BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual
BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual
BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual
Manual
I
S
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Copyright
c 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. (”ISC”)
Copyright
c 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 Internet Software Consortium.
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is
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2
Contents
1 Introduction 7
1.1 Scope of Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
1.2 Organization of This Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
1.3 Conventions Used in This Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
1.4 The Domain Name System (DNS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
1.4.1 DNS Fundamentals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
1.4.2 Domains and Domain Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
1.4.3 Zones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
1.4.4 Authoritative Name Servers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
1.4.4.1 The Primary Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
1.4.4.2 Slave Servers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
1.4.4.3 Stealth Servers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
1.4.5 Caching Name Servers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
1.4.5.1 Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
1.4.6 Name Servers in Multiple Roles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3
CONTENTS
4
CONTENTS
8 Troubleshooting 87
8.1 Common Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
8.1.1 It’s not working; how can I figure out what’s wrong? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
8.2 Incrementing and Changing the Serial Number . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
8.3 Where Can I Get Help? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
A Appendices 89
A.1 Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
A.1.1 A Brief History of the DNS and BIND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
A.2 General DNS Reference Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
A.2.1 IPv6 addresses (AAAA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
A.3 Bibliography (and Suggested Reading) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
A.3.1 Request for Comments (RFCs) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
A.3.2 Internet Drafts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
A.3.3 Other Documents About BIND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
B Manual pages 95
B.1 dig . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
B.2 host . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
B.3 dnssec-keygen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
B.4 dnssec-signzone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
B.5 named-checkconf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
B.6 named-checkzone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
B.7 named . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
B.8 rndc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
B.9 rndc.conf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
B.10 rndc-confgen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
5
Chapter 1
Introduction
The Internet Domain Name System (DNS) consists of the syntax to specify the names of entities in the
Internet in a hierarchical manner, the rules used for delegating authority over names, and the system
implementation that actually maps names to Internet addresses. DNS data is maintained in a group of
distributed hierarchical databases.
7
1.4. THE DOMAIN NAME SYSTEM (DNS) CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION
The following conventions are used in descriptions of the BIND configuration file:
The purpose of this document is to explain the installation and upkeep of the BIND software package,
and we begin by reviewing the fundamentals of the Domain Name System (DNS) as they relate to BIND.
The Domain Name System (DNS) is a hierarchical, distributed database. It stores information for map-
ping Internet host names to IP addresses and vice versa, mail routing information, and other data used
by Internet applications.
Clients look up information in the DNS by calling a resolver library, which sends queries to one or more
name servers and interprets the responses. The BIND 9 software distribution contains a name server,
named, and two resolver libraries, liblwres and libbind.
The data stored in the DNS is identified by domain names that are organized as a tree according to or-
ganizational or administrative boundaries. Each node of the tree, called a domain, is given a label. The
domain name of the node is the concatenation of all the labels on the path from the node to the root node.
This is represented in written form as a string of labels listed from right to left and separated by dots. A
label need only be unique within its parent domain.
For example, a domain name for a host at the company Example, Inc. could be ourhost.example.com,
where com is the top level domain to which ourhost.example.com belongs, example is a subdomain
of com, and ourhost is the name of the host.
For administrative purposes, the name space is partitioned into areas called zones, each starting at a
node and extending down to the leaf nodes or to nodes where other zones start. The data for each zone
is stored in a name server, which answers queries about the zone using the DNS protocol.
The data associated with each domain name is stored in the form of resource records (RRs). Some of the
supported resource record types are described in Section 6.3.1.
For more detailed information about the design of the DNS and the DNS protocol, please refer to the
standards documents listed in Section A.3.1.
1.4.3 Zones
To properly operate a name server, it is important to understand the difference between a zone and a
domain.
As stated previously, a zone is a point of delegation in the DNS tree. A zone consists of those contigu-
ous parts of the domain tree for which a name server has complete information and over which it has
authority. It contains all domain names from a certain point downward in the domain tree except those
which are delegated to other zones. A delegation point is marked by one or more NS records in the
parent zone, which should be matched by equivalent NS records at the root of the delegated zone.
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CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION 1.4. THE DOMAIN NAME SYSTEM (DNS)
For instance, consider the example.com domain which includes names such as host.aaa.example.
com and host.bbb.example.com even though the example.com zone includes only delegations for
the aaa.example.com and bbb.example.com zones. A zone can map exactly to a single domain, but
could also include only part of a domain, the rest of which could be delegated to other name servers.
Every name in the DNS tree is a domain, even if it is terminal, that is, has no subdomains. Every subdomain
is a domain and every domain except the root is also a subdomain. The terminology is not intuitive and
we suggest that you read RFCs 1033, 1034 and 1035 to gain a complete understanding of this difficult
and subtle topic.
Though BIND is called a ”domain name server”, it deals primarily in terms of zones. The master and
slave declarations in the named.conf file specify zones, not domains. When you ask some other site
if it is willing to be a slave server for your domain, you are actually asking for slave service for some
collection of zones.
Each zone is served by at least one authoritative name server, which contains the complete data for the
zone. To make the DNS tolerant of server and network failures, most zones have two or more authori-
tative servers, on different networks.
Responses from authoritative servers have the ”authoritative answer” (AA) bit set in the response pack-
ets. This makes them easy to identify when debugging DNS configurations using tools like dig (Sec-
tion 3.3.1.1).
The authoritative server where the master copy of the zone data is maintained is called the primary
master server, or simply the primary. Typically it loads the zone contents from some local file edited by
humans or perhaps generated mechanically from some other local file which is edited by humans. This
file is called the zone file or master file.
In some cases, however, the master file may not be edited by humans at all, but may instead be the result
of dynamic update operations.
The other authoritative servers, the slave servers (also known as secondary servers) load the zone con-
tents from another server using a replication process known as a zone transfer. Typically the data are
transferred directly from the primary master, but it is also possible to transfer it from another slave. In
other words, a slave server may itself act as a master to a subordinate slave server.
Usually all of the zone’s authoritative servers are listed in NS records in the parent zone. These NS
records constitute a delegation of the zone from the parent. The authoritative servers are also listed in the
zone file itself, at the top level or apex of the zone. You can list servers in the zone’s top-level NS records
that are not in the parent’s NS delegation, but you cannot list servers in the parent’s delegation that are
not present at the zone’s top level.
A stealth server is a server that is authoritative for a zone but is not listed in that zone’s NS records.
Stealth servers can be used for keeping a local copy of a zone to speed up access to the zone’s records or
to make sure that the zone is available even if all the ”official” servers for the zone are inaccessible.
A configuration where the primary master server itself is a stealth server is often referred to as a ”hidden
primary” configuration. One use for this configuration is when the primary master is behind a firewall
and therefore unable to communicate directly with the outside world.
9
1.4. THE DOMAIN NAME SYSTEM (DNS) CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION
The resolver libraries provided by most operating systems are stub resolvers, meaning that they are not
capable of performing the full DNS resolution process by themselves by talking directly to the authori-
tative servers. Instead, they rely on a local name server to perform the resolution on their behalf. Such
a server is called a recursive name server; it performs recursive lookups for local clients.
To improve performance, recursive servers cache the results of the lookups they perform. Since the
processes of recursion and caching are intimately connected, the terms recursive server and caching server
are often used synonymously.
The length of time for which a record may be retained in the cache of a caching name server is controlled
by the Time To Live (TTL) field associated with each resource record.
1.4.5.1 Forwarding
Even a caching name server does not necessarily perform the complete recursive lookup itself. Instead,
it can forward some or all of the queries that it cannot satisfy from its cache to another caching name
server, commonly referred to as a forwarder.
There may be one or more forwarders, and they are queried in turn until the list is exhausted or an
answer is found. Forwarders are typically used when you do not wish all the servers at a given site
to interact directly with the rest of the Internet servers. A typical scenario would involve a number
of internal DNS servers and an Internet firewall. Servers unable to pass packets through the firewall
would forward to the server that can do it, and that server would query the Internet DNS servers on the
internal server’s behalf.
The BIND name server can simultaneously act as a master for some zones, a slave for other zones, and
as a caching (recursive) server for a set of local clients.
However, since the functions of authoritative name service and caching/recursive name service are
logically separate, it is often advantageous to run them on separate server machines. A server that
only provides authoritative name service (an authoritative-only server) can run with recursion disabled,
improving reliability and security. A server that is not authoritative for any zones and only provides
recursive service to local clients (a caching-only server) does not need to be reachable from the Internet
at large and can be placed inside a firewall.
10
Chapter 2
DNS hardware requirements have traditionally been quite modest. For many installations, servers that
have been pensioned off from active duty have performed admirably as DNS servers.
The DNSSEC features of BIND 9 may prove to be quite CPU intensive however, so organizations that
make heavy use of these features may wish to consider larger systems for these applications. BIND 9 is
fully multithreaded, allowing full utilization of multiprocessor systems for installations that need it.
CPU requirements for BIND 9 range from i486-class machines for serving of static zones without caching,
to enterprise-class machines if you intend to process many dynamic updates and DNSSEC signed zones,
serving many thousands of queries per second.
The memory of the server has to be large enough to fit the cache and zones loaded off disk. The max-
cache-size option can be used to limit the amount of memory used by the cache, at the expense of
reducing cache hit rates and causing more DNS traffic. Additionally, if additional section caching (Sec-
tion 6.2.16.19) is enabled, the max-acache-size can be used to limit the amount of memory used by the
mechanism. It is still good practice to have enough memory to load all zone and cache data into memory
— unfortunately, the best way to determine this for a given installation is to watch the name server in
operation. After a few weeks the server process should reach a relatively stable size where entries are
expiring from the cache as fast as they are being inserted.
For name server intensive environments, there are two alternative configurations that may be used.
The first is where clients and any second-level internal name servers query a main name server, which
has enough memory to build a large cache. This approach minimizes the bandwidth used by external
name lookups. The second alternative is to set up second-level internal name servers to make queries
independently. In this configuration, none of the individual machines needs to have as much memory
or CPU power as in the first alternative, but this has the disadvantage of making many more external
queries, as none of the name servers share their cached data.
11
2.5. SUPPORTED OPERATING SYSTEMS CHAPTER 2. BIND RESOURCE REQUIREMENTS
12
Chapter 3
In this section we provide some suggested configurations along with guidelines for their use. We sug-
gest reasonable values for certain option settings.
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 using the allow-query option.
Alternatively, the same effect could be achieved using suitable firewall rules.
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
allow-query-cache { none; }; // Do not allow access to cache
allow-query { any; }; // This is the default
recursion no; // Do not provide recursive service
};
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3.3. NAME SERVER OPERATIONS CHAPTER 3. NAME SERVER CONFIGURATION
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; };
};
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, see
RRset Ordering.
This section describes several indispensable diagnostic, administrative and monitoring tools available
to the system administrator for controlling and debugging the name server daemon.
14
CHAPTER 3. NAME SERVER CONFIGURATION 3.3. NAME SERVER OPERATIONS
The dig, host, and nslookup programs are all command line tools for manually querying name servers.
They differ in style and output format.
dig The domain information groper (dig) is the most versatile and complete of these lookup tools. It 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.
Usage
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.
host The host utility emphasizes simplicity and ease of use. By default, it converts between host names
and Internet addresses, but its functionality can be extended with the use of options.
Usage
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 nslookup has two modes: interactive and non-interactive. Interactive mode allows the user
to query name servers 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.
Usage
nslookup [-option...] [host-to-find | - [server]]
Interactive mode is entered when no arguments are given (the default name server will be used)
or when the first argument is a hyphen (‘-’) and the second argument is the host name or Internet
address of a name server.
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
name server.
Due to its arcane user interface and frequently inconsistent behavior, we do not recommend the
use of nslookup. Use dig instead.
named-checkzone The named-checkzone program checks a master file for syntax and consistency.
Usage
15
3.3. NAME SERVER OPERATIONS CHAPTER 3. NAME SERVER CONFIGURATION
named-compilezone Similar to named-checkzone, but it always dumps the zone content to a specified
file (typically in a different format).
rndc The remote name daemon control (rndc) program allows the system administrator to control the
operation of a name server. If you run rndc without any options it will display a usage message as
follows:
Usage
rndc [-c config] [-s server] [-p port] [-y key] command [command...]
The command is one of the following:
refresh zone [class [view]] Schedule zone maintenance for the given zone.
retransfer zone [class [view]] Retransfer the given zone from the master.
freeze [zone [class [view]]] Suspend updates to a dynamic zone. If no zone is speci-
fied, then all zones are suspended. This allows manual edits to be made to a zone normally
updated by dynamic update. It also causes changes in the journal file to be synced into the
master and the journal file to be removed. All dynamic update attempts will be refused while
the zone is frozen.
thaw [zone [class [view]]] Enable updates to a frozen dynamic zone. If no zone is spec-
ified, then all frozen zones are enabled. This causes the server to reload the zone from disk,
and re-enables dynamic updates after the load has completed. After a zone is thawed, dy-
namic updates will no longer be refused.
notify zone [class [view]] Resend NOTIFY messages for the zone.
reconfig Reload the configuration file and load new zones, but do not reload existing zone files
even if they have changed. This is faster than a full reload when there is a large number of
zones because it avoids the need to examine the modification times of the zones files.
querylog Toggle query logging. Query logging can also be enabled by explicitly directing the
queries category to a channel in the logging section of named.conf or by specifying query-
log yes; in the options section of named.conf.
dumpdb [-all|-cache|-zone] [view ...] Dump the server’s caches (default) and/or zones
to the dump file for the specified views. If no view is specified, all views are dumped.
stop [-p] Stop the server, making sure any recent changes made through dynamic update or
IXFR are first saved to the master files of the updated zones. If -p is specified named’s process
16
CHAPTER 3. NAME SERVER CONFIGURATION 3.3. NAME SERVER OPERATIONS
id is returned. This allows an external process to determine when named had completed
stopping.
halt [-p] Stop the server immediately. Recent changes made through dynamic update or IXFR
are not saved to the master files, but will be rolled forward from the journal files when the
server is restarted. If -p is specified named’s process id is returned. This allows an external
process to determine when named had completed halting.
flushname name Flushes the given name from the server’s cache.
status Display status of the server. Note that the number of zones includes the internal bind/CH
zone and the default ./IN hint zone if there is not an explicit root zone configured.
