -A and -B if both are specified.

       -D   specify   the   data   source   for   ASINFO/CIDR   annotations,  if  enabled  by  -a.   Default  is
            asn.routeviews.org, but you may wish to try aspath.routeviews.org.

       -d   enable debug mode.  Repeat for more debug output.

       -f   specify batch lookup mode allowing one or more queries to be performed.  Queries will be  read  from
            standard input and are expected to be in one of the following formats:

                  -   RRset (name) query: rrset/name/NAME[/RRTYPE[,...][/BAILIWICK]]

                  -   RRset (raw) query: rrset/raw/HEX[/RRTYPE[,...][/BAILIWICK]]

                  -   Rdata (name) query: rdata/name/NAME[/RRTYPE][,...]

                  -   Rdata (IP address) query: rdata/ip/ADDR[,PFXLEN]

                  -   Rdata (raw) query: rdata/raw/HEX[/RRTYPE][,...]

                  -   Change query options: $OPTIONS {options}

            Where options :==

                [-A timestamp] [-B timestamp] [-c] [-g] [-G]
                [-l query_limit] [-L output_limit] [-O offset]

            $OPTIONS  alone  on  a  line allows command line options to be changed mid-batch.  If no options are
            given, the query parameters will be reset to those given on the command line, if  any,  or  else  to
            defaults.

            A line starting with a # will be ignored as a comment.

            Any internal slash (/) or comma (,) characters within the search names of a batch entry must be URL-
            encoded  (for  example, %2F or %2C). So, to search for the domain "212.0/24.150.104.24.in-addr.arpa"
            the search string would be specified as "212.0%2F150.104.24.in-addr.arpa".

            For raw queries, the hex value is an even number  of  hexadecimal  digits  specifying  a  raw  octet
            string.   The  "raw"  wire-format  encodings are standardized. The embedding of these in dnstable is
            documented  in  the  dnstable-encoding(5)  manual  page.  This  topic  is  explained  in  detail  at
            <https://www.farsightsecurity.com/blog/txt-record/dnsdb-rawhex-20161125>.

            In batch lookup mode, each answer will be followed by a '--' marker, so that programmatic users will
            know  when  it is safe to send the next lookup, or if lookups are pipelined, to know when one answer
            has ended and another begun.  This option cannot be mixed with -n, -r, -R, or -i.  See the  EXAMPLES
            section for more information on how to use -f.

            If  two  -f  options  are  given, then each answer will also be preceded by a '++' marker giving the
            query string (as read from the batch input) in order to identify each answer when a very large batch
            input is given, and the '--' marker will include an error/noerror  indicator  and  a  short  message
            describing  the  outcome.   With two -f options and also -m, answers can appear in a different order
            than the batched questions, and the

       -g   return graveled results if available. The default is to return aggregated results ("rocks").  Gravel
            is  a  feature  for  providing Volume Across Time. Note that not all Passive DNS system APIs support
            this feature, and not all time ranges contain granular results ("gravel").

       -G   undo the effect of -g, this returning rocks rather than gravel. (Used in $OPTIONS in batch files.)

       -h   emit usage and quit.

       -I   request information from the API server concerning the API key itself, which may include rate limit,
            query quota, query allowance, or privilege levels; the output format and content is dependent on the
            server_sys argument (see -u ) and upon the -p argument.  -I -p json prints the raw info.  -I -p text
            prints the information in a more understandable textual form, including converting any epoch integer
            times into UTC formatted times.

       -i ip
            specify rdata ip ("right-hand side") query.  The value is one of an IPv4 address, an  IPv6  address,
            an IPv4 network with prefix length, an IPv4 address range, or an IPv6 network with prefix length. If
            a  network  lookup  is being performed, the delimiter between network address and prefix length is a
            single comma (",") character rather than the usual slash ("/") character to avoid clashing with  the
            HTTP  URI  path  name  separator.   See  EXAMPLES  section  for  more  information  about  separator
            substitution rules.

       -J input_file
            opens input_file and reads newline-separated JSON objects therefrom,  in  preference  to  -f  (batch
            mode)  or query mode. This can be used to reprocess the output from a prior invocation which used -j
            (or -p json).  Sorting, limits, and time fences will work. Specification of a domain  name,  RRtype,
            Rdata,  or  offset  is not supported at this time.  If input_file is "-" then standard input (stdin)
            will be read.

       -j   synonym for -p json.

