record is changed.
.P
Haeredes can alert administrators when NS/MX records are changed.
+.SH NORMALIZATION
+.P
+By default, domain/hostnames given will be normalized in two ways:
+.IP \[bu] 2
+All names will be lowercased.
+
+.IP \[bu]
+All names will have a trailing dot (the DNS root) appended if one is
+not present. This can be controlled with the
+\fB\-\-no\-append\-root\fR flag.
+.SH QUERY RESULTS
+.P
+When Haeredes makes a query for an MX record, the result is parsed
+from the \(dqanswer\(dq section of the response. This is
+straightforward.
+.P
+For NS records, however, there are two sections that may contain
+results. If you query the authoritative nameservers for example.com,
+they will return the response in the \(dqanswer\(dq section, as with
+MX records:
+
+.nf
+.I $ dig +short @a.iana-servers.net example.com NS
+b.iana-servers.net.
+a.iana-servers.net.
+.fi
+.P
+However, if you ask a root server, they will return the response in another section, called \(dqauthority\(dq. The \(dqanswer\(dq section is empty:
+
+.nf
+.I $ dig +short @a.gtld-servers.net example.com NS
+.fi
+.P
+We have to request the \(dqauthority\(dq section explicitly:
+
+.nf
+.I $ dig +noall +authority @a.gtld-servers.net example.com NS
+example.com. 172800 IN NS a.iana-servers.net.
+example.com. 172800 IN NS b.iana-servers.net.
+.fi
+.P
+Given Haeredes' use case, it is useful to combine the two. You can
+query a root server to check the registrar data, or a recursive
+resolver to check the data on the authoritative nameservers.
+.P
+So that's what we do. In NS mode, Haeredes will check both the
+\(dqanswer\(dq and \(dqauthority\(dq sections for results.
.SH OPTIONS
+.IP \fB\-\-no\-append\-root\fR,\ \fB-n\fR
+Don't append a trailing dot to any DNS names. If you know what you're
+doing, this can be used to check relative results. Otherwise, it will
+probably just lead to false positives.
.IP \fB\-\-server\fR,\ \fB-s\fR
Use the given DNS server rather than the resolvers listed in
-/etc/resolv.conf.
+/etc/resolv.conf. Either an IP address or a hostname will work.
.SH EXAMPLES
.IP \[bu] 2
.nf
.I $ haeredes a.iana-servers.net b.iana-servers.net <<< \(dqexample.com\(dq
.fi
+
+.IP \[bu] 2
+If you use \-\-no\-append\-root and your nameservers are rooted, you
+must remember to supply the trailing dot yourself. Otherwise, you'll
+get false positives.
+
+.nf
+.I $ haeredes \-\-no\-append\-root \\\\
+.I " a.iana-servers.net b.iana-servers.net" \\\\
+.I " <<< \(dqexample.com\(dq"
+Domain \(dqexample.com\(dq delegates somewhere else:
+\(dqb.iana-servers.net.\(dq \(dqa.iana-servers.net.\(dq
+.fi
.IP \[bu]
Check orlitzky.com against the expected name servers, using
-d.gtld-servers.net:
+a root nameserver (this checks the registrar configuration):
.nf
-.I $ haeredes --server 199.7.91.13 dns1.viabit.com dns2.viabit.com \\\\
+.I $ haeredes --server d.gtld-servers.net dns1.viabit.com dns2.viabit.com \\\\
.I " <<< \(dqorlitzky.com\(dq"
.fi
.IP \[bu]