17
3.3. NAME SERVER OPERATIONS CHAPTER 3. NAME SERVER CONFIGURATION
key rndc_key {
algorithm "hmac-md5";
secret "c3Ryb25nIGVub3VnaCBmb3IgYSBtYW4gYnV0IG1hZGUgZm9yIGEgd29tYW4K";
};
options {
default-server 127.0.0.1;
default-key rndc_key;
};
controls {
inet 127.0.0.1 allow { localhost; } keys { rndc_key; };
};
3.3.2 Signals
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.
SIGHUP Causes the server to read named.conf and reload the database.
SIGTERM Causes the server to clean up and exit.
SIGINT Causes the server to clean up and exit.
18
Chapter 4
4.1 Notify
DNS NOTIFY is a mechanism that allows master servers 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 zone transfer.
For more information about DNS NOTIFY, see the description of the notify option in Section 6.2.16.1
and the description of the zone option also-notify in Section 6.2.16.7. The NOTIFY protocol is specified
in RFC 1996.
N OTE
As a slave zone can also be a master to other slaves, named, by default, sends
NOTIFY messages for every zone it loads. Specifying notify master-only; will
cause named to only send NOTIFY for master zones that it loads.
Dynamic Update is a method for adding, replacing or deleting records in a master server by sending it
a special form of DNS messages. The format and meaning of these messages is specified in RFC 2136.
Dynamic update is enabled by including an allow-update or update-policy clause in the zone state-
ment.
Updating of secure zones (zones using DNSSEC) follows RFC 3007: RRSIG and NSEC records affected
by updates are automatically regenerated by the server using an online zone key. Update authorization
is based on transaction signatures and an explicit server policy.
All changes made to a zone using dynamic update are stored in the zone’s journal file. This file is auto-
matically created by the server when the first dynamic update takes place. The name of the journal file is
formed by appending the extension .jnl to the name of the corresponding zone file unless specifically
overridden. The journal file is in a binary format and should not be edited manually.
The server will also occasionally write (”dump”) the complete contents of the updated zone to its zone
file. This is not done immediately after each dynamic update, because that would be too slow when a
19
4.3. INCREMENTAL ZONE TRANSFERS (IXFR) CHAPTER 4. ADVANCED DNS FEATURES
large zone is updated frequently. Instead, the dump is delayed by up to 15 minutes, allowing additional
updates to take place.
When a server is restarted after a shutdown or crash, it will replay the journal file to incorporate into the
zone any updates that took place after the last zone dump.
Changes that result from incoming incremental zone transfers are also journalled in a similar way.
The zone files of dynamic zones cannot normally be edited by hand because they are not guaranteed to
contain the most recent dynamic changes — those are only in the journal file. The only way to ensure
that the zone file of a dynamic zone is up to date is to run rndc stop.
If you have to make changes to a dynamic zone manually, the following procedure will work: Disable
dynamic updates to the zone using rndc freeze zone. This will also remove the zone’s .jnl file and
update the master file. Edit the zone file. Run rndc thaw zone to reload the changed zone and re-enable
dynamic updates.
The incremental zone transfer (IXFR) protocol is a way for slave servers to transfer only changed data,
instead of having to transfer the entire zone. The IXFR protocol is specified in RFC 1995. See [Proposed
Standards].
When acting as a master, BIND 9 supports IXFR for those zones where the necessary change history
information is available. These include master zones maintained by dynamic update and slave zones
whose data was obtained by IXFR. For manually maintained master zones, and for slave zones obtained
by performing a full zone transfer (AXFR), IXFR is supported only if the option ixfr-from-differences is
set to yes.
When acting as a slave, BIND 9 will attempt to use IXFR unless it is explicitly disabled. For more
information about disabling IXFR, see the description of the request-ixfr clause of the server statement.
Setting up different views, or visibility, of the DNS space to internal and external resolvers is usually
referred to as a Split DNS setup. There are several reasons an organization would want to set up its DNS
this way.
One common reason for setting up a DNS system this way is to hide ”internal” DNS information from
”external” clients on the Internet. There is some debate as to whether or not this is actually useful.
Internal DNS information leaks out in many ways (via email headers, for example) and most savvy
”attackers” can find the information they need using other means. However, since listing addresses
of internal servers that external clients cannot possibly reach can result in connection delays and other
annoyances, an organization may choose to use a Split DNS to present a consistant view of itself to the
outside world.
Another common reason for setting up a Split DNS system is to allow internal networks that are behind
filters or in RFC 1918 space (reserved IP space, as documented in RFC 1918) to resolve DNS on the
Internet. Split DNS can also be used to allow mail from outside back in to the internal network.
Here is an example of a split DNS setup:
Let’s say a company named Example, Inc. (example.com) has several corporate sites that have an
internal network with reserved Internet Protocol (IP) space and an external demilitarized zone (DMZ),
or ”outside” section of a network, that is available to the public.
Example, Inc. wants its internal clients to be able to resolve external hostnames and to exchange mail
with people on the outside. The company also wants its internal resolvers to have access to certain
internal-only zones that are not available at all outside of the internal network.
20
CHAPTER 4. ADVANCED DNS FEATURES 4.4. SPLIT DNS
In order to accomplish this, the company will set up two sets of name servers. One set will be on the
inside network (in the reserved IP space) and the other set will be on bastion hosts, which are ”proxy”
hosts that can talk to both sides of its network, in the DMZ.
The internal servers will be configured to forward all queries, except queries for site1.internal,
site2.internal, site1.example.com, and site2.example.com, to the servers in the DMZ.
These internal servers will have complete sets of information for site1.example.com, site2.example.
com, site1.internal, and site2.internal.
To protect the site1.internal and site2.internal domains, the internal name servers must be
configured to disallow all queries to these domains from any external hosts, including the bastion hosts.
The external servers, which are on the bastion hosts, will be configured to serve the ”public” version
of the site1 and site2.example.com zones. This could include things such as the host records for
public servers (www.example.com and ftp.example.com), and mail exchange (MX) records (a.mx.
example.com and b.mx.example.com).
In addition, the public site1 and site2.example.com zones should have special MX records that
contain wildcard (‘*’) records pointing to the bastion hosts. This is needed because external mail servers
do not have any other way of looking up how to deliver mail to those internal hosts. With the wildcard
records, the mail will be delivered to the bastion host, which can then forward it on to internal hosts.
Here’s an example of a wildcard MX record:
* IN MX 10 external1.example.com.
Now that they accept mail on behalf of anything in the internal network, the bastion hosts will need
to know how to deliver mail to internal hosts. In order for this to work properly, the resolvers on the
bastion hosts will need to be configured to point to the internal name servers for DNS resolution.
Queries for internal hostnames will be answered by the internal servers, and queries for external host-
names will be forwarded back out to the DNS servers on the bastion hosts.
In order for all this to work properly, internal clients will need to be configured to query only the internal
name servers for DNS queries. This could also be enforced via selective filtering on the network.
If everything has been set properly, Example, Inc.’s internal clients will now be able to:
• Look up any hostnames in the site1 and site2.example.com zones.
• Look up any hostnames in the site1.internal and site2.internal domains.
• Look up any hostnames on the Internet.
• Exchange mail with both internal and external people.
Hosts on the Internet will be able to:
• Look up any hostnames in the site1 and site2.example.com zones.
• Exchange mail with anyone in the site1 and site2.example.com zones.
Here is an example configuration for the setup we just described above. Note that this is only configu-
ration information; for information on how to configure your zone files, see Section 3.1.
Internal DNS server config:
options {
...
...
forward only;
forwarders { // forward to external servers
bastion-ips-go-here;
21
4.4. SPLIT DNS CHAPTER 4. ADVANCED DNS FEATURES
};
allow-transfer { none; }; // sample allow-transfer (no one)
allow-query { internals; externals; }; // restrict query access
allow-recursion { internals; }; // restrict recursion
...
...
};
zone "site1.internal" {
type master;
file "m/site1.internal";
forwarders { };
allow-query { internals; };
allow-transfer { internals; }
};
zone "site2.internal" {
type slave;
file "s/site2.internal";
masters { 172.16.72.3; };
forwarders { };
allow-query { internals };
allow-transfer { internals; }
};
options {
...
...
allow-transfer { none; }; // sample allow-transfer (no one)
allow-query { any; }; // default query access
allow-query-cache { internals; externals; }; // restrict cache access
allow-recursion { internals; externals; }; // restrict recursion
...
...
22
CHAPTER 4. ADVANCED DNS FEATURES 4.5. TSIG
};
zone "site2.example.com" {
type slave;
file "s/site2.foo.com";
masters { another_bastion_host_maybe; };
allow-transfer { internals; externals; }
};
search ...
nameserver 172.16.72.2
nameserver 172.16.72.3
nameserver 172.16.72.4
4.5 TSIG
This is a short guide to setting up Transaction SIGnatures (TSIG) based transaction security in BIND. It
describes changes to the configuration file as well as what changes are required for different features,
including the process of creating transaction keys and using transaction signatures with BIND.
BIND primarily supports TSIG for server to server communication. This includes zone transfer, notify,
and recursive query messages. Resolvers based on newer versions of BIND 8 have limited support for
TSIG.
TSIG can also be useful for dynamic update. A primary server for a dynamic zone should control access
to the dynamic update service, but IP-based access control is insufficient. The cryptographic access
control provided by TSIG is far superior. The nsupdate program supports TSIG via the -k and -y
command line options or inline by use of the key.
A shared secret is generated to be shared between host1 and host2. An arbitrary key name is chosen:
”host1-host2.”. The key name must be the same on both hosts.
The following command will generate a 128-bit (16 byte) HMAC-MD5 key as described above. Longer
keys are better, but shorter keys are easier to read. Note that the maximum key length is 512 bits; keys
longer than that will be digested with MD5 to produce a 128-bit key.
dnssec-keygen -a hmac-md5 -b 128 -n HOST host1-host2.
The key is in the file Khost1-host2.+157+00000.private. Nothing directly uses this file, but the
base-64 encoded string following ”Key:” can be extracted from the file and used as a shared secret:
Key: La/E5CjG9O+os1jq0a2jdA==
The string ”La/E5CjG9O+os1jq0a2jdA==” can be used as the shared secret.
23
4.5. TSIG CHAPTER 4. ADVANCED DNS FEATURES
The shared secret is simply a random sequence of bits, encoded in base-64. Most ASCII strings are valid
base-64 strings (assuming the length is a multiple of 4 and only valid characters are used), so the shared
secret can be manually generated.
Also, a known string can be run through mmencode or a similar program to generate base-64 encoded
data.
This is beyond the scope of DNS. A secure transport mechanism should be used. This could be secure
FTP, ssh, telephone, etc.
Imagine host1 and host 2 are both servers. The following is added to each server’s named.conf file:
key host1-host2. {
algorithm hmac-md5;
secret "La/E5CjG9O+os1jq0a2jdA==";
};
The algorithm, hmac-md5, is the only one supported by BIND. The secret is the one generated above.
Since this is a secret, it is recommended that either named.conf be non-world readable, or the key
directive be added to a non-world readable file that is included by named.conf.
At this point, the key is recognized. This means that if the server receives a message signed by this key,
it can verify the signature. If the signature is successfully verified, the response is signed by the same
key.
Since keys are shared between two hosts only, the server must be told when keys are to be used. The
following is added to the named.conf file for host1, if the IP address of host2 is 10.1.2.3:
server 10.1.2.3 {
keys { host1-host2. ;};
};
Multiple keys may be present, but only the first is used. This directive does not contain any secrets, so
it may be in a world-readable file.
If host1 sends a message that is a request to that address, the message will be signed with the specified
key. host1 will expect any responses to signed messages to be signed with the same key.
A similar statement must be present in host2’s configuration file (with host1’s address) for host2 to sign
request messages to host1.
BIND allows IP addresses and ranges to be specified in ACL definitions and allow-{ query | transfer |
update } directives. This has been extended to allow TSIG keys also. The above key would be denoted
key host1-host2.
24
CHAPTER 4. ADVANCED DNS FEATURES 4.6. TKEY
This allows dynamic updates to succeed only if the request was signed by a key named ”host1-host2.”.
You may want to read about the more powerful update-policy statement in Section 6.2.24.4.
4.5.6 Errors
The processing of TSIG signed messages can result in several errors. If a signed message is sent to a non-
TSIG aware server, a FORMERR (format error) will be returned, since the server will not understand the
record. This is a result of misconfiguration, since the server must be explicitly configured to send a TSIG
signed message to a specific server.
If a TSIG aware server receives a message signed by an unknown key, the response will be unsigned
with the TSIG extended error code set to BADKEY. If a TSIG aware server receives a message with a
signature that does not validate, the response will be unsigned with the TSIG extended error code set
to BADSIG. If a TSIG aware server receives a message with a time outside of the allowed range, the
response will be signed with the TSIG extended error code set to BADTIME, and the time values will be
adjusted so that the response can be successfully verified. In any of these cases, the message’s rcode is
set to NOTAUTH (not authenticated).
4.6 TKEY
TKEY is a mechanism for automatically generating a shared secret between two hosts. There are several
”modes” of TKEY that specify how the key is generated or assigned. BIND 9 implements only one of
these modes, the Diffie-Hellman key exchange. Both hosts are required to have a Diffie-Hellman KEY
record (although this record is not required to be present in a zone). The TKEY process must use signed
messages, signed either by TSIG or SIG(0). The result of TKEY is a shared secret that can be used to sign
messages with TSIG. TKEY can also be used to delete shared secrets that it had previously generated.