       -k sort_keys
            when sorting with -s or -S, selects one or more comma separated sort keys,  among  "first",  "last",
            "duration",    "count",    "name",    "type",    and/or   "data".    The   default   order   is   be
            "first,last,duration,count,name,type,data" (if sorting is requested.)  Names  are  sorted  right  to
            left  (by  TLD  then  2LD  etc).  Data is sorted either by name if present, or else by numeric value
            (e.g., for A and AAAA RRsets.)  Several -k options can be given after different -s and  -S  options,
            to sort in ascending order for some keys, descending for others.

       -l query_limit
            query  for that limit's number of responses. If specified as 0 then the DNSDB API server will return
            the maximum limit of results allowed.  If -l, is not specified, then the query will  not  specify  a
            limit, and the DNSDB API server may use its default limit.

       -L output_limit
            clamps  the  number  of  objects  per  response  (under  -[R|r|N|n|i|f]) or for all responses (under
            -[fm|ff|ffm]) output to output_limit.  If unset, and if batch and merge modes have not been selected
            with the -f and -m options, then the -L output limit defaults to the -l limit's value. Otherwise the
            default is no output limit.

       -M max_count
            for the summarize verb, stops summarizing when the count reaches that max_count,  which  must  be  a
            positive  integer.   The  resulting  total  count may exceed max_count as it will include the entire
            count from the last RRset examined.  The default is to not constrain the maximum count.  The  number
            of RRsets summarized is also limited by the query_limit.

       -m   used  only  with  -f,  this causes multiple (up to ten) API queries to execute in parallel.  In this
            mode there will be no "--" marker, and the combined output of all queries is what will be subject to
            sorting, if any. If two -f flags are specified with -m, the output will not be merged, can appear in
            any order, will be sorted separately for each response, and will have normal '--' and '++'  markers.
            (See -f option above.)

       -N hex[/rrtype[,...]]
            specify raw rdata data ("right-hand side") query. Hex is as described above for -f.

       -n name
            specify  rdata  name  ("right-hand  side")  query.   The  value is a DNS domain name in presentation
            format, or a left-hand ("*.example.com") or right-hand ("www.example.*") wildcard domain name.  Note
            that left-hand wildcard queries are somewhat more expensive than right-hand wildcard queries.

       -O offset
            to  offset  by  #offset  the  results  returned  by  the  query.  This gives you incremental results
            transfers.  Cannot be negative. The default is 0 which means no offset.

       -p output_type
            select output type. Specify:

            text     for presentation output meant to be human-readable. This is the default.  dns is a synonym,
                     for compatibility with older programmatic callers.

            json     for newline delimited JSON output. See also <https://jsonlines.org/>.

            csv      for comma separated value output. This  format  is  information  losing,  since  it  cannot
                     express  multiple  resource  records  that  are  in a single RRset.  Instead, each resource
                     record is expressed in a separate line of output.  See the  DNSDBQ_TIME_FORMAT  environment
                     variable for controlling how timestamps are formatted for this option.

            minimal  outputs  only  the  owner  name  or  rdata, one per line and deduplicated; for use by shell
                     scripts.

       -q   makes the program reticent about warnings.

       -R hex[/rrtype[,...][/bailiwick]]
            specify raw rrset owner data ("left-hand side") query. Hex is as described above for -f.

       -r name[/type[,...][/bailiwick]]
            specify RRset ("left-hand side") name query. See discussion in -n above as  to  the  format  of  and
            limitations on query names.

       -s   sort  output  in  ascending key order. Limits (if any) specified by -l and -L will be applied before
            and after sorting, respectively. In batch mode, the -f, -ff, and -ffm option sets  will  cause  each
            batch  entry's  result  to  be  sorted independently, whereas with -fm, all outputs will be combined
            before sorting. This means with -fm there will be no output until after the  last  batch  entry  has
            been processed, due to store and forward by the sort process.

       -S   sort output in descending key order. See discussion for -s above.

       -T transform[,...]
            specify one or more transforms to be applied to the output:

            datefix  always  show  dates  in the format selected by the DNSDBQ_TIME_FORMAT environment variable,
                     not in database format.

            reverse  show the  DNS  owner  name  (rrname)  in  TLD-first  order  (so,  COM.EXAMPLE  rather  than
                     EXAMPLE.COM).

            chomp    strip away the trailing dot (.) from the DNS owner name (rrname).

       -t rrtype[,...]
            specify  the  resource  record  type(s)  desired.   Default  is ANY.  If present, this option should
            precede any -R, -r, -N, or -n options.  This option is not allowed if  the  -i  option  is  present.
            Valid values include those defined in DNS RFCs, including ANY.  A special-case supported in DNSDB is
            ANY-DNSSEC,  which  matches  on  DS, RRSIG, NSEC, DNSKEY, NSEC3, NSEC3PARAM, and DLV resource record
            types.

