nss-resolve, libnss_resolve.so.2 — Hostname resolution via systemd-resolved.service
libnss_resolve.so.2
nss-resolve is a plug-in module for the GNU Name Service Switch (NSS) functionality of the GNU C Library (glibc) enabling it to resolve hostnames via the systemd-resolved(8) local network name resolution service. It replaces the nss-dns plug-in module that traditionally resolves hostnames via DNS.
To activate the NSS module, add "resolve [!UNAVAIL=return]" to the line starting
    with "hosts:" in /etc/nsswitch.conf. Specifically, it is
    recommended to place "resolve" early in /etc/nsswitch.conf's
    "hosts:" line. It should be before the "files" entry, since
    systemd-resolved supports /etc/hosts internally, but with
    caching. To the contrary, it should be after "mymachines", to give hostnames given to
    local VMs and containers precedence over names received over DNS. Finally, we recommend placing
    "dns" somewhere after "resolve", to fall back to
    nss-dns if systemd-resolved.service is not available.
Note that systemd-resolved will synthesize DNS resource records in a few cases,
    for example for "localhost" and the current local hostname, see
    systemd-resolved(8) for
    the full list. This duplicates the functionality of
    nss-myhostname(8), but
    it is still recommended (see examples below) to keep nss-myhostname configured in
    /etc/nsswitch.conf, to keep those names resolveable if
    systemd-resolved is not running.
Please keep in mind that nss-myhostname (and nss-resolve) also resolve in the other direction — from locally attached IP adresses to hostnames. If you rely on that lookup being provided by DNS, you might want to order things differently.
Communication between nss-resolve and
    systemd-resolved.service takes place via the
    /run/systemd/resolve/io.systemd.Resolve AF_UNIX socket.
$SYSTEMD_NSS_RESOLVE_VALIDATE¶Takes a boolean argument. When false, cryptographic validation of resource records via DNSSEC will be disabled. This may be useful for testing, or when system time is known to be unreliable.
Here is an example /etc/nsswitch.conf file that enables nss-resolve
    correctly:
passwd:         compat systemd
group:          compat [SUCCESS=merge] systemd
shadow:         compat systemd
gshadow:        files systemd
hosts:          mymachines resolve [!UNAVAIL=return] files myhostname dns
networks:       files
protocols:      db files
services:       db files
ethers:         db files
rpc:            db files
netgroup:       nis