The TKEY process is initiated by a client or server by sending a signed TKEY query (including any
appropriate KEYs) to a TKEY-aware server. The server response, if it indicates success, will contain a
TKEY record and any appropriate keys. After this exchange, both participants have enough information
to determine the shared secret; the exact process depends on the TKEY mode. When using the Diffie-
Hellman TKEY mode, Diffie-Hellman keys are exchanged, and the shared secret is derived by both
participants.
4.7 SIG(0)
BIND 9 partially supports DNSSEC SIG(0) transaction signatures as specified in RFC 2535 and RFC2931.
SIG(0) uses public/private keys to authenticate messages. Access control is performed in the same
manner as TSIG keys; privileges can be granted or denied based on the key name.
When a SIG(0) signed message is received, it will only be verified if the key is known and trusted by the
server; the server will not attempt to locate and/or validate the key.
The only tool shipped with BIND 9 that generates SIG(0) signed messages is nsupdate.
25
4.8. DNSSEC CHAPTER 4. ADVANCED DNS FEATURES
4.8 DNSSEC
Cryptographic authentication of DNS information is possible through the DNS Security (DNSSEC-bis)
extensions, defined in RFC 4033, RFC 4034 and RFC 4035. This section describes the creation and use of
DNSSEC signed zones.
In order to set up a DNSSEC secure zone, there are a series of steps which must be followed. BIND 9
ships with several tools that are used in this process, which are explained in more detail below. In all
cases, the -h option prints a full list of parameters. Note that the DNSSEC tools require the keyset files
to be in the working directory or the directory specified by the -d option, and that the tools shipped
with BIND 9.2.x and earlier are not compatible with the current ones.
There must also be communication with the administrators of the parent and/or child zone to transmit
keys. A zone’s security status must be indicated by the parent zone for a DNSSEC capable resolver to
trust its data. This is done through the presence or absence of a DS record at the delegation point.
For other servers to trust data in this zone, they must either be statically configured with this zone’s
zone key or the zone key of another zone above this one in the DNS tree.
26
CHAPTER 4. ADVANCED DNS FEATURES 4.8. DNSSEC
dnssec-signzone will also produce a keyset and dsset files and optionally a dlvset file. These are used
to provide the parent zone administators with the DNSKEYs (or their corresponding DS records) that are
the secure entry point to the zone.
To enable named to respond appropriately to DNS requests from DNSSEC aware clients, dnssec-enable
must be set to yes.
To enable named to validate answers from other servers both dnssec-enable and dnssec-validate must
be set and some trusted-keys must be configured into named.conf.
trusted-keys are copies of DNSKEY RRs for zones that are used to form the first link in the cryptographic
chain of trust. All keys listed in trusted-keys (and corresponding zones) are deemed to exist and only
the listed keys will be used to validated the DNSKEY RRset that they are from.
trusted-keys are described in more detail later in this document.
Unlike BIND 8, BIND 9 does not verify signatures on load, so zone keys for authoritative zones do not
need to be specified in the configuration file.
After DNSSEC gets established, a typical DNSSEC configuration will look something like the following.
It has a one or more public keys for the root. This allows answers from outside the organization to be
validated. It will also have several keys for parts of the namespace the organization controls. These are
here to ensure that named is immune to compromises in the DNSSEC components of the security of
parent zones.
trusted-keys {
/* Root Key */
"." 257 3 3 "BNY4wrWM1nCfJ+CXd0rVXyYmobt7sEEfK3clRbGaTwSJxrGkxJWoZu6I7PzJu/
E9gx4UC1zGAHlXKdE4zYIpRhaBKnvcC2U9mZhkdUpd1Vso/HAdjNe8LmMlnzY3
zy2Xy4klWOADTPzSv9eamj8V18PHGjBLaVtYvk/ln5ZApjYghf+6fElrmLkdaz
MQ2OCnACR817DF4BBa7UR/beDHyp5iWTXWSi6XmoJLbG9Scqc7l70KDqlvXR3M
/lUUVRbkeg1IPJSidmK3ZyCllh4XSKbje/45SKucHgnwU5jefMtq66gKodQj+M
iA21AfUVe7u99WzTLzY3qlxDhxYQQ20FQ97S+LKUTpQcq27R7AT3/V5hRQxScI
Nqwcz4jYqZD2fQdgxbcDTClU0CRBdiieyLMNzXG3";
options {
...
27
4.9. IPV6 SUPPORT IN BIND 9 CHAPTER 4. ADVANCED DNS FEATURES
dnssec-enable yes;
dnssec-validation yes;
};
N OTE
None of the keys listed in this example are valid. In particular, the root key is not
valid.
The IPv6 AAAA record is a parallel to the IPv4 A record, and, unlike the deprecated A6 record, specifies
the entire IPv6 address in a single record. For example,
$ORIGIN example.com.
host 3600 IN AAAA 2001:db8::1
Use of IPv4-in-IPv6 mapped addresses is not recommended. If a host has an IPv4 address, use an A
record, not a AAAA, with ::ffff:192.168.42.1 as the address.
When looking up an address in nibble format, the address components are simply reversed, just as in
IPv4, and ip6.arpa. is appended to the resulting name. For example, the following would provide
reverse name lookup for a host with address 2001:db8::1.
$ORIGIN 0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.8.b.d.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa.
1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0 14400 IN PTR host.example.com.
28
Chapter 5
29
Chapter 6
BIND 9 configuration is broadly similar to BIND 8; however, there are a few new areas of configuration,
such as views. BIND 8 configuration files should work with few alterations in BIND 9, although more
complex configurations should be reviewed to check if they can be more efficiently implemented using
the new features found in BIND 9.
BIND 4 configuration files can be converted to the new format using the shell script contrib/named-
bootconf/named-bootconf.sh.
acl name The name of an address match list as defined by the acl
statement.
address match list A list of one or more ip addr, ip prefix, key id, or
acl name elements, see Section 6.1.1.
masters list A named list of one or more ip addr with optional key id
and/or ip port. A masters list may include other
masters lists.
domain name A quoted string which will be used as a DNS name, for exam-
ple ”my.test.domain”.
dotted decimal One to four integers valued 0 through 255 separated by dots
(‘.’), such as 123, 45.67 or 89.123.45.67.
ip4 addr An IPv4 address with exactly four elements in
dotted decimal notation.
ip6 addr An IPv6 address, such as 2001:db8::1234. IPv6 scoped ad-
dresses that have ambiguity on their scope zones must be
disambiguated by an appropriate zone ID with the percent
character (‘%’) as delimiter. It is strongly recommended to
use string zone names rather than numeric identifiers, in or-
der to be robust against system configuration changes. How-
ever, since there is no standard mapping for such names and
identifier values, currently only interface names as link iden-
tifiers are supported, assuming one-to-one mapping between
interfaces and links. For example, a link-local address fe80::1
on the link attached to the interface ne0 can be specified as
fe80::1%ne0. Note that on most systems link-local addresses
always have the ambiguity, and need to be disambiguated.
ip addr An ip4 addr or ip6 addr.
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6.1. CONFIGURATION FILE ELEMENTS CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
6.1.1.1 Syntax
address_match_list = address_match_list_element ;
[ address_match_list_element; ... ]
address_match_list_element = [ ! ] (ip_address [/length] |
key key_id | acl_name | { address_match_list } )
Address match lists are primarily used to determine access control for various server operations. They
are also used in the listen-on and sortlist statements. The elements which constitute an address match
list can be any of the following:
• an IP address (IPv4 or IPv6)
• an IP prefix (in ‘/’ notation)
32
CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.1. CONFIGURATION FILE ELEMENTS
The BIND 9 comment syntax allows for comments to appear anywhere that white space may appear in
a BIND configuration file. To appeal to programmers of all kinds, they can be written in the C, C++, or
shell/perl style.
6.1.2.1 Syntax
Comments may appear anywhere that white space may appear in a BIND configuration file.
C-style comments start with the two characters /* (slash, star) and end with */ (star, slash). Because
they are completely delimited with these characters, they can be used to comment only a portion of a
line or to span multiple lines.
C-style comments cannot be nested. For example, the following is not valid because the entire comment
ends with the first */:
/* This is the start of a comment.
This is still part of the comment.
/* This is an incorrect attempt at nesting a comment. */
This is no longer in any comment. */
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
C++-style comments start with the two characters // (slash, slash) and continue to the end of the phys-
ical line. They cannot be continued across multiple physical lines; to have one logical comment span
multiple lines, each line must use the // pair.
For example:
// This is the start of a comment. The next line
// is a new comment, even though it is logically
// part of the previous comment.
Shell-style (or perl-style, if you prefer) comments start with the character # (number sign) and continue
to the end of the physical line, as in C++ comments.
For example:
# This is the start of a comment. The next line
# is a new comment, even though it is logically
# part of the previous comment.
WARNING
You cannot use the semicolon (‘;’) character to start a comment such as you
would in a zone file. The semicolon indicates the end of a configuration state-
ment.
The logging and options statements may only occur once per configuration.
34
CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
acl acl-name {
address_match_list
};
The acl statement assigns a symbolic name to an address match list. It gets its name from a primary use
of address match lists: Access Control Lists (ACLs).
Note that an address match list’s name must be defined with acl before it can be used elsewhere; no
forward references are allowed.
The following ACLs are built-in:
controls {
[ inet ( ip_addr | * ) [ port ip_port ] allow { address_match_list }
keys { key_list }; ]
[ inet ...; ]
[ unix path perm number owner number group number keys { key_list }; ]
[ unix ...; ]
};
The controls statement declares control channels to be used by system administrators to control the
operation of the name server. These control channels are used by the rndc utility to send commands to
and retrieve non-DNS results from a name server.
An inet control channel is a TCP socket listening at the specified ip port on the specified ip addr, which
can be an IPv4 or IPv6 address. An ip addr of * (asterisk) is interpreted as the IPv4 wildcard address;
connections will be accepted on any of the system’s IPv4 addresses. To listen on the IPv6 wildcard
address, use an ip addr of ::. If you will only use rndc on the local host, using the loopback address
(127.0.0.1 or ::1) is recommended for maximum security.
If no port is specified, port 953 is used. The asterisk ”*” cannot be used for ip port.
The ability to issue commands over the control channel is restricted by the allow and keys clauses.
Connections to the control channel are permitted based on the address match list. This is for simple IP
address based filtering only; any key id elements of the address match list are ignored.
35
6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
A unix control channel is a UNIX domain socket listening at the specified path in the file system. Access
to the socket is specified by the perm, owner and group clauses. Note on some platforms (SunOS and
Solaris) the permissions (perm) are applied to the parent directory as the permissions on the socket itself
are ignored.
The primary authorization mechanism of the command channel is the key list, which contains a list of
key ids. Each key id in the key list is authorized to execute commands over the control channel. See
[Remote Name Daemon Control application] in Section 3.3.1.2) for information about configuring keys
in rndc.
If no controls statement is present, named will set up a default control channel listening on the loopback
address 127.0.0.1 and its IPv6 counterpart ::1. In this case, and also when the controls statement is
present but does not have a keys clause, named will attempt to load the command channel key from the
file rndc.key in /etc (or whatever sysconfdir was specified as when BIND was built). To create a
rndc.key file, run rndc-confgen -a.
The rndc.key feature was created to ease the transition of systems from BIND 8, which did not have
digital signatures on its command channel messages and thus did not have a keys clause. It makes it
possible to use an existing BIND 8 configuration file in BIND 9 unchanged, and still have rndc work the
same way ndc worked in BIND 8, simply by executing the command rndc-confgen -a after BIND 9
is installed.
Since the rndc.key feature is only intended to allow the backward-compatible usage of BIND 8 con-
figuration files, this feature does not have a high degree of configurability. You cannot easily change the
key name or the size of the secret, so you should make a rndc.conf with your own key if you wish to
change those things. The rndc.key file also has its permissions set such that only the owner of the file
(the user that named is running as) can access it. If you desire greater flexibility in allowing other users
to access rndc commands, then you need to create a rndc.conf file and make it group readable by a
group that contains the users who should have access.
To disable the command channel, use an empty controls statement: controls { };.
include filename;
The include statement inserts the specified file at the point where the include statement is encountered.
The include statement facilitates the administration of configuration files by permitting the reading or
writing of some things but not others. For example, the statement could include private keys that are
readable only by the name server.
key key_id {
algorithm string;
secret string;
};
The key statement defines a shared secret key for use with TSIG (see Section 4.5) or the command
channel (see Section 6.2.4).
36
CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
The key statement can occur at the top level of the configuration file or inside a view statement. Keys de-
fined in top-level key statements can be used in all views. Keys intended for use in a controls statement
(see Section 6.2.4) must be defined at the top level.
The key id, also known as the key name, is a domain name uniquely identifying the key. It can be used
in a server statement to cause requests sent to that server to be signed with this key, or in address match
lists to verify that incoming requests have been signed with a key matching this name, algorithm, and
secret.
logging {
[ channel channel_name {
( file path name
[ versions ( number | unlimited ) ]
[ size size spec ]
| syslog syslog_facility
| stderr
| null );
[ severity (critical | error | warning | notice |
info | debug [ level ] | dynamic ); ]
[ print-category yes or no; ]
[ print-severity yes or no; ]
[ print-time yes or no; ]
}; ]
[ category category_name {
channel_name ; [ channel_name ; ... ]
}; ]
...
};
The logging statement configures a wide variety of logging options for the name server. Its channel
phrase associates output methods, format options and severity levels with a name that can then be used
with the category phrase to select how various classes of messages are logged.
Only one logging statement is used to define as many channels and categories as are wanted. If there is
no logging statement, the logging configuration will be:
logging {
category default { default_syslog; default_debug; };
category unmatched { null; };
};
In BIND 9, the logging configuration is only established when the entire configuration file has been
parsed. In BIND 8, it was established as soon as the logging statement was parsed. When the server
is starting up, all logging messages regarding syntax errors in the configuration file go to the default
channels, or to standard error if the ”-g” option was specified.
