NAME
    Net::DNS::SPF::Expander

DESCRIPTION
    This module expands DNS SPF records, so you don't have to. The problem
    is that you only get 10 per SPF record, and recursions count against
    you. Your record won't validate.

    Let's say you start with this as an SPF record:

        @   TXT   "v=spf1 include:_spf.google.com include:sendgrid.net a:hq1.campusexplorer.com a:hq2.campusexplorer.com a:mail2.campusexplorer.com ~all"

    You go to http://www.kitterman.com/spf/validate.html and check this
    record. It passes validation. But later you come back and add
    salesforce, so that you now have:

        @   TXT   "v=spf1 include:_spf.google.com include:sendgrid.net include:salesforce.com a:hq1.campusexplorer.com a:hq2.campusexplorer.com a:mail2.campusexplorer.com ~all"

    And now your record fails validation.

        _spf.google.com takes 3 lookups.
            _spf1.google.com
            _spf2.google.com
            _spf3.google.com
        sendgrid.net takes 1 lookup.
            _sendgrid.biz
        hq1 takes 1 lookup.
        hq2 takes 1 lookup.
        mail2 takes 1 lookup.

    Salesforce adds:

        _spf.google.com (3 you already did)
            _spf1.google.com
            _spf2.google.com
            _spf3.google.com
        mx takes 4 lookups.
            salesforce.com.s8a1.psmtp.com.
            salesforce.com.s8a2.psmtp.com.
            salesforce.com.s8b1.psmtp.com.
            salesforce.com.s8b2.psmtp.com.

    So now instead of 7 you have 14. The common advice is to expand them,
    and that is a tedious process. It's especially tedious when, say,
    salesforce changes their mx record.

    So this module and the accompanying script attempt to automate this
    process for you.

SYNOPSIS
    Using the script:

        myhost:~/ $ dns-dpf-expander --input_file zone.db
        myhost:~/ $ ls
         zone.db   zone.db.new   zone.db.bak

    Using the module:

        {
            package MyDNSExpander;
        
            use Net::DNS::SPF::Expander;

            my $input_file = '/home/me/project/etc/zone.db';
            my $expander = Net::DNS::SPF::Expander->new(
                input_file => $input_file
            );

            my $string = $expander->write;

            1;
        }

CONFIGURABLE ATTRIBUTES
  input_file
    This is the path and name of the zonefile whose SPF records you want to
    expand. It must be a valid Net::DNS::Zonefile zonefile.

  output_file
    The path and name of the output file. By default, we tack ".new" onto
    the end of the original filename.

  backup_file
    The path and name of the backup file. By default, we tack ".bak" onto
    the end of the original filename.

  parsed_file
    The Net::DNS::Zonefile object created from the input_file.

  to_expand
    An arrayref of regexes that we will expand. By default we expand a, mx,
    include, and redirect records. Configurable.

  to_copy
    An arrayref of regexes that we will simply copy over. By default we will
    copy ip4, ip6, ptr, and exists records. Configurable.

  to_ignore
    An arrayref of regexes that we will ignore. By default we ignore ?all,
    exp, v=spf1, and ~all.

  maximum_record_length
    We leave out the protocol declaration and the trailing ~all while we are
    expanding records, so we need to subtract their length from our length
    calculation.

  ttl
    Default time to live is 10 minutes. Configurable.

  origin
    The origin of the zonefile. We take it from the zonefile, or you can set
    it if you like.

PRIVATE ATTRIBUTES
  _input_file
    The IO::All object created from the input_file.

  _resource_records
    An arrayref of all the Net::DNS::RR resource records found in the entire
    parsed_file.

  _spf_records
    An arrayref of the Net::DNS::RR::TXT or Net::DNS::RR::SPF records found
    in the entire parsed_file.

  _resolver
    What we use to do the DNS lookups and expand the records. A
    Net::DNS::Resolver object. You can still set environment variables if
    you want to change the nameserver it uses.

  _expansions
    This is a hashref representing the expanded SPF records. The keys are
    the names of the SPF records, and the values are hashrefs. Those are
    keyed on the include, and the values are arrayrefs of the expanded
    values. There is also a key called "elements" which gathers all the
    includes into one place, e.g.,

        "*.test_zone.com" => {
            "~all"   => undef,
            elements => [
                "ip4:216.239.32.0/19", "ip4:64.233.160.0/19",
                "ip4:66.249.80.0/20",  "ip4:72.14.192.0/18",
                ...
            ],
            "include:_spf.google.com" => [
                 "ip4:216.239.32.0/19",
                 "ip4:64.233.160.0/19",
                 ...
            ],
            "ip4:96.43.144.0/20" => [ "ip4:96.43.144.0/20" ],
            "v=spf1"             => undef
          }

  _lengths_of_expansions
    We need to know how long the expanded record would be, because SPF
    records should be less than 256 bytes. If the expanded record would be
    longer than that, we need to split it into pieces.

