GetAddressByName Function

The GetAddressByName function queries a namespace, or a set of default namespaces, to retrieve network address information for a specified network service. This process is known as service name resolution. A network service can also use the function to obtain local address information that it can use with the bind function.

Hinweis  The GetAddressByName function is a Microsoft-specific extension to the Windows Sockets 1.1 specification. This function is obsolete. For the convenience of Windows Sockets 1.1 developers, the reference material is as follows. The functions detailed in Protocol-Independent Name Resolution provide equivalent functionality in Windows Sockets 2.

Syntax

INT GetAddressByName(
  __in      DWORD dwNameSpace,
  __in      LPGUID lpServiceType,
  __in_opt  LPTSTR lpServiceName,
  __in_opt  LPINT lpiProtocols,
  __in      DWORD dwResolution,
  __in_opt  LPSERVICE_ASYNC_INFO lpServiceAsyncInfo,
  __out     LPVOID lpCsaddrBuffer,
  __inout   LPDWORD lpdwBufferLength,
  __inout   LPTSTR lpAliasBuffer,
  __inout   LPDWORD lpdwAliasBufferLength
);

Parameter

  • dwNameSpace [in]
    The namespace, or set of default namespaces, that the operating system should query for network address information.

    Use one of the following constants to specify a namespace.

    Wert Bedeutung
    NS_DEFAULT

    A set of default namespaces. The function queries each namespace within this set. The set of default namespaces typically includes all the namespaces installed on the system. System administrators, however, can exclude particular namespaces from the set. This is the value that most applications should use for dwNameSpace.

    NS_DNS

    The Domain Name System (DNS) used in the Internet for host name resolution.

    NS_NETBT

    The NetBIOS over TCP/IP layer. All operating systems register their computer names with NetBIOS. This namespace is used to convert a computer name to an IP address that uses this registration. Note that NS_NETBT can access a WINS server to perform the resolution.

    NS_SAP

    The NetWare Service Advertising Protocol. This can access the NetWare bindery if appropriate. NS_SAP is a dynamic namespace that allows registration of services.

    NS_TCPIP_HOSTS

    Lookup value in the <systemroot>\system32\drivers\etc\hosts file.

    NS_TCPIP_LOCAL

    Local TCP/IP name resolution mechanisms, including comparisons against the local host name and looks up host names and IP addresses in cache of host to IP address mappings.

     

    Most calls to GetAddressByName should use the special value NS_DEFAULT. This lets a client get by with no knowledge of which namespaces are available on an internetwork. The system administrator determines namespace access. Namespaces can come and go without the client having to be aware of the changes.

  • lpServiceType [in]
    A pointer to a globally unique identifier (GUID) that specifies the type of the network service. The Svcguid.h header file includes definitions of several GUID service types, and macros for working with them.

    The Svcguid.h header file is not automatically included by the Winsock2.h header file.

  • lpServiceName [in, optional]
    A pointer to a zero-terminated string that uniquely represents the service name. For example, "MY SNA SERVER".

    Setting lpServiceName to NULL is the equivalent of setting dwResolution to RES_SERVICE. The function operates in its second mode, obtaining the local address to which a service of the specified type should bind. The function stores the local address within the LocalAddr member of the CSADDR_INFO structures stored into *lpCsaddrBuffer.

    If dwResolution is set to RES_SERVICE, the function ignores the lpServiceName parameter.

    If dwNameSpace is set to NS_DNS, *lpServiceName is the name of the host.

  • lpiProtocols [in, optional]
    A pointer to a zero-terminated array of protocol identifiers. The function restricts a name resolution attempt to namespace providers that offer these protocols. This lets the caller limit the scope of the search.

    If lpiProtocols is set to NULL, the function retrieves information on all available protocols.

  • dwResolution [in]
    A set of bit flags that specify aspects of the service name resolution process. The following bit flags are defined.

    Wert Bedeutung
    RES_SERVICE

    If set, the function retrieves the address to which a service of the specified type should bind. This is the equivalent to setting the lpServiceName parameter to NULL.

    If this flag is clear, normal name resolution occurs.

    RES_FIND_MULTIPLE

    If this flag is set, the operating system performs an extensive search of all namespaces for the service. It asks every appropriate namespace to resolve the service name. If this flag is clear, the operating system stops looking for service addresses as soon as one is found.