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
All log output goes to one or more channels; you can make as many of them as you want.
Every channel definition must include a destination clause that says whether messages selected for the
channel go to a file, to a particular syslog facility, to the standard error stream, or are discarded. It can
optionally also limit the message severity level that will be accepted by the channel (the default is info),
and whether to include a named-generated time stamp, the category name and/or severity level (the
default is not to include any).
The null destination clause causes all messages sent to the channel to be discarded; in that case, other
options for the channel are meaningless.
The file destination clause directs the channel to a disk file. It can include limitations both on how
large the file is allowed to become, and how many versions of the file will be saved each time the file is
opened.
If you use the versions log file option, then named will retain that many backup versions of the file
by renaming them when opening. For example, if you choose to keep three old versions of the file
lamers.log, then just before it is opened lamers.log.1 is renamed to lamers.log.2, lamers.
log.0 is renamed to lamers.log.1, and lamers.log is renamed to lamers.log.0. You can say
versions unlimited to not limit the number of versions. If a size option is associated with the log file,
then renaming is only done when the file being opened exceeds the indicated size. No backup versions
are kept by default; any existing log file is simply appended.
The size option for files is used to limit log growth. If the file ever exceeds the size, then named will
stop writing to the file unless it has a versions option associated with it. If backup versions are kept, the
files are rolled as described above and a new one begun. If there is no versions option, no more data
will be written to the log until some out-of-band mechanism removes or truncates the log to less than
the maximum size. The default behavior is not to limit the size of the file.
Example usage of the size and versions options:
channel an_example_channel {
file "example.log" versions 3 size 20m;
print-time yes;
print-category yes;
};
The syslog destination clause directs the channel to the system log. Its argument is a syslog facility as
described in the syslog man page. Known facilities are kern, user, mail, daemon, auth, syslog, lpr,
news, uucp, cron, authpriv, ftp, local0, local1, local2, local3, local4, local5, local6 and local7, however
not all facilities are supported on all operating systems. How syslog will handle messages sent to this
facility is described in the syslog.conf man page. If you have a system which uses a very old version of
syslog that only uses two arguments to the openlog() function, then this clause is silently ignored.
The severity clause works like syslog’s ”priorities”, except that they can also be used if you are writing
straight to a file rather than using syslog. Messages which are not at least of the severity level given will
not be selected for the channel; messages of higher severity levels will be accepted.
If you are using syslog, then the syslog.conf priorities will also determine what eventually passes
through. For example, defining a channel facility and severity as daemon and debug but only log-
ging daemon.warning via syslog.conf will cause messages of severity info and notice to be dropped.
If the situation were reversed, with named writing messages of only warning or higher, then syslogd
would print all messages it received from the channel.
The stderr destination clause directs the channel to the server’s standard error stream. This is intended
for use when the server is running as a foreground process, for example when debugging a configura-
tion.
The server can supply extensive debugging information when it is in debugging mode. If the server’s
global debug level is greater than zero, then debugging mode will be active. The global debug level is
set either by starting the named server with the -d flag followed by a positive integer, or by running
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
rndc trace. The global debug level can be set to zero, and debugging mode turned off, by running rndc
notrace. All debugging messages in the server have a debug level, and higher debug levels give more
detailed output. Channels that specify a specific debug severity, for example:
channel specific_debug_level {
file "foo";
severity debug 3;
};
will get debugging output of level 3 or less any time the server is in debugging mode, regardless of
the global debugging level. Channels with dynamic severity use the server’s global debug level to
determine what messages to print.
If print-time has been turned on, then the date and time will be logged. print-time may be specified for
a syslog channel, but is usually pointless since syslog also prints the date and time. If print-category is
requested, then the category of the message will be logged as well. Finally, if print-severity is on, then
the severity level of the message will be logged. The print- options may be used in any combination,
and will always be printed in the following order: time, category, severity. Here is an example where all
three print- options are on:
28-Feb-2000 15:05:32.863 general: notice: running
There are four predefined channels that are used for named’s default logging as follows. How they are
used is described in Section 6.2.10.2.
channel default_syslog {
syslog daemon; // send to syslog’s daemon
// facility
severity info; // only send priority info
// and higher
};
channel default_debug {
file "named.run"; // write to named.run in
// the working directory
// Note: stderr is used instead
// of "named.run"
// if the server is started
// with the ’-f’ option.
severity dynamic; // log at the server’s
// current debug level
};
channel default_stderr {
stderr; // writes to stderr
severity info; // only send priority info
// and higher
};
channel null {
null; // toss anything sent to
// this channel
};
The default debug channel has the special property that it only produces output when the server’s
debug level is nonzero. It normally writes to a file called named.run in the server’s working directory.
For security reasons, when the ”-u” command line option is used, the named.run file is created only
after named has changed to the new UID, and any debug output generated while named is starting up
and still running as root is discarded. If you need to capture this output, you must run the server with
the ”-g” option and redirect standard error to a file.
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
Once a channel is defined, it cannot be redefined. Thus you cannot alter the built-in channels directly,
but you can modify the default logging by pointing categories at channels you have defined.
There are many categories, so you can send the logs you want to see wherever you want, without
seeing logs you don’t want. If you don’t specify a list of channels for a category, then log messages in
that category will be sent to the default category instead. If you don’t specify a default category, the
following ”default default” is used:
category default { default_syslog; default_debug; };
As an example, let’s say you want to log security events to a file, but you also want keep the default
logging behavior. You’d specify the following:
channel my_security_channel {
file "my_security_file";
severity info;
};
category security {
my_security_channel;
default_syslog;
default_debug;
};
To discard all messages in a category, specify the null channel:
category xfer-out { null; };
category notify { null; };
Following are the available categories and brief descriptions of the types of log information they contain.
More categories may be added in future BIND releases.
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
The lwres statement configures the name server to also act as a lightweight resolver server. (See Sec-
tion 5.2.) There may be be multiple lwres statements configuring lightweight resolver servers with
different properties.
The listen-on statement specifies a list of addresses (and ports) that this instance of a lightweight re-
solver daemon should accept requests on. If no port is specified, port 921 is used. If this statement is
omitted, requests will be accepted on 127.0.0.1, port 921.
The view statement binds this instance of a lightweight resolver daemon to a view in the DNS names-
pace, so that the response will be constructed in the same manner as a normal DNS query matching this
view. If this statement is omitted, the default view is used, and if there is no default view, an error is
triggered.
The search statement is equivalent to the search statement in /etc/resolv.conf. It provides a list of
domains which are appended to relative names in queries.
The ndots statement is equivalent to the ndots statement in /etc/resolv.conf. It indicates the min-
imum number of dots in a relative domain name that should result in an exact match lookup before
search path elements are appended.
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
masters name [port ip_port] { ( masters_list | ip_addr [port ip_port] [key key] ) ; [...] }
masters lists allow for a common set of masters to be easily used by multiple stub and slave zones.
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
43
6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
[ statistics-interval number; ]
[ topology { address_match_list }];
[ sortlist { address_match_list }];
[ rrset-order { order_spec ; [ order_spec ; ... ] ] };
[ lame-ttl number; ]
[ max-ncache-ttl number; ]
[ max-cache-ttl number; ]
[ sig-validity-interval number ; ]
[ min-roots number; ]
[ use-ixfr yes_or_no ; ]
[ provide-ixfr yes_or_no; ]
[ request-ixfr yes_or_no; ]
[ treat-cr-as-space yes_or_no ; ]
[ min-refresh-time number ; ]
[ max-refresh-time number ; ]
[ min-retry-time number ; ]
[ max-retry-time number ; ]
[ port ip_port; ]
[ additional-from-auth yes_or_no ; ]
[ additional-from-cache yes_or_no ; ]
[ random-device path_name ; ]
[ max-cache-size size_spec ; ]
[ match-mapped-addresses yes_or_no; ]
[ preferred-glue ( A | AAAA | NONE ); ]
[ edns-udp-size number; ]
[ max-udp-size number; ]
[ root-delegation-only [ exclude { namelist } ] ; ]
[ querylog yes_or_no ; ]
[ disable-algorithms domain { algorithm; [ algorithm; ] }; ]
[ acache-enable yes_or_no ; ]
[ acache-cleaning-interval number; ]
[ max-acache-size size_spec ; ]
[ clients-per-query number ; ]
[ max-clients-per-query number ; ]
[ masterfile-format (text|raw) ; ]
[ empty-server name ; ]
[ empty-contact name ; ]
[ empty-zones-enable yes_or_no ; ]
[ disable-empty-zone zone_name ; ]
[ zero-no-soa-ttl yes_or_no ; ]
[ zero-no-soa-ttl-cache yes_or_no ; ]
};
The options statement sets up global options to be used by BIND. This statement may appear only once
in a configuration file. If there is no options statement, an options block with each option set to its
default will be used.
directory The working directory of the server. Any non-absolute pathnames in the configuration file
will be taken as relative to this directory. The default location for most server output files (e.g.
named.run) is this directory. If a directory is not specified, the working directory defaults to ‘.’,
the directory from which the server was started. The directory specified should be an absolute
path.
key-directory When performing dynamic update of secure zones, the directory where the public and
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
private key files should be found, if different than the current working directory. The directory
specified must be an absolute path.
named-xfer This option is obsolete. It was used in BIND 8 to specify the pathname to the named-xfer
program. In BIND 9, no separate named-xfer program is needed; its functionality is built into the
name server.
tkey-domain The domain appended to the names of all shared keys generated with TKEY. When a
client requests a TKEY exchange, it may or may not specify the desired name for the key. If
present, the name of the shared key will be ”client specified part” + ”tkey-domain”.
Otherwise, the name of the shared key will be ”random hex digits” + ”tkey-domain”. In
most cases, the domainname should be the server’s domain name.
tkey-dhkey The Diffie-Hellman key used by the server to generate shared keys with clients using the
Diffie-Hellman mode of TKEY. The server must be able to load the public and private keys from
files in the working directory. In most cases, the keyname should be the server’s host name.
dump-file The pathname of the file the server dumps the database to when instructed to do so with
rndc dumpdb. If not specified, the default is named dump.db.
memstatistics-file The pathname of the file the server writes memory usage statistics to on exit. If not
specified, the default is named.memstats.
pid-file The pathname of the file the server writes its process ID in. If not specified, the default is /
var/run/named.pid. The pid-file is used by programs that want to send signals to the running
name server. Specifying pid-file none disables the use of a PID file — no file will be written and
any existing one will be removed. Note that none is a keyword, not a file name, and therefore is
not enclosed in double quotes.
statistics-file The pathname of the file the server appends statistics to when instructed to do so using
rndc stats. If not specified, the default is named.stats in the server’s current directory. The
format of the file is described in Section 6.2.16.18.
port The UDP/TCP port number the server uses for receiving and sending DNS protocol traffic. The
default is 53. This option is mainly intended for server testing; a server using a port other than 53
will not be able to communicate with the global DNS.
random-device The source of entropy to be used by the server. Entropy is primarily needed for DNSSEC
operations, such as TKEY transactions and dynamic update of signed zones. This options speci-
fies the device (or file) from which to read entropy. If this is a file, operations requiring entropy
will fail when the file has been exhausted. If not specified, the default value is /dev/random (or
equivalent) when present, and none otherwise. The random-device option takes effect during the
initial configuration load at server startup time and is ignored on subsequent reloads.
preferred-glue If specified, the listed type (A or AAAA) will be emitted before other glue in the addi-
tional section of a query response. The default is not to prefer any type (NONE).
root-delegation-only Turn on enforcement of delegation-only in TLDs (top level domains) and root
zones with an optional exclude list.
Note some TLDs are not delegation only (e.g. ”DE”, ”LV”, ”US” and ”MUSEUM”).
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
options {
root-delegation-only exclude { "de"; "lv"; "us"; "museum"; };
};
disable-algorithms Disable the specified DNSSEC algorithms at and below the specified name. Multi-
ple disable-algorithms statements are allowed. Only the most specific will be applied.
dnssec-lookaside When set, dnssec-lookaside provides the validator with an alternate method to val-
idate DNSKEY records at the top of a zone. When a DNSKEY is at or below a domain specified
by the deepest dnssec-lookaside, and the normal dnssec validation has left the key untrusted, the
trust-anchor will be append to the key name and a DLV record will be looked up to see if it can
validate the key. If the DLV record validates a DNSKEY (similarly to the way a DS record does)
the DNSKEY RRset is deemed to be trusted.
dnssec-must-be-secure Specify hierarchies which must be or may not be secure (signed and validated).
If yes, then named will only accept answers if they are secure. If no, then normal dnssec validation
applies allowing for insecure answers to be accepted. The specified domain must be under a
trusted-key or dnssec-lookaside must be active.
auth-nxdomain If yes, then the AA bit is always set on NXDOMAIN responses, even if the server is
not actually authoritative. The default is no; this is a change from BIND 8. If you are using very
old DNS software, you may need to set it to yes.
deallocate-on-exit This option was used in BIND 8 to enable checking for memory leaks on exit. BIND
9 ignores the option and always performs the checks.
dialup If yes, then the server treats all zones as if they are doing zone transfers across a dial-on-demand
dialup link, which can be brought up by traffic originating from this server. This has different
effects according to zone type and concentrates the zone maintenance so that it all happens in a
short interval, once every heartbeat-interval and hopefully during the one call. It also suppresses
some of the normal zone maintenance traffic. The default is no.
The dialup option may also be specified in the view and zone statements, in which case it over-
rides the global dialup option.
If the zone is a master zone, then the server will send out a NOTIFY request to all the slaves
(default). This should trigger the zone serial number check in the slave (providing it supports
NOTIFY) allowing the slave to verify the zone while the connection is active. The set of servers to
which NOTIFY is sent can be controlled by notify and also-notify.
If the zone is a slave or stub zone, then the server will suppress the regular ”zone up to date” (re-
fresh) queries and only perform them when the heartbeat-interval expires in addition to sending
NOTIFY requests.
