gethostbynamel

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

gethostbynamel Get a list of IPv4 addresses corresponding to a given Internet host name

Description

gethostbynamel(string $hostname): array|false

Returns a list of IPv4 addresses to which the Internet host specified by hostname resolves.

Parameters

hostname

The host name.

Return Values

Returns an array of IPv4 addresses or false if hostname could not be resolved.

Examples

Example #1 gethostbynamel() example

<?php
$hosts
= gethostbynamel('www.example.com');
print_r($hosts);
?>

The above example will output:

Array
(
    [0] => 192.0.34.166
)

See Also

  • gethostbyname() - Get the IPv4 address corresponding to a given Internet host name
  • gethostbyaddr() - Get the Internet host name corresponding to a given IP address
  • checkdnsrr() - Check DNS records corresponding to a given Internet host name or IP address
  • getmxrr() - Get MX records corresponding to a given Internet host name
  • the named(8) manual page

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User Contributed Notes 5 notes

up
4
ab at null dot ixo dot ca
8 years ago
If using gethostbyname against the name of the localhost is always giving you 127.0.0.1 but you want the DNS address instead, just put a dot at the end of the name.  E.g.,

$foo = gethostbynamel("myhost.example.com");
print_r($foo);

...is giving you this:
Array
(
    [0] => 127.0.0.1
)

Then put a dot at the end of the name:

$foo = gethostbynamel("myhost.example.com.");
print_r($foo);

...and now you get something like:
Array
(
    [0] => 172.217.1.99
)
up
-1
webdev at concraption dot com
19 years ago
In PHP 5.0.4, gethostbynamel returns an empty string instead of false if the lookup fails. A simple workaround for this error is to use is_array() in an IF block:

<?
$hosts
= gethostbynamel($hostname);
if (
is_array($hosts)) {
     echo
"Host ".$hostname." resolves to:<br><br>";
     foreach (
$hosts as $ip) {
          echo
"IP: ".$ip."<br>";
     }
} else {
     echo
"Host ".$hostname." is not tied to any IP.";
}
?>
up
-1
Anonymous
6 years ago
不要使用http协议,gethostbynamel函数中
up
-1
Skyld at o2 dot co dot uk
20 years ago
Obviously, in some cases, not all IPs are likely to be useful while checking a hostname. Sometimes also, not all IPs will work. This code will check for the first WORKING IP from the list. Or at least it should - I haven't had time to test it yet.
Needs domain parameter, and port and max IPs to check are optional.
If port is not set, it will check HTTP port 80, and if max IPs to check is not set, it will only check the first 10 IPs from the list.
Hope it helps someone.

<?php
 
function checkhostlist($domain, $port = 80, $maxipstocheck = 10) {
 
$hosts = gethostbynamel($domain);
    for (
$chk=0;$chk<$maxipstocheck;$chk++) {
      if (isset(
$hosts[$chk])) {
       
$th = fsockopen($domain, $port);
        if (
$th) {
         
fclose($th);
          return
$hosts[$chk];
          break;
        }
      }
    }
  }
?>
up
-3
info at methfessel-computers.de
18 years ago
The solution is simpel. Just add a . (point) to the end of the URL for correct name resolving.

Without this point PHP thinks it's a subdomain of your local domain and so returns the "local-IP".
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