  _record_class
    What sort of records are SPF records? IN records.

BUILDERS
  _build_resolver
    Return a Net::DNS::Resolver.

  _build_origin
    Extract the origin from parsed_file.

  _build_expansions
  _build_backup_file
    Tack a ".bak" onto the end of the input_file.

  _build__input_file
    Turn the string input_file into a filehandle with IO::All.

  _build_output_file
    Tack a ".new" onto the end of the input_file.

  _build_parsed_file
    Turn the IO::All filehandle into a Net::DNS::Zonefile object, so that we
    can extract the SPF records.

  _build_resource_records
    Extract all the resource records from the Net::DNS::Zonefile.

  _build__spf_records
    Grep through the _resource_records to find the SPF records. They can be
    both "TXT" and "SPF" records, so we search for the protocol string,
    v=spf1.

  _build__lengths_of_expansions
    Calculate the length of each fully expanded SPF record, because they
    can't be longer than 256 bytes. We have to split them up into multiple
    records if they are.

PUBLIC METHODS
  write
    This is the only method you really need to call. This expands all your
    SPF records and writes out the new and the backup files.

    Returns a scalar string of the data written to the file.

  new_spf_records
    In case you want to see how your records were expanded, this returns the
    hashref used to create the new records.

PRIVATE METHODS
  _normalize_component
    Each component of an SPF record has a prefix, like include:, mx:, etc.
    Here we chop off the prefix before performing the lookup on the value.

  _perform_expansion
    Expand a single SPF record component. This returns either undef or the
    full SPF record string from Net::DNS::RR::TXT->txtdata.

  _expand_spf_component
    Recursively call _perform_expansion for each component of the SPF
    record. This returns an array consisting of the component, e.g.,
    include:salesforce.com, and an arrayref consisting of its full
    expansion, e.g.,

        [
            "ip4:216.239.32.0/19",
            "ip4:64.233.160.0/19",
            ...
            "ip6:2c0f:fb50:4000::/36"
        ]

  _expand
    Create the _expansions hashref from which we generate new SPF records.

  _extract_expansion_elements
    Filter ignored elements from component expansions.

  _new_records_from_arrayref
    The full expansion of a given SPF record is contained in an arrayref,
    and if the length of the resulting new SPF record would be less than the
    maximum_record_length, we can use this method to make new Net::DNS::RR
    objects that will later be stringified for the new SPF record.

  _new_records_from_partition
    The full expansion of a given SPF record is contained in an arrayref,
    and if the length of the resulting new SPF record would be greater than
    the maximum_record_length, we have to jump through some hoops to
    properly split it into new SPF records. Because there will be more than
    one, and each needs to be less than the maximum_record_length. We do our
    partitioning here, and then call _new_records_from_arrayref on each of
    the resulting partitions.

  _get_single_record_string
    Stringify the Net::DNS::RR::TXT records when they will fit into a single
    SPF record.

  _normalize_record_name
    Net::DNS uses fully qualified record names, so that new SPF records will
    be named *.domain.com, and domain.com, instead of * and @. I prefer the
    symbols. This code replaces the fully qualified record names with
    symbols.

  _get_multiple_record_strings
    Whereas a single new SPF record needs to be concatenated from the
    stringified Net::DNS::RR::TXTs, and have the trailing ~all added,
    multiple new SPF records do not need that. They need to be given special
    _spf names that will then be included in "master" SPF records, and they
    don't need the trailing ~all.

  _get_master_record_strings
    Create our "master" SPF records that include the split _spf records
    created in _get_multiple_record_strings, e.g.,

        *   600     IN      TXT     "v=spf1 _spf1.test_zone.com _spf2.test_zone.com ~all"

  _new_records_lines
    Assemble the new DNS zonefile from the lines of the original, comment
    out the old SPF records, add in the new lines, and append the end of the
    original.

AUTHOR
    Amiri Barksdale, <amiri@campusexplorer.com>

COPYRIGHT
    Copyright (c) 2013 the Net::DNS::SPF::Expander "AUTHOR" listed above.

LICENSE
    This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the same terms as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO
    Net::DNS

    Net::DNS::RR::TXT

    MooseX::Getopt