Finer control can be achieved by using notify which only sends NOTIFY messages, notify-
passive which sends NOTIFY messages and suppresses the normal refresh queries, refresh
which suppresses normal refresh processing and sends refresh queries when the heartbeat-interval
expires, and passive which just disables normal refresh processing.
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
fake-iquery In BIND 8, this option enabled simulating the obsolete DNS query type IQUERY. BIND 9
never does IQUERY simulation.
fetch-glue This option is obsolete. In BIND 8, fetch-glue yes caused the server to attempt to fetch
glue resource records it didn’t have when constructing the additional data section of a response.
This is now considered a bad idea and BIND 9 never does it.
flush-zones-on-shutdown When the nameserver exits due receiving SIGTERM, flush or do not flush
any pending zone writes. The default is flush-zones-on-shutdown no.
has-old-clients This option was incorrectly implemented in BIND 8, and is ignored by BIND 9. To
achieve the intended effect of has-old-clients yes, specify the two separate options auth-nxdomain
yes and rfc2308-type1 no instead.
host-statistics In BIND 8, this enables keeping of statistics for every host that the name server interacts
with. Not implemented in BIND 9.
maintain-ixfr-base This option is obsolete. It was used in BIND 8 to determine whether a transaction log
was kept for Incremental Zone Transfer. BIND 9 maintains a transaction log whenever possible. If
you need to disable outgoing incremental zone transfers, use provide-ixfr no.
minimal-responses If yes, then when generating responses the server will only add records to the au-
thority and additional data sections when they are required (e.g. delegations, negative responses).
This may improve the performance of the server. The default is no.
multiple-cnames This option was used in BIND 8 to allow a domain name to have multiple CNAME
records in violation of the DNS standards. BIND 9.2 onwards always strictly enforces the CNAME
rules both in master files and dynamic updates.
notify If yes (the default), DNS NOTIFY messages are sent when a zone the server is authoritative
for changes, see Section 4.1. The messages are sent to the servers listed in the zone’s NS records
(except the master server identified in the SOA MNAME field), and to any servers listed in the
also-notify option.
If master-only, notifies are only sent for master zones. If explicit, notifies are sent only to
servers explicitly listed using also-notify. If no, no notifies are sent.
The notify option may also be specified in the zone statement, in which case it overrides the
options notify statement. It would only be necessary to turn off this option if it caused slaves to
crash.
recursion If yes, and a DNS query requests recursion, then the server will attempt to do all the work
required to answer the query. If recursion is off and the server does not already know the answer, it
will return a referral response. The default is yes. Note that setting recursion no does not prevent
clients from getting data from the server’s cache; it only prevents new data from being cached as
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
an effect of client queries. Caching may still occur as an effect the server’s internal operation, such
as NOTIFY address lookups. See also fetch-glue above.
rfc2308-type1 Setting this to yes will cause the server to send NS records along with the SOA record
for negative answers. The default is no.
N OTE
use-id-pool This option is obsolete. BIND 9 always allocates query IDs from a pool.
zone-statistics If yes, the server will collect statistical data on all zones (unless specifically turned off
on a per-zone basis by specifying zone-statistics no in the zone statement). These statistics may
be accessed using rndc stats, which will dump them to the file listed in the statistics-file. See also
Section 6.2.16.18.
use-ixfr This option is obsolete. If you need to disable IXFR to a particular server or servers see the
information on the provide-ixfr option in Section 6.2.18. See also Section 4.3.
treat-cr-as-space This option was used in BIND 8 to make the server treat carriage return (”\r”) charac-
ters the same way as a space or tab character, to facilitate loading of zone files on a UNIX system
that were generated on an NT or DOS machine. In BIND 9, both UNIX ”\n” and NT/DOS ”\r\n”
newlines are always accepted, and the option is ignored.
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
data lookups but also when looking up the answer. This is usually the desired behavior in an
authoritative-only server where the correctness of the cached data is an issue.
When a name server is non-recursively queried for a name that is not below the apex of any served
zone, it normally answers with an ”upwards referral” to the root servers or the servers of some
other known parent of the query name. Since the data in an upwards referral comes from the
cache, the server will not be able to provide upwards referrals when additional-from-cache no
has been specified. Instead, it will respond to such queries with REFUSED. This should not cause
any problems since upwards referrals are not required for the resolution process.
match-mapped-addresses If yes, then an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address will match any address match
list entries that match the corresponding IPv4 address. Enabling this option is sometimes useful
on IPv6-enabled Linux systems, to work around a kernel quirk that causes IPv4 TCP connections
such as zone transfers to be accepted on an IPv6 socket using mapped addresses, causing address
match lists designed for IPv4 to fail to match. The use of this option for any other purpose is
discouraged.
ixfr-from-differences When yes and the server loads a new version of a master zone from its zone
file or receives a new version of a slave file by a non-incremental zone transfer, it will compare
the new version to the previous one and calculate a set of differences. The differences are then
logged in the zone’s journal file such that the changes can be transmitted to downstream slaves as
an incremental zone transfer.
By allowing incremental zone transfers to be used for non-dynamic zones, this option saves band-
width at the expense of increased CPU and memory consumption at the master. In particular, if
the new version of a zone is completely different from the previous one, the set of differences will
be of a size comparable to the combined size of the old and new zone version, and the server will
need to temporarily allocate memory to hold this complete difference set.
ixfr-from-differences also accepts master and slave at the view and options levels which causes
ixfr-from-differences to apply to all master or slave zones respectively.
multi-master This should be set when you have multiple masters for a zone and the addresses refer to
different machines. If yes, named will not log when the serial number on the master is less than
what named currently has. The default is no.
dnssec-enable Enable DNSSEC support in named. Unless set to yes, named behaves as if it does not
support DNSSEC. The default is yes.
dnssec-validation Enable DNSSEC validation in named. Note dnssec-enable also needs to be set to
yes to be effective. The default is no.
dnssec-accept-expired Accept expired signatures when verifying DNSSEC signatures. The default is
no.
querylog Specify whether query logging should be started when named starts. If querylog is not spec-
ified, then the query logging is determined by the presence of the logging category queries.
check-names This option is used to restrict the character set and syntax of certain domain names in
master files and/or DNS responses received from the network. The default varies according to
usage area. For master zones the default is fail. For slave zones the default is warn. For answers
received from the network (response) the default is ignore.
The rules for legal hostnames and mail domains are derived from RFC 952 and RFC 821 as modi-
fied by RFC 1123.
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
check-names applies to the owner names of A, AAA and MX records. It also applies to the domain
names in the RDATA of NS, SOA and MX records. It also applies to the RDATA of PTR records
where the owner name indicated that it is a reverse lookup of a hostname (the owner name ends
in IN-ADDR.ARPA, IP6.ARPA or IP6.INT).
check-mx Check whether the MX record appears to refer to a IP address. The default is to warn. Other
possible values are fail and ignore.
check-wildcard This option is used to check for non-terminal wildcards. The use of non-terminal wild-
cards is almost always as a result of a failure to understand the wildcard matching algorithm (RFC
1034). This option affects master zones. The default (yes) is to check for non-terminal wildcards
and issue a warning.
check-integrity Perform post load zone integrity checks on master zones. This checks that MX and SRV
records refer to address (A or AAAA) records and that glue address records exist for delegated
zones. For MX and SRV records only in-zone hostnames are checked (for out-of-zone hostnames
use named-checkzone). For NS records only names below top of zone are checked (for out-of-zone
names and glue consistancy checks use named-checkzone). The default is yes.
check-mx-cname If check-integrity is set then fail, warn or ignore MX records that refer to CNAMES.
The default is to warn.
check-srv-cname If check-integrity is set then fail, warn or ignore SRV records that refer to CNAMES.
The default is to warn.
check-sibling When performing integrity checks, also check that sibling glue exists. The default is yes.
zero-no-soa-ttl When returning authoritative negative responses to SOA queries set the TTL of the SOA
recored returned in the authority section to zero. The default is yes.
zero-no-soa-ttl-cache When caching a negative response to a SOA query set the TTL to zero. The default
is no.
update-check-ksk When regenerating the RRSIGs following a UPDATE request to a secure zone, check
the KSK flag on the DNSKEY RR to determine if this key should be used to generate the RRSIG.
This flag is ignored if there are not DNSKEY RRs both with and without a KSK. The default is yes.
6.2.16.2 Forwarding
The forwarding facility can be used to create a large site-wide cache on a few servers, reducing traffic
over links to external name servers. It can also be used to allow queries by servers that do not have
direct access to the Internet, but wish to look up exterior names anyway. Forwarding occurs only on
those queries for which the server is not authoritative and does not have the answer in its cache.
forward This option is only meaningful if the forwarders list is not empty. A value of first, the
default, causes the server to query the forwarders first — and if that doesn’t answer the question,
the server will then look for the answer itself. If only is specified, the server will only query the
forwarders.
forwarders Specifies the IP addresses to be used for forwarding. The default is the empty list (no for-
warding).
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
Forwarding can also be configured on a per-domain basis, allowing for the global forwarding options to
be overridden in a variety of ways. You can set particular domains to use different forwarders, or have
a different forward only/first behavior, or not forward at all, see Section 6.2.23.
Dual-stack servers are used as servers of last resort to work around problems in reachability due the
lack of support for either IPv4 or IPv6 on the host machine.
dual-stack-servers Specifies host names or addresses of machines with access to both IPv4 and IPv6
transports. If a hostname is used, the server must be able to resolve the name using only the
transport it has. If the machine is dual stacked, then the dual-stack-servers have no effect unless
access to a transport has been disabled on the command line (e.g. named -4).
Access to the server can be restricted based on the IP address of the requesting system. See Section 6.1.1
for details on how to specify IP address lists.
allow-notify Specifies which hosts are allowed to notify this server, a slave, of zone changes in addition
to the zone masters. allow-notify may also be specified in the zone statement, in which case
it overrides the options allow-notify statement. It is only meaningful for a slave zone. If not
specified, the default is to process notify messages only from a zone’s master.
allow-query Specifies which hosts are allowed to ask ordinary DNS questions. allow-query may also
be specified in the zone statement, in which case it overrides the options allow-query statement.
If not specified, the default is to allow queries from all hosts.
N OTE
allow-query-cache Specifies which hosts are allowed to get answers from the cache. If allow-query-
cache is not set then allow-recursion is used if set, otherwise allow-query is used if set, otherwise
the default (localnets; localhost;) is used.
allow-recursion Specifies which hosts are allowed to make recursive queries through this server. If
allow-recursion is not set then allow-query-cache is used if set, otherwise allow-query is used if
set, otherwise the default (localnets; localhost;) is used.
allow-update Specifies which hosts are allowed to submit Dynamic DNS updates for master zones. The
default is to deny updates from all hosts. Note that allowing updates based on the requestor’s IP
address is insecure; see Section 7.3 for details.
allow-update-forwarding Specifies which hosts are allowed to submit Dynamic DNS updates to slave
zones to be forwarded to the master. The default is { none; }, which means that no update for-
warding will be performed. To enable update forwarding, specify allow-update-forwarding
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
{ any; };. Specifying values other than { none; } or { any; } is usually counterproduc-
tive, since the responsibility for update access control should rest with the master server, not the
slaves.
Note that enabling the update forwarding feature on a slave server may expose master servers
relying on insecure IP address based access control to attacks; see Section 7.3 for more details.
allow-v6-synthesis This option was introduced for the smooth transition from AAAA to A6 and from
”nibble labels” to binary labels. However, since both A6 and binary labels were then deprecated,
this option was also deprecated. It is now ignored with some warning messages.
allow-transfer Specifies which hosts are allowed to receive zone transfers from the server. allow-
transfer may also be specified in the zone statement, in which case it overrides the options allow-
transfer statement. If not specified, the default is to allow transfers to all hosts.
blackhole Specifies a list of addresses that the server will not accept queries from or use to resolve a
query. Queries from these addresses will not be responded to. The default is none.
6.2.16.5 Interfaces
The interfaces and ports that the server will answer queries from may be specified using the listen-on
option. listen-on takes an optional port, and an address match list. The server will listen on all
interfaces allowed by the address match list. If a port is not specified, port 53 will be used.
Multiple listen-on statements are allowed. For example,
listen-on { 5.6.7.8; };
listen-on port 1234 { !1.2.3.4; 1.2/16; };
will enable the name server on port 53 for the IP address 5.6.7.8, and on port 1234 of an address on the
machine in net 1.2 that is not 1.2.3.4.
If no listen-on is specified, the server will listen on port 53 on all interfaces.
The listen-on-v6 option is used to specify the interfaces and the ports on which the server will listen for
incoming queries sent using IPv6.
When
{ any; }
is specified as the address match list for the listen-on-v6 option, the server does not bind a separate
socket to each IPv6 interface address as it does for IPv4 if the operating system has enough API support
for IPv6 (specifically if it conforms to RFC 3493 and RFC 3542). Instead, it listens on the IPv6 wildcard
address. If the system only has incomplete API support for IPv6, however, the behavior is the same as
that for IPv4.
A list of particular IPv6 addresses can also be specified, in which case the server listens on a separate
socket for each specified address, regardless of whether the desired API is supported by the system.
Multiple listen-on-v6 options can be used. For example,
listen-on-v6 { any; };
listen-on-v6 port 1234 { !2001:db8::/32; any; };
will enable the name server on port 53 for any IPv6 addresses (with a single wildcard socket), and on
port 1234 of IPv6 addresses that is not in the prefix 2001:db8::/32 (with separate sockets for each matched
address.)
To make the server not listen on any IPv6 address, use
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
listen-on-v6 { none; };
If no listen-on-v6 option is specified, the server will not listen on any IPv6 address.
