In this section we provide some suggested configurations along with guidelines for their use. We also address the topic of reasonable option setting.
The following sample configuration is appropriate for a caching-only name server for use by clients internal to a corporation. All queries from outside clients are refused.
// Two corporate subnets we wish to allow queries from.
acl "corpnets" { 192.168.4.0/24; 192.168.7.0/24; };
options {
directory "/etc/namedb"; // Working directory
pid-file "named.pid"; // Put pid file in working dir
allow-query { "corpnets "; };
};
// Root server hints
zone "." { type hint; file "root.hint"; };
// Provide a reverse mapping for the loopback address 127.0.0.1
zone "0.0.127.in-addr.arpa" {
type master;
file "localhost.rev";
notify no;
};
This sample configuration is for an authoritative-only server that is the master server for "example.com" and a slave for the subdomain "eng.example.com".
options {
directory "/etc/namedb"; // Working directory
pid-file "named.pid"; // Put pid file in working dir
allow-query { any; }; // This is the default
recursion no; // Do not provide recursive service
};
// Root server hints
zone "." { type hint; file "root.hint"; };
// Provide a reverse mapping for the loopback address 127.0.0.1
zone "0.0.127.in-addr.arpa" {
type master;
file "localhost.rev";
notify no;
};
// We are the master server for example.com
zone "example.com" {
type master;
file "example.com.db";
// IP addresses of slave servers allowed to transfer example.com
allow-transfer {
192.168.4.14;
192.168.5.53;
};
};
// We are a slave server for eng.example.com
zone "eng.example.com" {
type slave;
file "eng.example.com.bk";
// IP address of eng.example.com master server
masters { 192.168.4.12; };
};
Primitive load balancing can be achieved in DNS using multiple A records for one name.
For example, if you have three WWW servers with network addresses of 10.0.0.1, 10.0.0.2 and 10.0.0.3, a set of records such as the following means that clients will connect to each machine one third of the time:
When a resolver queries for these records, BIND will rotate them and respond to the query with the records in a different order. In the example above, clients will randomly receive records in the order 1, 2, 3; 2, 3, 1; and 3, 1, 2. Most clients will use the first record returned and discard the rest.
For more detail on ordering responses, check the
rrset-order
substatement in the
options
statement under RRset Ordering. This substatement is not supported in BIND 9, and only the ordering scheme described above is available.
DNS Notify is a mechanism that allows master nameservers to notify their slave servers of changes to a zone's data. In response to a NOTIFY
from a master server, the slave will check to see that its version of the zone is the current version and, if not, initiate a transfer.
DNS Notify is fully documented in RFC 1996. See also the description of the zone option
also-notify
under Zone Transfers. More information about notify
can be found under Boolean Options.
There are several indispensable diagnostic, administrative and monitoring tools available to the system administrator for controlling and debugging the nameserver daemon. We describe several in this section
The domain information groper (
dig
) is a command line tool that can be used to gather information from the Domain Name System servers. Dig has two modes: simple interactive mode for a single query, and batch mode which executes a query for each in a list of several query lines. All query options are accessible from the command line.
dig [@server] domain [<query-type>] [<query-class>]
[+<query-option>] [-<dig-option>] [%comment]
The usual simple use of dig will take the form
dig @server domain query-type query-class
For more information and a list of available commands and options, see the
dig
man page.
The
host
utility provides a simple DNS lookup using a command-line interface for looking up Internet hostnames. By default, the utility converts between host names and Internet addresses, but its functionality can be extended with the use of options.
host [-aCdlrTwv] [-c class] [-N ndots] [-t type]
[-W timeout] [-R retries] hostname [server]
For more information and a list of available commands and options, see the
host
man page.
nslookup
is a program used to query Internet domain nameservers.
nslookup
has two modes: interactive and non-interactive. Interactive mode allows the user to query nameservers for information about various hosts and domains or to print a list of hosts in a domain. Non-interactive mode is used to print just the name and requested information for a host or domain.
nslookup [-option ...] [host-to-find | -[server]]
Interactive mode is entered when no arguments are given (the default nameserver will be used) or when the first argument is a hyphen (`-') and the second argument is the host name or Internet address of a nameserver.