    RES_SOFT_SEARCH

    This flag is valid if the namespace supports multiple levels of searching.

    If this flag is valid and set, the operating system performs a simple and quick search of the namespace. This is useful if an application only needs to obtain easy-to-find addresses for the service.

    If this flag is valid and clear, the operating system performs a more extensive search of the namespace.

     

  • lpServiceAsyncInfo [in, optional]
    Reserved for future use; must be set to NULL.

  • lpCsaddrBuffer [out]
    A pointer to a buffer to receive one or more CSADDR_INFO data structures. The number of structures written to the buffer depends on the amount of information found in the resolution attempt. You should assume that multiple structures will be written, although in many cases there will only be one.

  • lpdwBufferLength [in, out]
    A pointer to a variable that, upon input, specifies the size, in bytes, of the buffer pointed to by lpCsaddrBuffer.

    Upon output, this variable contains the total number of bytes required to store the array of CSADDR_INFO structures. If this value is less than or equal to the input value of *lpdwBufferLength, and the function is successful, this is the number of bytes actually stored in the buffer. If this value is greater than the input value of *lpdwBufferLength, the buffer was too small, and the output value of *lpdwBufferLength is the minimal required buffer size.

  • lpAliasBuffer [in, out]
    A pointer to a buffer to receive alias information for the network service.

    If a namespace supports aliases, the function stores an array of zero-terminated name strings into the buffer pointed to by lpAliasBuffer. There is a double zero-terminator at the end of the list. The first name in the array is the service's primary name. Names that follow are aliases. An example of a namespace that supports aliases is DNS.

    If a namespace does not support aliases, it stores a double zero-terminator into the buffer.

    This parameter is optional, and can be set to NULL.

  • lpdwAliasBufferLength [in, out]
    A pointer to a variable that, upon input, specifies the size, in elements (characters), of the buffer pointed to by lpAliasBuffer.

    Upon output, this variable contains the total number of elements (characters) required to store the array of name strings. If this value is less than or equal to the input value of *lpdwAliasBufferLength, and the function is successful, this is the number of elements actually stored in the buffer. If this value is greater than the input value of *lpdwAliasBufferLength, the buffer was too small, and the output value of *lpdwAliasBufferLength is the minimal required buffer size.

    If lpAliasBuffer is NULL, lpdwAliasBufferLength is meaningless and can also be NULL.

Rückgabewert

If the function succeeds, the return value is the number of CSADDR_INFO data structures written to the buffer pointed to by lpCsaddrBuffer.

If the function fails, the return value is SOCKET_ERROR( – 1). To get extended error information, call GetLastError, which returns the following extended error value.

Error code Meaning
ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER

The buffer pointed to by lpCsaddrBuffer was too small to receive all of the relevant CSADDR_INFO structures. Call the function with a buffer at least as large as the value returned in *lpdwBufferLength.

 

Hinweise

This function is a more powerful version of the gethostbyname function. The GetAddressByName function works with multiple name services.

Hinweis  The gethostbyname function has been deprecated by the introduction of the getaddrinfo function. Developers creating Windows Sockets 2 applications are urged to use the getaddrinfo function instead of gethostbyname.

The GetAddressByName function lets a client obtain a Windows Sockets address for a network service. The client specifies the service of interest by its service type and service name.

Many name services support a default prefix or suffix that the name service provider considers when resolving service names. For example, in the DNS namespace, if a domain is named "nt.microsoft.com", and "ftp millikan" is provided as input, the DNS software fails to resolve "millikan", but successfully resolves "millikan.nt.microsoft.com".

Note that the GetAddressByName function can search for a service address in two ways: within a particular namespace, or within a set of default namespaces. Using a default namespace, an administrator can specify that certain namespaces will be searched for service addresses only if specified by name. An administrator or namespace–setup program can also control the ordering of namespace searches.

Anforderungen

Mindestens unterstützter Client

Windows 2000 Professional

Mindestens unterstützter Server

Windows 2000 Server

Header

Nspapi.h

Bibliothek

Mswsock.lib

DLL

Mswsock.dll

Unicode- und ANSI-Namen

GetAddressByNameW (Unicode) and GetAddressByNameA (ANSI)

Siehe auch

Winsock Reference

Winsock Functions

getaddrinfo

gethostbyname

CSADDR_INFO