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Can I use Bonjour from command line?

Is it possible to use Bonjour from command line? For example if I want to register a service I type something like that: bonjour -register service_name port. And then Bonjour allocate a free IP for my service. Or, for example, if I want to see a list of available services I type something like: bonjour -showServices. And then I get list of all available services with their names, IP addresses and ports. Does something like that exist?

I am kind of confused by the available documentation. For example here, in the beginning of the document I see:

To register your service, call DNSServiceRegister.

Where should I call it? In the command line? In Java? In C++? In python? It is kind of strange that this kind of context is not provided.

In general, I find just a general information about zeroconf and Bonjour (what it is supposed to do). But I cannot find something concrete and simple. Like "Hello World" examples of usage of Bonjour.

Can anybody help me with that?

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Roman Avatar asked Mar 04 '10 13:03

Roman


2 Answers

dns-sd is the command line program that works on both windows and Mac OS X.

I often use it to tunnel iTunes shares over the internet with ssh. My typical use is dns-sd -P my_music _daap._tcp. local 3690 localhost 127.0.0.1. This assumes that I've set up an ssh tunnel listen on localhost port 3690 to port 3689 of the host sharing iTunes on the foreign network. This makes a little iTunes share icon appear in iTunes named "my_music".

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jdizzle Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 04:09

jdizzle


mDNS is an older version of the dns-sd tool. They are both command line tools, written by Apple, to interact with Bonjour.

You can use the command line tool to do a few things with Bonjour, but to quote from the dns-sd man page:

The dns-sd command is primarily intended for interactive use. Because its command-line arguments and output format are subject to change, invoking it from a shell script will generally be fragile.

If you wish to perform DNS Service Discovery operations from a scripting language, then the best way to do this is not to execute the dns-sd command and then attempt to decipher the textual output, but instead to directly call the DNS-SD APIs using a binding for your chosen language.

For example, if you are programming in Ruby, then you can directly call DNS-SD APIs using the dnssd package documented at http://rubyforge.org/projects/dnssd/. Similar bindings for other languages are also in development.

For example, you asked about "DNSServiceRegister", which is a C function:
http://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Networking/Reference/DNSServiceDiscovery_CRef/dns_sd_h/index.html#//apple_ref/c/func/DNSServiceRegister

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Peter Bierman Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 04:09

Peter Bierman