If the server doesn’t know the answer to a question, it will query other name servers. query-source
specifies the address and port used for such queries. For queries sent over IPv6, there is a separate
query-source-v6 option. If address is * (asterisk) or is omitted, a wildcard IP address (INADDR ANY)
will be used. If port is * or is omitted, a random unprivileged port will be used. The avoid-v4-udp-
ports and avoid-v6-udp-ports options can be used to prevent named from selecting certain ports. The
defaults are:
query-source address * port *;
query-source-v6 address * port *;
N OTE
The address specified in the query-source option is used for both UDP and
TCP queries, but the port applies only to UDP queries. TCP queries always use
a random unprivileged port.
N OTE
Solaris 2.5.1 and earlier does not support setting the source address for TCP
sockets.
N OTE
BIND has mechanisms in place to facilitate zone transfers and set limits on the amount of load that
transfers place on the system. The following options apply to zone transfers.
also-notify Defines a global list of IP addresses of name servers that are also sent NOTIFY messages
whenever a fresh copy of the zone is loaded, in addition to the servers listed in the zone’s NS
records. This helps to ensure that copies of the zones will quickly converge on stealth servers. If
an also-notify list is given in a zone statement, it will override the options also-notify statement.
When a zone notify statement is set to no, the IP addresses in the global also-notify list will not
be sent NOTIFY messages for that zone. The default is the empty list (no global notification list).
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
max-transfer-time-in Inbound zone transfers running longer than this many minutes will be termi-
nated. The default is 120 minutes (2 hours). The maximum value is 28 days (40320 minutes).
max-transfer-idle-in Inbound zone transfers making no progress in this many minutes will be termi-
nated. The default is 60 minutes (1 hour). The maximum value is 28 days (40320 minutes).
max-transfer-time-out Outbound zone transfers running longer than this many minutes will be termi-
nated. The default is 120 minutes (2 hours). The maximum value is 28 days (40320 minutes).
max-transfer-idle-out Outbound zone transfers making no progress in this many minutes will be ter-
minated. The default is 60 minutes (1 hour). The maximum value is 28 days (40320 minutes).
serial-query-rate Slave servers will periodically query master servers to find out if zone serial numbers
have changed. Each such query uses a minute amount of the slave server’s network bandwidth.
To limit the amount of bandwidth used, BIND 9 limits the rate at which queries are sent. The value
of the serial-query-rate option, an integer, is the maximum number of queries sent per second. The
default is 20.
serial-queries In BIND 8, the serial-queries option set the maximum number of concurrent serial num-
ber queries allowed to be outstanding at any given time. BIND 9 does not limit the number of
outstanding serial queries and ignores the serial-queries option. Instead, it limits the rate at which
the queries are sent as defined using the serial-query-rate option.
transfer-format Zone transfers can be sent using two different formats, one-answer and many-answers.
The transfer-format option is used on the master server to determine which format it sends. one-
answer uses one DNS message per resource record transferred. many-answers packs as many
resource records as possible into a message. many-answers is more efficient, but is only supported
by relatively new slave servers, such as BIND 9, BIND 8.x and BIND 4.9.5 onwards. The many-
answers format is also supported by recent Microsoft Windows nameservers. The default is many-
answers. transfer-format may be overridden on a per-server basis by using the server statement.
transfers-in The maximum number of inbound zone transfers that can be running concurrently. The
default value is 10. Increasing transfers-in may speed up the convergence of slave zones, but it
also may increase the load on the local system.
transfers-out The maximum number of outbound zone transfers that can be running concurrently.
Zone transfer requests in excess of the limit will be refused. The default value is 10.
transfers-per-ns The maximum number of inbound zone transfers that can be concurrently transferring
from a given remote name server. The default value is 2. Increasing transfers-per-ns may speed
up the convergence of slave zones, but it also may increase the load on the remote name server.
transfers-per-ns may be overridden on a per-server basis by using the transfers phrase of the
server statement.
transfer-source transfer-source determines which local address will be bound to IPv4 TCP connections
used to fetch zones transferred inbound by the server. It also determines the source IPv4 address,
and optionally the UDP port, used for the refresh queries and forwarded dynamic updates. If not
set, it defaults to a system controlled value which will usually be the address of the interface ”clos-
est to” the remote end. This address must appear in the remote end’s allow-transfer option for
the zone being transferred, if one is specified. This statement sets the transfer-source for all zones,
but can be overridden on a per-view or per-zone basis by including a transfer-source statement
within the view or zone block in the configuration file.
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
N OTE
Solaris 2.5.1 and earlier does not support setting the source address for
TCP sockets.
transfer-source-v6 The same as transfer-source, except zone transfers are performed using IPv6.
alt-transfer-source An alternate transfer source if the one listed in transfer-source fails and use-alt-
transfer-source is set.
N OTE
If you do not wish the alternate transfer source to be used, you should set
use-alt-transfer-source appropriately and you should not depend upon
getting a answer back to the first refresh query.
alt-transfer-source-v6 An alternate transfer source if the one listed in transfer-source-v6 fails and use-
alt-transfer-source is set.
use-alt-transfer-source Use the alternate transfer sources or not. If views are specified this defaults to
no otherwise it defaults to yes (for BIND 8 compatibility).
notify-source notify-source determines which local source address, and optionally UDP port, will be
used to send NOTIFY messages. This address must appear in the slave server’s masters zone
clause or in an allow-notify clause. This statement sets the notify-source for all zones, but can
be overridden on a per-zone or per-view basis by including a notify-source statement within the
zone or view block in the configuration file.
N OTE
Solaris 2.5.1 and earlier does not support setting the source address for
TCP sockets.
notify-source-v6 Like notify-source, but applies to notify messages sent to IPv6 addresses.
avoid-v4-udp-ports and avoid-v6-udp-ports specify a list of IPv4 and IPv6 UDP ports that will not be
used as system assigned source ports for UDP sockets. These lists prevent named from choosing as its
random source port a port that is blocked by your firewall. If a query went out with such a source port,
the answer would not get by the firewall and the name server would have to query again.
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
The server’s usage of many system resources can be limited. Scaled values are allowed when specifying
resource limits. For example, 1G can be used instead of 1073741824 to specify a limit of one gigabyte.
unlimited requests unlimited use, or the maximum available amount. default uses the limit that was in
force when the server was started. See the description of size spec in Section 6.1.
The following options set operating system resource limits for the name server process. Some operating
systems don’t support some or any of the limits. On such systems, a warning will be issued if the
unsupported limit is used.
datasize The maximum amount of data memory the server may use. The default is default. This is
a hard limit on server memory usage. If the server attempts to allocate memory in excess of this
limit, the allocation will fail, which may in turn leave the server unable to perform DNS service.
Therefore, this option is rarely useful as a way of limiting the amount of memory used by the
server, but it can be used to raise an operating system data size limit that is too small by default. If
you wish to limit the amount of memory used by the server, use the max-cache-size and recursive-
clients options instead.
files The maximum number of files the server may have open concurrently. The default is unlimited.
stacksize The maximum amount of stack memory the server may use. The default is default.
The following options set limits on the server’s resource consumption that are enforced internally by
the server rather than the operating system.
max-ixfr-log-size This option is obsolete; it is accepted and ignored for BIND 8 compatibility. The
option max-journal-size performs a similar function in BIND 9.
max-journal-size Sets a maximum size for each journal file (see Section 4.2.1). When the journal file
approaches the specified size, some of the oldest transactions in the journal will be automatically
removed. The default is unlimited.
host-statistics-max In BIND 8, specifies the maximum number of host statistics entries to be kept. Not
implemented in BIND 9.
recursive-clients The maximum number of simultaneous recursive lookups the server will perform on
behalf of clients. The default is 1000. Because each recursing client uses a fair bit of memory, on
the order of 20 kilobytes, the value of the recursive-clients option may have to be decreased on
hosts with limited memory.
tcp-clients The maximum number of simultaneous client TCP connections that the server will accept.
The default is 100.
max-cache-size The maximum amount of memory to use for the server’s cache, in bytes. When the
amount of data in the cache reaches this limit, the server will cause records to expire prematurely
so that the limit is not exceeded. In a server with multiple views, the limit applies separately to the
cache of each view. The default is unlimited, meaning that records are purged from the cache
only when their TTLs expire.
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tcp-listen-queue The listen queue depth. The default and minimum is 3. If the kernel supports the
accept filter ”dataready” this also controls how many TCP connections that will be queued in
kernel space waiting for some data before being passed to accept. Values less than 3 will be silently
raised.
cleaning-interval The server will remove expired resource records from the cache every cleaning-
interval minutes. The default is 60 minutes. The maximum value is 28 days (40320 minutes).
If set to 0, no periodic cleaning will occur.
heartbeat-interval The server will perform zone maintenance tasks for all zones marked as dialup
whenever this interval expires. The default is 60 minutes. Reasonable values are up to 1 day
(1440 minutes). The maximum value is 28 days (40320 minutes). If set to 0, no zone maintenance
for these zones will occur.
interface-interval The server will scan the network interface list every interface-interval minutes. The
default is 60 minutes. The maximum value is 28 days (40320 minutes). If set to 0, interface scanning
will only occur when the configuration file is loaded. After the scan, the server will begin listen-
ing for queries on any newly discovered interfaces (provided they are allowed by the listen-on
configuration), and will stop listening on interfaces that have gone away.
statistics-interval Name server statistics will be logged every statistics-interval minutes. The default
is 60. The maximum value is 28 days (40320 minutes). If set to 0, no statistics will be logged.
N OTE
6.2.16.12 Topology
All other things being equal, when the server chooses a name server to query from a list of name
servers, it prefers the one that is topologically closest to itself. The topology statement takes an ad-
dress match list and interprets it in a special way. Each top-level list element is assigned a distance.
Non-negated elements get a distance based on their position in the list, where the closer the match is
to the start of the list, the shorter the distance is between it and the server. A negated match will be
assigned the maximum distance from the server. If there is no match, the address will get a distance
which is further than any non-negated list element, and closer than any negated element. For example,
topology {
10/8;
!1.2.3/24;
{ 1.2/16; 3/8; };
};
will prefer servers on network 10 the most, followed by hosts on network 1.2.0.0 (netmask 255.255.0.0)
and network 3, with the exception of hosts on network 1.2.3 (netmask 255.255.255.0), which is preferred
least of all.
The default topology is
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
N OTE
The response to a DNS query may consist of multiple resource records (RRs) forming a resource records
set (RRset). The name server will normally return the RRs within the RRset in an indeterminate order
(but see the rrset-order statement in Section 6.2.16.14). The client resolver code should rearrange the RRs
as appropriate, that is, using any addresses on the local net in preference to other addresses. However,
not all resolvers can do this or are correctly configured. When a client is using a local server, the sorting
can be performed in the server, based on the client’s address. This only requires configuring the name
servers, not all the clients.
The sortlist statement (see below) takes an address match list and interprets it even more specifically
than the topology statement does (Section 6.2.16.12). Each top level statement in the sortlist must itself
be an explicit address match list with one or two elements. The first element (which may be an IP
address, an IP prefix, an ACL name or a nested address match list) of each top level list is checked
against the source address of the query until a match is found.
Once the source address of the query has been matched, if the top level statement contains only one
element, the actual primitive element that matched the source address is used to select the address in
the response to move to the beginning of the response. If the statement is a list of two elements, then the
second element is treated the same as the address match list in a topology statement. Each top level
element is assigned a distance and the address in the response with the minimum distance is moved to
the beginning of the response.
In the following example, any queries received from any of the addresses of the host itself will get
responses preferring addresses on any of the locally connected networks. Next most preferred are ad-
dresses on the 192.168.1/24 network, and after that either the 192.168.2/24 or 192.168.3/24 network with
no preference shown between these two networks. Queries received from a host on the 192.168.1/24
network will prefer other addresses on that network to the 192.168.2/24 and 192.168.3/24 networks.
Queries received from a host on the 192.168.4/24 or the 192.168.5/24 network will only prefer other
addresses on their directly connected networks.
sortlist {
{ localhost; // IF the local host
{ localnets; // THEN first fit on the
192.168.1/24; // following nets
{ 192.168.2/24; 192.168.3/24; }; }; };
{ 192.168.1/24; // IF on class C 192.168.1
{ 192.168.1/24; // THEN use .1, or .2 or .3
{ 192.168.2/24; 192.168.3/24; }; }; };
{ 192.168.2/24; // IF on class C 192.168.2
{ 192.168.2/24; // THEN use .2, or .1 or .3
{ 192.168.1/24; 192.168.3/24; }; }; };
{ 192.168.3/24; // IF on class C 192.168.3
{ 192.168.3/24; // THEN use .3, or .1 or .2
{ 192.168.1/24; 192.168.2/24; }; }; };
{ { 192.168.4/24; 192.168.5/24; }; // if .4 or .5, prefer that net
};
};
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The following example will give reasonable behavior for the local host and hosts on directly connected
networks. It is similar to the behavior of the address sort in BIND 4.9.x. Responses sent to queries from
the local host will favor any of the directly connected networks. Responses sent to queries from any
other hosts on a directly connected network will prefer addresses on that same network. Responses to
other queries will not be sorted.
sortlist {
{ localhost; localnets; };
{ localnets; };
};
When multiple records are returned in an answer it may be useful to configure the order of the records
placed into the response. The rrset-order statement permits configuration of the ordering of the records
in a multiple record response. See also the sortlist statement, Section 6.2.16.13.
An order spec is defined as follows:
[class class name] [type type name] [name "domain name"] order ordering
If no class is specified, the default is ANY. If no type is specified, the default is ANY. If no name is
specified, the default is ”*” (asterisk).
The legal values for ordering are:
fixed Records are returned in the order they are defined in the zone
file.
random Records are returned in some random order.
cyclic Records are returned in a round-robin order.
For example:
rrset-order {
class IN type A name "host.example.com" order random;
order cyclic;
};
will cause any responses for type A records in class IN that have ”host.example.com” as a suffix, to
always be returned in random order. All other records are returned in cyclic order.
If multiple rrset-order statements appear, they are not combined — the last one applies.