Non-interactive mode is used when the name or Internet address of the host to be looked up is given as the first argument. The optional second argument specifies the host name or address of a nameserver.
The options listed under the "set" command (see the
nslookup
man page for details) can be specified in the
.nslookuprc
file in the user's home directory if they are listed one per line. Options can also be specified on the command line if they precede the arguments and are prefixed with a hyphen. For example, to change the default query type to host information, and the initial time-out to 10 seconds, type:
nslookup -query=hinfo -timeout=10
For more information and a list of available commands and options, see the
nslookup
man page.
Due to its arcane user interface and frequently inconsistent behavior, we do not recommend the use of nslookup
. Use dig
instead.
Administrative tools play an integral part in the management of a server.
The remote name
daemon control (rndc
) program allows
the system administrator to control the operation of a nameserver. If
you run (rndc
) without any options
it will display a usage message as follows:
rndc [-c config] [-s server] [-p port] [-y key] command [command ...]
command
is one of the following for named:
*status |
Display ps(1) status of named. |
*dumpdb | Dump database and cache to /var/tmp/named_dump.db. |
reload | Reload configuration file and zones. |
*stats | Dump statistics to /var/tmp/named.stats. |
*trace | Increment debugging level by one. |
*notrace | Set debugging level to 0. |
*querylog | Toggle query logging. |
*stop | Stop the server. |
*restart | Restart the server. |
* == not yet implemented |
As noted above, "reload" is the only command available for BIND 9.0.0. The other commands, and more, are planned to be implemented for future releases.
A configuration file is required, since all communication with the server is authenticated with digital signatures that rely on a shared secret, and there is no way to provide that secret other than with a configuration file. The default location for the rndc configuration file is /etc/rndc.conf, but an alternate location can be specified with the "-c
" option.
The format of the configuration file is similar to that of named.conf, but limited to only three statements, the options{}
, key{}
and server{}
statements. These statements are what associate the secret keys to the servers with which they are meant to be shared. The order of statements is not significant.
The options{}
statement has two clauses: default-server
and default-key. default-server
takes a host name or address argument and represents the server that will be contacted if no "-s
" option is provided on the command line. default-key takes the name of the key as its argument, as defined by a key{}
statement. In the future a default-port clause will be added to specify the port to which rndc
should connect.
The key{}
statement names a key with its string argument. The string is required by the server to be a valid domain name, though it need not actually be hierarchical; thus, a string like "rndc_key" is a valid name. The key{}
statement has two clauses: algorithm
and secret
. While the configuration parser will accept any string as the argument to algorithm, currently only the string "hmac-md5" has any meaning. The secret is a base-64 encoded string, typically generated with either dnssec-keygen
or mmencode
.
The server{}
statement uses the key clause to associate a key{}
-defined key with a server. The argument to the server{}
statement is a host name or address (addresses must be double quoted). The argument to the key clause is the name of key as defined by the key{}
statement. A port clause will be added to a future release to specify the port to which rndc should connect on the given server.
A sample minimal configuration file is as follows:
key rndc_key { algorithm "hmac-md5"; secret "c3Ryb25nIGVub3VnaCBmb3IgYSBtYW4gYnV0IG1hZGUgZm9yIGEgd29tYW4K"; };
options { default-server localhost; default-key rndc_key; };
This file, if installed as /etc/rndc.conf, would allow the command:
$ rndc reload
to connect to 127.0.0.1 port 953 and cause the nameserver to reload, if a nameserver on the local machine were running with following controls statements:
controls {
inet 127.0.0.1 allow { localhost; } keys { rndc_key; };
};
and it had an identical key statement for rndc_key
.
Certain UNIX signals cause the name server to take specific actions, as described in the following table. These signals can be sent using the
kill
command.
Causes the server to read |
|
Return to BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual table of contents.