            If multiple rrtype values are specified, each will  be  sent  separately  to  the  database  server,
            consuming quota if there is a quota. Such queries will be sent simultaneously in parallel, which may
            have a load impact on the server.

       -u server_sys
            specifies  the  Passive DNS system and thus its syntax for RESTful URLs.  Can be "dnsdb" or "circl".
            The default is "dnsdb". See also environment variable DNSDBQ_SYSTEM.

       -V verb
            The verb to perform, i.e. the type of query, either "lookup" or "summarize".   The  default  is  the
            "lookup"  verb.   As an option, you can specify the "summarize" verb, which gives you an estimate of
            result size.  At a glance, it provides information on when a given domain name, IP address or  other
            DNS  asset  was  first-seen  and last-seen by the global sensor network, as well as the total sensor
            network observation count. This verb respects the database limit (see  -l)  in  that  the  resulting
            summary will only be of rows that would have been returned by the "lookup" verb. See also -M.

       -0 function=thing
            This is a developer tool meant to feed automated testing systems.

       -U   turns off TLS certificate verification (unsafe).

       -v   report the version of dnsdbq and exit.

       -4   use to force connecting to the DNSDB server via IPv4.

       -6   use to force connecting to the DNSDB server via IPv6.

       -8   Normally  dnsdbq requires that -n or -r arguments are 7-bit ASCII clean.  Non-ASCII values should be
            queried using PUNYCODE IDN encoding. This -8 option allows using arbitrary 8 bit values.

TIMESTAMP FORMATS

       Timestamps may be one of following forms.

             -   positive unsigned integer : in Unix epoch format.

             -   negative unsigned integer : negative offset in seconds from now.

             -   YYYY-MM-DD [HH:MM:SS] : in absolute form, in UTC time, as DNSDB  does  its  fencing  using  UTC
                 time.

             -   %uw%ud%uh%um%us  : the relative form with explicit labels (w=weeks, d=days, h=hours, m=minutes,
                 s=seconds).  Calculates offset from UTC time, as DNSDB does its fencing using UTC time.

       When using batch mode with the second or forth cases, using relative times to now, the value for "now" is
       set when dnsdbq starts.

       A few examples of how to use timefencing options.

           # tuples ending after Aug 22, 2015 (midnight)
           $ dnsdbq ... -A 2015-08-22
           # tuples starting before Jan 22, 2013 (midnight)
           $ dnsdbq ... -B 2013-01-22
           # tuples starting or ending from 2015 (midnight to midnight)
           $ dnsdbq ... -B 2016-01-01 -A 2015-01-01
           # tuples ending after 2015-08-22 14:36:10
           $ dnsdbq ... -A "2015-08-22 14:36:10"
           # tuples ending within the last 60 minutes
           $ dnsdbq ... -A "-3600"
           # tuples ending after "just now"
           $ date +%s
           1485284066
           $ dnsdbq ... -A 1485284066
           # batch mode with only tuples ending within last 60 minutes,
           # even if feeding inputs to dnsdbq in batch mode takes hours.
           $ dnsdbq -f ... -A "-3600"

EXAMPLES

       A few examples of how to specify IP address information.

           # specify a single IPv4 address
           $ dnsdbq ... -i 128.223.32.35
           # specify an IPv4 CIDR
           $ dnsdbq ... -i 128.223.32.0/24
           # specify a range of IPv4 addresses
           $ dnsdbq ... -i 128.223.32.0-128.223.32.32

       Perform an RRset query for a single A record for farsightsecurity.com.  The output is serialized as  JSON
       and  is piped to the jq program (a command-line JSON processor, see <https://stedolan.github.io/jq/>) for
       pretty printing.

           $ dnsdbq -r farsightsecurity.com/A -l 1 -j -a | jq .
           {
             "count": 6350,
             "time_first": 1380123423,
             "time_last": 1427869045,
             "rrname": "farsightsecurity.com.",
             "rrtype": "A",
             "bailiwick": "farsightsecurity.com.",
             "rdata": [
               "66.160.140.81"
             ],
             "dnsdbq-rdata": [
               {
                 "asinfo": [ 6939 ],
                 "cidr": "66.160.128.0/18",
                 "rdata": "66.160.140.81"
               }
             ]
           }

       Note the "dnsdbq-rdata" element added due to the use of the -a option.

       Perform a batched operation for a several different rrset and rdata queries. Output is  again  serialized
       as JSON and redirected to a file.