N OTE
The rrset-order statement is not yet fully implemented in BIND 9. BIND 9 cur-
rently does not fully support ”fixed” ordering.
6.2.16.15 Tuning
lame-ttl Sets the number of seconds to cache a lame server indication. 0 disables caching. (This is NOT
recommended.) The default is 600 (10 minutes) and the maximum value is 1800 (30 minutes).
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max-ncache-ttl To reduce network traffic and increase performance, the server stores negative answers.
max-ncache-ttl is used to set a maximum retention time for these answers in the server in seconds.
The default max-ncache-ttl is 10800 seconds (3 hours). max-ncache-ttl cannot exceed 7 days and
will be silently truncated to 7 days if set to a greater value.
max-cache-ttl Sets the maximum time for which the server will cache ordinary (positive) answers. The
default is one week (7 days).
min-roots The minimum number of root servers that is required for a request for the root servers to be
accepted. The default is 2.
N OTE
sig-validity-interval Specifies the number of days into the future when DNSSEC signatures automat-
ically generated as a result of dynamic updates (Section 4.2) will expire. The default is 30 days.
The maximum value is 10 years (3660 days). The signature inception time is unconditionally set
to one hour before the current time to allow for a limited amount of clock skew.
edns-udp-size Sets the advertised EDNS UDP buffer size in bytes. Valid values are 512 to 4096 (values
outside this range will be silently adjusted). The default value is 4096. The usual reason for setting
edns-udp-size to a non-default value it to get UDP answers to pass through broken firewalls that
block fragmented packets and/or block UDP packets that are greater than 512 bytes.
max-udp-size Sets the maximum EDNS UDP message size named will send in bytes. Valid values
are 512 to 4096 (values outside this range will be silently adjusted). The default value is 4096. The
usual reason for setting max-udp-size to a non-default value is to get UDP answers to pass through
broken firewalls that block fragmented packets and/or block UDP packets that are greater than
512 bytes.
masterfile-format Specifies the file format of zone files (see Section 6.3.7). The default value is text,
which is the standard textual representation. Files in other formats than text are typically ex-
pected to be generated by the named-compilezone tool. Note that when a zone file in a different
format than text is loaded, named may omit some of the checks which would be performed for
a file in the text format. In particular, check-names checks do not apply for the raw format. This
means a zone file in the raw format must be generated with the same check level as that specified
in the named configuration file. This statement sets the masterfile-format for all zones, but can be
overridden on a per-zone or per-view basis by including a masterfile-format statement within the
zone or view block in the configuration file.
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clients-per-query, max-clients-per-query These set the initial value (minimum) and maximum number
of recursive simultanious clients for any given query (<qname,qtype,qclass>) that the server will
accept before dropping additional clients. named will attempt to self tune this value and changes
will be logged. The default values are 10 and 100.
This value should reflect how many queries come in for a given name in the time it takes to resolve
that name. If the number of queries exceed this value, named will assume that it is dealing with a
non-responsive zone and will drop additional queries. If it gets a response after dropping queries,
it will raise the estimate. The estimate will then be lowered in 20 minutes if it has remained
unchanged.
If clients-per-query is set to zero, then there is no limit on the number of clients per query and no
queries will be dropped.
If max-clients-per-query is set to zero, then there is no upper bound other than imposed by
recursive-clients.
The server provides some helpful diagnostic information through a number of built-in zones under
the pseudo-top-level-domain bind in the CHAOS class. These zones are part of a built-in view (see
Section 6.2.21) of class CHAOS which is separate from the default view of class IN; therefore, any global
server options such as allow-query do not apply the these zones. If you feel the need to disable these
zones, use the options below, or hide the built-in CHAOS view by defining an explicit view of class
CHAOS that matches all clients.
version The version the server should report via a query of the name version.bind with type TXT,
class CHAOS. The default is the real version number of this server. Specifying version none
disables processing of the queries.
hostname The hostname the server should report via a query of the name hostname.bind with type
TXT, class CHAOS. This defaults to the hostname of the machine hosting the name server as
found by the gethostname() function. The primary purpose of such queries is to identify which of
a group of anycast servers is actually answering your queries. Specifying hostname none; disables
processing of the queries.
server-id The ID of the server should report via a query of the name ID.SERVER with type TXT, class
CHAOS. The primary purpose of such queries is to identify which of a group of anycast servers
is actually answering your queries. Specifying server-id none; disables processing of the queries.
Specifying server-id hostname; will cause named to use the hostname as found by the gethost-
name() function. The default server-id is none.
Named has some built-in empty zones (SOA and NS records only). These are for zones that should
normally be answered locally and which queries should not be sent to the Internet’s root servers. The
offical servers which cover these namespaces return NXDOMAIN responses to these queries. In particu-
lar, these cover the reverse namespace for addresses from RFC 1918 and RFC 3330. They also include the
reverse namespace for IPv6 local address (locally assigned), IPv6 link local addresses, the IPv6 loopback
address and the IPv6 unknown addresss.
Named will attempt to determine if a built in zone already exists or is active (covered by a forward-only
forwarding declaration) and will not not create a empty zone in that case.
The current list of empty zones is:
• 10.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 127.IN-ADDR.ARPA
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6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE
• 254.169.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 16.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 17.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 18.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 19.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 20.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 21.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 22.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 23.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 24.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 25.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 26.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 27.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 28.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 29.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 30.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 31.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 168.192.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 2.0.192.IN-ADDR.ARPA
• 0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.IP6.ARPA
• 1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.IP6.ARPA
• D.F.IP6.ARPA
• 8.E.F.IP6.ARPA
• 9.E.F.IP6.ARPA
• A.E.F.IP6.ARPA
• B.E.F.IP6.ARPA
Empty zones are settable at the view level and only apply to views of class IN. Disabled empty zones are
only inherited from options if there are no disabled empty zones specified at the view level. To override
the options list of disabled zones, you can disable the root zone at the view level, for example:
disable-empty-zone ".";
If you are using the address ranges covered here, you should already have reverse zones covering the
addresses you use. In practice this appears to not be the case with many queries being made to the
infrustructure servers for names in these spaces. So many in fact that sacrificial servers were needed to
be deployed to channel the query load away from the infrustructure servers.
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N OTE
The real parent servers for these zones should disable all empty zone under the
parent zone they serve. For the real root servers, this is all built in empty zones.
This will enable them to return referrals to deeper in the tree.
empty-server Specify what server name will appear in the returned SOA record for empty zones. If
none is specified, then the zone’s name will be used.
empty-contact Specify what contact name will appear in the returned SOA record for empty zones. If
none is specified, then ”.” will be used.
empty-zones-enable Enable or disable all empty zones. By default they are enabled.
disable-empty-zone Disable individual empty zones. By default none are disabled. This option can be
specified multiple times.
The statistics file generated by BIND 9 is similar, but not identical, to that generated by BIND 8.
The statistics dump begins with a line, like:
+++ Statistics Dump +++ (973798949)
The number in parentheses is a standard Unix-style timestamp, measured as seconds since January
1, 1970. Following that line are a series of lines containing a counter type, the value of the counter,
optionally a zone name, and optionally a view name. The lines without view and zone listed are global
statistics for the entire server. Lines with a zone and view name for the given view and zone (the view
name is omitted for the default view).
The statistics dump ends with the line where the number is identical to the number in the beginning
line; for example:
— Statistics Dump — (973798949)
The following statistics counters are maintained:
Each query received by the server will cause exactly one of success, referral, nxrrset, nxdomain, or
failure to be incremented, and may additionally cause the recursion counter to be incremented.
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The additional section cache, also called acache, is an internal cache to improve the response perfor-
mance of BIND 9. When additional section caching is enabled, BIND 9 will cache an internal short-cut
to the additional section content for each answer RR. Note that acache is an internal caching mechanism
of BIND 9, and is not related to the DNS caching server function.
Additional section caching does not change the response content (except the RRsets ordering of the
additional section, see below), but can improve the response performance significantly. It is particularly
effective when BIND 9 acts as an authoritative server for a zone that has many delegations with many
glue RRs.
In order to obtain the maximum performance improvement from additional section caching, setting
additional-from-cache to no is recommended, since the current implementation of acache does not
short-cut of additional section information from the DNS cache data.
One obvious disadvantage of acache is that it requires much more memory for the internal cached data.
Thus, if the response performance does not matter and memory consumption is much more critical,
the acache mechanism can be disabled by setting acache-enable to no. It is also possible to specify the
upper limit of memory consumption for acache by using max-acache-size.
Additional section caching also has a minor effect on the RRset ordering in the additional section. With-
out acache, cyclic order is effective for the additional section as well as the answer and authority sec-
tions. However, additional section caching fixes the ordering when it first caches an RRset for the addi-
tional section, and the same ordering will be kept in succeeding responses, regardless of the setting of
rrset-order. The effect of this should be minor, however, since an RRset in the additional section typ-
ically only contains a small number of RRs (and in many cases it only contains a single RR), in which
case the ordering does not matter much.
The following is a summary of options related to acache.
acache-enable If yes, additional section caching is enabled. The default value is no.
acache-cleaning-interval The server will remove stale cache entries, based on an LRU based algorithm,
every acache-cleaning-interval minutes. The default is 60 minutes. If set to 0, no periodic cleaning
will occur.
max-acache-size The maximum amount of memory in bytes to use for the server’s acache. When the
amount of data in the acache reaches this limit, the server will clean more aggressively so that the
limit is not exceeded. In a server with multiple views, the limit applies separately to the acache of
each view. The default is unlimited, meaning that entries are purged from the acache only at the
periodic cleaning time.
server ip_addr[/prefixlen] {
[ bogus yes_or_no ; ]
[ provide-ixfr yes_or_no ; ]
[ request-ixfr yes_or_no ; ]
[ edns yes_or_no ; ]
[ edns-udp-size number ; ]
[ max-udp-size number ; ]
[ transfers number ; ]
[ transfer-format ( one-answer | many-answers ) ; ]]
[ keys { string ; [ string ; [...]] } ; ]
[ transfer-source (ip4_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ transfer-source-v6 (ip6_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ notify-source (ip4_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ notify-source-v6 (ip6_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.2. CONFIGURATION FILE GRAMMAR
The server statement defines characteristics to be associated with a remote name server. If a prefix length
is specified, then a range of servers is covered. Only the most specific server clause applies regardless of
the order in named.conf.
The server statement can occur at the top level of the configuration file or inside a view statement. If a
view statement contains one or more server statements, only those apply to the view and any top-level
ones are ignored. If a view contains no server statements, any top-level server statements are used as
defaults.
If you discover that a remote server is giving out bad data, marking it as bogus will prevent further
queries to it. The default value of bogus is no.
The provide-ixfr clause determines whether the local server, acting as master, will respond with an
incremental zone transfer when the given remote server, a slave, requests it. If set to yes, incremental
transfer will be provided whenever possible. If set to no, all transfers to the remote server will be non-
incremental. If not set, the value of the provide-ixfr option in the view or global options block is used
as a default.
The request-ixfr clause determines whether the local server, acting as a slave, will request incremental
zone transfers from the given remote server, a master. If not set, the value of the request-ixfr option in
the view or global options block is used as a default.
IXFR requests to servers that do not support IXFR will automatically fall back to AXFR. Therefore, there
is no need to manually list which servers support IXFR and which ones do not; the global default of yes
should always work. The purpose of the provide-ixfr and request-ixfr clauses is to make it possible to
disable the use of IXFR even when both master and slave claim to support it, for example if one of the
servers is buggy and crashes or corrupts data when IXFR is used.
The edns clause determines whether the local server will attempt to use EDNS when communicating
with the remote server. The default is yes.
The edns-udp-size option sets the EDNS UDP size that is advertised by named when querying the
remote server. Valid values are 512 to 4096 bytes (values outside this range will be silently adjusted).
This option is useful when you wish to advertises a different value to this server than the value you
advertise globally, for example, when there is a firewall at the remote site that is blocking large replies.
The max-udp-size option sets the maximum EDNS UDP message size named will send. Valid values
are 512 to 4096 bytes (values outside this range will be silently adjusted). This option is useful when you
know that there is a firewall that is blocking large replies from named.
The server supports two zone transfer methods. The first, one-answer, uses one DNS message per
resource record transferred. many-answers packs as many resource records as possible into a message.
many-answers is more efficient, but is only known to be understood by BIND 9, BIND 8.x, and patched
versions of BIND 4.9.5. You can specify which method to use for a server with the transfer-format
option. If transfer-format is not specified, the transfer-format specified by the options statement will
be used.
transfers is used to limit the number of concurrent inbound zone transfers from the specified server. If
no transfers clause is specified, the limit is set according to the transfers-per-ns option.
The keys clause identifies a key id defined by the key statement, to be used for transaction security
(TSIG, Section 4.5) when talking to the remote server. When a request is sent to the remote server,
a request signature will be generated using the key specified here and appended to the message. A
request originating from the remote server is not required to be signed by this key.
Although the grammar of the keys clause allows for multiple keys, only a single key per server is
currently supported.
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The transfer-source and transfer-source-v6 clauses specify the IPv4 and IPv6 source address to be used
for zone transfer with the remote server, respectively. For an IPv4 remote server, only transfer-source
can be specified. Similarly, for an IPv6 remote server, only transfer-source-v6 can be specified. For more
details, see the description of transfer-source and transfer-source-v6 in Section 6.2.16.7.
The notify-source and notify-source-v6 clauses specify the IPv4 and IPv6 source address to be used for
notify messages sent to remote servers, respectively. For an IPv4 remote server, only notify-source can
be specified. Similarly, for an IPv6 remote server, only notify-source-v6 can be specified.
The query-source and query-source-v6 clauses specify the IPv4 and IPv6 source address to be used
for queries sent to remote servers, respectively. For an IPv4 remote server, only query-source can be
specified. Similarly, for an IPv6 remote server, only query-source-v6 can be specified.
trusted-keys {
string number number number string ;
[ string number number number string ; [...]]
