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    Home - man page - WHOIS

    WHOIS

    WillieBy WillieJanuary 30, 2026Updated:January 30, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read

    NAME

    whois – client for the whois directory service  

    SYNOPSIS

    whois [~{~-h | –host~}~HOST~] [~{~-p | –port~}~PORT~] [~-abBcdGHKlLmMrRx~] [~-g~SOURCE:FIRST-LAST~] [~-i~ATTR[,ATTR]…~] [~-s~SOURCE[,SOURCE]…~] [~-T~TYPE[,TYPE]…~] [~–verbose~] OBJECT

    whois -q KEYWORD

    whois -t TYPE

    whois -v TYPE

    whois –help

    whois –version

     

    DESCRIPTION

    whois searches for an object in a RFC 3912 database.

    This version of the whois client tries to guess the right server to ask for the specified object. If no guess can be made it will connect to whois.networksolutions.com for NIC handles or whois.arin.net for IPv4 addresses and network names.

     

    OPTIONS

    -h HOST, –host HOST
    Connect to HOST.
    -H
    Do not display the legal disclaimers some registries like to show you.
    -p, –port PORT
    Connect to PORT.
    –verbose
    Be verbose.
    –help
    Display online help.
    –version
    Display client version information.

    Other options are flags understood by whois.ripe.net and some other RIPE-like servers:

    -a
    Also search all the mirrored databases.
    -b
    Return brief IP address ranges with abuse contact.
    -B
    Disable object filtering. (Show the e-mail addresses.)
    -c
    Return the smallest IP address range with a reference to an irt object.
    -d
    Return the reverse DNS delegation object too.
    -g SOURCE:FIRST-LAST
    Search updates from SOURCE database between FIRST and LAST update serial number. It’s useful to obtain Near Real Time Mirroring stream.
    -G
    Disable grouping of associated objects.
    -i ATTR[,ATTR]…
    Search objects having associated attributes. ATTR is attribute name. Attribute value is positional OBJECT argument.
    -K
    Return primary key attributes only. Exception is members attribute of set object which is always returned. Another exceptions are all attributes of objects organisation, person, and role that are never returned.
    -l
    Return the one level less specific object.
    -L
    Return all levels of less specific objects.
    -m
    Return all one level more specific objects.
    -M
    Return all levels of more specific objects.
    -q KEYWORD
    Return list of keywords supported by server. KEYWORD can be version for server version, sources for list of source databases, or types for object types.
    -r
    Disable recursive look-up for contact information.
    -R
    Disable following referrals and force showing the object from the local copy in the server.
    -s SOURCE[,SOURCE]…
    Request the server to search for objects mirrored from SOURCES. Sources are delimited by comma and the order is significant. Use -q sources option to obtain list of valid sources.
    -t TYPE
    Return the template for a object of TYPE.
    -T TYPE[,TYPE]…
    Restrict the search to objects of TYPE. Multiple types are separated by a comma.
    -v TYPE
    Return the verbose template for a object of TYPE.
    -x
    Search for only exact match on network address prefix.
     

    NOTES

    Please remember that whois.networksolutions.com by default will only search in the domains database. If you want to search for NIC handles you have to prepend a ! character. When you do this, the default server becomes whois.networksolutions.com.

    When querying whois.arin.net for IPv4 or IPv6 networks, the CIDR netmask length will be automatically removed from the query string.

    When querying whois.nic.ad.jp for AS numbers, the program will automatically convert the request in the appropriate format, inserting a space after the string AS.

    When querying whois.denic.de for domain names and no other flags have been specified, the program will automatically add the flag -T dn.

    When querying whois.dk-hostmaster.dk for domain names and no other flags have been specified, the program will automatically add the flag –show-handles.

    RIPE-specific command line options are ignored when querying non-RIPE servers. This may or may not be the behaviour intended by the user. When querying a non-standard server, command line options which are not to be interpreted by the client should always follow the — separator (which marks the beginning of the query string).

    If the /etc/whois.conf configuration file exists, it will be consulted to find a server before applying the normal rules. Each line of the file should contain a regular expression to be matched against the query text and the whois server to use, separated by white space. IDN domains must use the ACE format.

    The whois protocol does not specify an encoding for characters which cannot be represented by ASCII and implementations vary wildly. If the program knows that a specific server uses a certain encoding, if needed it will transcode the server output to the encoding specified by the current system locale.

    Command line arguments will always be interpreted accordingly to the current system locale and converted to the IDN ASCII Compatible Encoding.  

    FILES

    /etc/whois.conf  

    ENVIRONMENT

    LANG
    When querying whois.nic.ad.jp and whois.jprs.jp English text is requested unless the LANG or LC_MESSAGES environment variables specify a Japanese locale.
    WHOIS_OPTIONS
    A list of options which will be evaluated before the ones specified on the command line.
    WHOIS_SERVER
    This server will be queried if the program cannot guess where some kind of objects are located. If the variable does not exist then whois.arin.net will be queried.
     

    BUGS

    The program may have buffer overflows in the command line parser: be sure to not pass untrusted data to it. It should be rewritten to use a dynamics strings library.  

    HISTORY

    This program closely tracks the user interface of the whois client developed at RIPE by Ambrose Magee and others on the base of the original BSD client. I also added support for the protocol extensions developed by David Kessens of QWest for the 6bone server.  

    AUTHOR

    Whois and this man page were written by Marco d’Itri <[email protected]]> and are licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2 or higher.

    Willie
    • Website

    Willie has over 15 years of experience in Linux system administration and DevOps. After managing infrastructure for startups and enterprises alike, he founded Command Linux to share the practical knowledge he wished he had when starting out. He oversees content strategy and contributes guides on server management, automation, and security.

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