           $ cat batch.txt
           rrset/name/wikipedia.org
           rrset/name/dmoz.org
           rrset/raw/0366736902696f00/A
           rdata/name/pbs.org
           rdata/name/opb.org
           rdata/ip/198.35.26.96
           rdata/ip/23.21.237.0,24
           rdata/raw/0b763d73706631202d616c6c
           $ dnsdbq -j -f < batch.txt > batch-output.json
           $ head -1 batch-output.json | jq .
           {
             "count": 2411,
             "zone_time_first": 1275401003,
             "zone_time_last": 1484841664,
             "rrname": "wikipedia.org.",
             "rrtype": "NS",
             "bailiwick": "org.",
             "rdata": [
               "ns0.wikimedia.org.",
               "ns1.wikimedia.org.",
               "ns2.wikimedia.org."
             ]
           }

ASINFO/CIDR LOOKUPS

       When  the  -a  option  is used, every address seen in a response will cause a DNS lookup under the domain
       specified by the -D option. This stream of DNS queries might be an intolerable information leak depending
       on the nature of the underlying research, and it could also lead to unusably bad performance depending on
       the placement of your configured recursive DNS service.

       For best results, always use an on-server or on-LAN  recursive  DNS  service,  and  consider  whether  to
       configure  that  recursive  DNS service to be a "stealth secondary" of the zone denoted by the -D option.
       For    the    default    -D    value,     more     information     can     be     found     online     at
       http://archive.routeviews.org/dnszones/.

       Use of DNS lookups to retrieve ASINFO/CIDR metadata can be extremely fast and surveillance-free, but some
       attention  must  be  paid  in  order  to obtain that outcome. For occasional low-volume use, your current
       recursive DNS placement and configuration is probably good enough.

       Note that while Passive DNS information is historical, the ASINFO/CIDR annotations  made  possible  using
       the  -a  and  -D  options  are based on current information. Internet routing system information may have
       changed since  the  DNS  data  was  recorded.  More  information  about  this  can  be  found  online  at
       https://github.com/dnsdb/dnsdbq/blob/master/README.

FILES

       ~/.isc-dnsdb-query.conf,   ~/.dnsdb-query.conf,   /etc/isc-dnsdb-query.conf,   or  /etc/dnsdb-query.conf:
       configuration file which can specify the API key and other variables. The first of these files  which  is
       readable  will be used, alone, in its entirety. See the DNSDBQ_CONFIG_FILE environment variable which can
       specify a different configuration file to use.

       The variables which can be set in the configuration file are as follows:

       DNSDBQ_SYSTEM          contains the default value for the -u option described  above.  The  last  setting
                              found for any given variable will prevail.

       DNSDB_API_KEY, APIKEY  contains the user's DNSDB apikey (no default).

       DNSDB_SERVER           contains  the URL of the DNSDB API server (default is https://api.dnsdb.info), and
                              optionally the URI prefix for the database.  The default  URI  prefix  for  system
                              "dnsdb2" is "/dnsdb/v2/lookup"; the default for "dnsdb1" is "/lookup".

       CIRCL_AUTH, CIRCL_SERVER
                              enable access to a passive DNS system compatible with the CIRCL.LU system.

ENVIRONMENT

       DNSDBQ_CONFIG_FILE  specifies the configuration file to use, overriding the internal search list.

       DNSDB_API_KEY       contains  the  user's apikey. The older APIKEY environment variable has been retired,
                           though it can still be  used  in  the  configuration  file.   Note  that  environment
                           variables  are  unprotected,  and putting one's API key in an unprotected place could
                           cause inadvertant sharing.

       DNSDB_SERVER        contains the URL of the DNSDB API server, and optionally a  URI  prefix  to  be  used
                           (default is "/lookup"). If not set, the configuration file is consulted.

       DNSDBQ_TIME_FORMAT  controls  how  human  readable date times are presented in the output.  If "iso" (the
                           default) then ISO8601 (RFC3339) format is used, for example;  "2018-09-06T22:48:00Z".
                           If  "csv"  then  an  Excel  CSV  compatible  format is used; for example, "2018-09-06
                           22:48:00".

       HTTPS_PROXY         contains  the   URL   of   the   HTTPS   proxy   that   you   wish   to   use.    See
                           https://curl.se/libcurl/c/CURLOPT_PROXY.html for information on its values.

EXIT STATUS

       Success  (exit  status zero) occurs if a connection could be established to the back end database server,
       even if no records matched the search criteria. Failure (exit status nonzero)  occurs  if  no  connection
       could  be  established,  perhaps  due  to  a network or service failure, or a configuration error such as
       specifying the wrong server hostname.

SEE ALSO

       dig(1), jq(1), libcurl(3), dnstable-encoding(5)

                                                   2018-01-30                                          dnsdbq(1)