};
The trusted-keys statement defines DNSSEC security roots. DNSSEC is described in Section 4.8. A se-
curity root is defined when the public key for a non-authoritative zone is known, but cannot be securely
obtained through DNS, either because it is the DNS root zone or because its parent zone is unsigned.
Once a key has been configured as a trusted key, it is treated as if it had been validated and proven
secure. The resolver attempts DNSSEC validation on all DNS data in subdomains of a security root.
All keys (and corresponding zones) listed in trusted-keys are deemed to exist regardless of what parent
zones say. Similarly for all keys listed in trusted-keys only those keys are used to validate the DNSKEY
RRset. The parent’s DS RRset will not be used.
The trusted-keys statement can contain multiple key entries, each consisting of the key’s domain name,
flags, protocol, algorithm, and the Base-64 representation of the key data.
view view_name
[class] {
match-clients { address_match_list };
match-destinations { address_match_list };
match-recursive-only yes_or_no ;
[ view_option; ...]
[ zone_statement; ...]
};
The view statement is a powerful feature of BIND 9 that lets a name server answer a DNS query differ-
ently depending on who is asking. It is particularly useful for implementing split DNS setups without
having to run multiple servers.
Each view statement defines a view of the DNS namespace that will be seen by a subset of clients. A
client matches a view if its source IP address matches the address match list of the view’s match-
clients clause and its destination IP address matches the address match list of the view’s match-
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destinations clause. If not specified, both match-clients and match-destinations default to matching
all addresses. In addition to checking IP addresses match-clients and match-destinations can also take
keys which provide an mechanism for the client to select the view. A view can also be specified as
match-recursive-only, which means that only recursive requests from matching clients will match that
view. The order of the view statements is significant — a client request will be resolved in the context of
the first view that it matches.
Zones defined within a view statement will be only be accessible to clients that match the view. By
defining a zone of the same name in multiple views, different zone data can be given to different clients,
for example, ”internal” and ”external” clients in a split DNS setup.
Many of the options given in the options statement can also be used within a view statement, and then
apply only when resolving queries with that view. When no view-specific value is given, the value in
the options statement is used as a default. Also, zone options can have default values specified in the
view statement; these view-specific defaults take precedence over those in the options statement.
Views are class specific. If no class is given, class IN is assumed. Note that all non-IN views must contain
a hint zone, since only the IN class has compiled-in default hints.
If there are no view statements in the config file, a default view that matches any client is automatically
created in class IN. Any zone statements specified on the top level of the configuration file are considered
to be part of this default view, and the options statement will apply to the default view. If any explicit
view statements are present, all zone statements must occur inside view statements.
Here is an example of a typical split DNS setup implemented using view statements:
view "internal" {
// This should match our internal networks.
match-clients { 10.0.0.0/8; };
view "external" {
// Match all clients not matched by the previous view.
match-clients { any; };
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[ allow-query { address_match_list }; ]
[ allow-transfer { address_match_list }; ]
[ allow-update { address_match_list }; ]
[ update-policy { update_policy_rule [...] }; ]
[ also-notify { ip_addr [port ip_port] ; [ ip_addr [port ip_port] ; ... ] }; ]
[ check-names (warn|fail|ignore) ; ]
[ check-mx (warn|fail|ignore) ; ]
[ check-wildcard yes_or_no; ]
[ check-integrity yes_or_no ; ]
[ dialup dialup_option ; ]
[ file string ; ]
[ masterfile-format (text|raw) ; ]
[ journal string ; ]
[ forward (only|first) ; ]
[ forwarders { [ ip_addr [port ip_port] ; ... ] }; ]
[ ixfr-base string ; ]
[ ixfr-tmp-file string ; ]
[ maintain-ixfr-base yes_or_no ; ]
[ max-ixfr-log-size number ; ]
[ max-transfer-idle-out number ; ]
[ max-transfer-time-out number ; ]
[ notify yes_or_no | explicit | master-only ; ]
[ pubkey number number number string ; ]
[ notify-source (ip4_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ notify-source-v6 (ip6_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ zone-statistics yes_or_no ; ]
[ sig-validity-interval number ; ]
[ database string ; ]
[ min-refresh-time number ; ]
[ max-refresh-time number ; ]
[ min-retry-time number ; ]
[ max-retry-time number ; ]
[ key-directory path_name; ]
[ zero-no-soa-ttl yes_or_no ; ]
};
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[ max-transfer-time-out number ; ]
[ notify yes_or_no | explicit | master-only ; ]
[ pubkey number number number string ; ]
[ transfer-source (ip4_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ transfer-source-v6 (ip6_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ alt-transfer-source (ip4_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ alt-transfer-source-v6 (ip6_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ use-alt-transfer-source yes_or_no; ]
[ notify-source (ip4_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ notify-source-v6 (ip6_addr | *) [port ip_port] ; ]
[ zone-statistics yes_or_no ; ]
[ database string ; ]
[ min-refresh-time number ; ]
[ max-refresh-time number ; ]
[ min-retry-time number ; ]
[ max-retry-time number ; ]
[ multi-master yes_or_no ; ]
[ zero-no-soa-ttl yes_or_no ; ]
};
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[ delegation-only yes_or_no ; ]
};
master The server has a master copy of the data for the zone and will be
able to provide authoritative answers for it.
slave A slave zone is a replica of a master zone. The masters list speci-
fies one or more IP addresses of master servers that the slave con-
tacts to update its copy of the zone. Masters list elements can also
be names of other masters lists. By default, transfers are made
from port 53 on the servers; this can be changed for all servers by
specifying a port number before the list of IP addresses, or on a
per-server basis after the IP address. Authentication to the master
can also be done with per-server TSIG keys. If a file is specified,
then the replica will be written to this file whenever the zone is
changed, and reloaded from this file on a server restart. Use of a
file is recommended, since it often speeds server startup and elimi-
nates a needless waste of bandwidth. Note that for large numbers
(in the tens or hundreds of thousands) of zones per server, it is
best to use a two-level naming scheme for zone file names. For ex-
ample, a slave server for the zone example.com might place the
zone contents into a file called ex/example.com where ex/ is
just the first two letters of the zone name. (Most operating systems
behave very slowly if you put 100 000 files into a single directory.)
stub A stub zone is similar to a slave zone, except that it replicates only
the NS records of a master zone instead of the entire zone. Stub
zones are not a standard part of the DNS; they are a feature specific
to the BIND implementation.
Stub zones can be used to eliminate the need for glue NS record
in a parent zone at the expense of maintaining a stub zone entry
and a set of name server addresses in named.conf. This usage is
not recommended for new configurations, and BIND 9 supports
it only in a limited way. In BIND 4/8, zone transfers of a par-
ent zone included the NS records from stub children of that zone.
This meant that, in some cases, users could get away with con-
figuring child stubs only in the master server for the parent zone.
BIND 9 never mixes together zone data from different zones in this
way. Therefore, if a BIND 9 master serving a parent zone has child
stub zones configured, all the slave servers for the parent zone also
need to have the same child stub zones configured.
Stub zones can also be used as a way of forcing the resolution of
a given domain to use a particular set of authoritative servers.
For example, the caching name servers on a private network us-
ing RFC1918 addressing may be configured with stub zones for
10.in-addr.arpa to use a set of internal name servers as the
authoritative servers for that domain.
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6.2.24.2 Class
The zone’s name may optionally be followed by a class. If a class is not specified, class IN (for Internet),
is assumed. This is correct for the vast majority of cases.
The hesiod class is named for an information service from MIT’s Project Athena. It is used to share
information about various systems databases, such as users, groups, printers and so on. The keyword
HS is a synonym for hesiod.
Another MIT development is CHAOSnet, a LAN protocol created in the mid-1970s. Zone data for it can
be specified with the CHAOS class.
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also-notify Only meaningful if notify is active for this zone. The set of machines that will receive a DNS
NOTIFY message for this zone is made up of all the listed name servers (other than the primary
master) for the zone plus any IP addresses specified with also-notify. A port may be specified
with each also-notify address to send the notify messages to a port other than the default of 53.
also-notify is not meaningful for stub zones. The default is the empty list.
check-names This option is used to restrict the character set and syntax of certain domain names in
master files and/or DNS responses received from the network. The default varies according to
zone type. For master zones the default is fail. For slave zones the default is warn.
database Specify the type of database to be used for storing the zone data. The string following the
database keyword is interpreted as a list of whitespace-delimited words. The first word identi-
fies the database type, and any subsequent words are passed as arguments to the database to be
interpreted in a way specific to the database type.
The default is "rbt", BIND 9’s native in-memory red-black-tree database. This database does not
take arguments.
Other values are possible if additional database drivers have been linked into the server. Some
sample drivers are included with the distribution but none are linked in by default.
delegation-only The flag only applies to hint and stub zones. If set to yes, then the zone will also be
treated as if it is also a delegation-only type zone.
forward Only meaningful if the zone has a forwarders list. The only value causes the lookup to fail
after trying the forwarders and getting no answer, while first would allow a normal lookup to be
tried.
forwarders Used to override the list of global forwarders. If it is not specified in a zone of type forward,
no forwarding is done for the zone and the global options are not used.
ixfr-base Was used in BIND 8 to specify the name of the transaction log (journal) file for dynamic update
and IXFR. BIND 9 ignores the option and constructs the name of the journal file by appending ”.
jnl” to the name of the zone file.
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journal Allow the default journal’s file name to be overridden. The default is the zone’s file with ”.
jnl” appended. This is applicable to master and slave zones.
pubkey In BIND 8, this option was intended for specifying a public zone key for verification of signa-
tures in DNSSEC signed zones when they are loaded from disk. BIND 9 does not verify signatures
on load and ignores the option.
zone-statistics If yes, the server will keep statistical information for this zone, which can be dumped
to the statistics-file defined in the server options.
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BIND 9 supports two alternative methods of granting clients the right to perform dynamic updates to a
zone, configured by the allow-update and update-policy option, respectively.
The allow-update clause works the same way as in previous versions of BIND. It grants given clients
the permission to update any record of any name in the zone.
The update-policy clause is new in BIND 9 and allows more fine-grained control over what updates are
allowed. A set of rules is specified, where each rule either grants or denies permissions for one or more
names to be updated by one or more identities. If the dynamic update request message is signed (that
is, it includes either a TSIG or SIG(0) record), the identity of the signer can be determined.
Rules are specified in the update-policy zone option, and are only meaningful for master zones. When
the update-policy statement is present, it is a configuration error for the allow-update statement to be
present. The update-policy statement only examines the signer of a message; the source address is not
relevant.
This is how a rule definition looks:
Each rule grants or denies privileges. Once a message has successfully matched a rule, the operation is
immediately granted or denied and no further rules are examined. A rule is matched when the signer
matches the identity field, the name matches the name field in accordance with the nametype field, and
the type matches the types specified in the type field.
The identity field specifies a name or a wildcard name. Normally, this is the name of the TSIG or SIG(0)
key used to sign the update request. When a TKEY exchange has been used to create a shared secret,
the identity of the shared secret is the same as the identity of the key used to authenticate the TKEY
exchange. When the identity field specifies a wildcard name, it is subject to DNS wildcard expansion,
so the rule will apply to multiple identities. The identity field must contain a fully qualified domain
name.
The nametype field has 6 values: name, subdomain, wildcard, self, selfsub, and selfwild.
In all cases, the name field must specify a fully qualified domain name.
If no types are explicitly specified, this rule matches all types except RRSIG, NS, SOA, and NSEC. Types
may be specified by name, including ”ANY” (ANY matches all types except NSEC, which can never be
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updated). Note that when an attempt is made to delete all records associated with a name, the rules are
checked for each existing record type.
This section, largely borrowed from RFC 1034, describes the concept of a Resource Record (RR) and
explains when each is used. Since the publication of RFC 1034, several new RRs have been identified
and implemented in the DNS. These are also included.
A domain name identifies a node. Each node has a set of resource information, which may be empty.
The set of resource information associated with a particular name is composed of separate RRs. The
order of RRs in a set is not significant and need not be preserved by name servers, resolvers, or other
parts of the DNS. However, sorting of multiple RRs is permitted for optimization purposes, for example,
to specify that a particular nearby server be tried first. See Section 6.2.16.13 and Section 6.2.16.14.
The components of a Resource Record are:
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The following classes of resource records are currently valid in the DNS:
IN The Internet.
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The owner name is often implicit, rather than forming an integral part of the RR. For example, many
name servers internally form tree or hash structures for the name space, and chain RRs off nodes. The
remaining RR parts are the fixed header (type, class, TTL) which is consistent for all RRs, and a variable
part (RDATA) that fits the needs of the resource being described.
The meaning of the TTL field is a time limit on how long an RR can be kept in a cache. This limit
does not apply to authoritative data in zones; it is also timed out, but by the refreshing policies for
the zone. The TTL is assigned by the administrator for the zone where the data originates. While
short TTLs can be used to minimize caching, and a zero TTL prohibits caching, the realities of Internet
performance suggest that these times should be on the order of days for the typical host. If a change
can be anticipated, the TTL can be reduced prior to the change to minimize inconsistency during the
change, and then increased back to its former value following the change.
The data in the RDATA section of RRs is carried as a combination of binary strings and domain names.
The domain names are frequently used as ”pointers” to other data in the DNS.
RRs are represented in binary form in the packets of the DNS protocol, and are usually represented in
highly encoded form when stored in a name server or resolver. In the examples provided in RFC 1034,
a style similar to that used in master files was employed in order to show the contents of RRs. In this
format, most RRs are shown on a single line, although continuation lines are possible using parentheses.
The start of the line gives the owner of the RR. If a line begins with a blank, then the owner is assumed
to be the same as that of the previous RR. Blank lines are often included for readability.
Following the owner, we list the TTL, type, and class of the RR. Class and type use the mnemonics
defined above, and TTL is an integer before the type field. In order to avoid ambiguity in parsing, type
and class mnemonics are disjoint, TTLs are integers, and the type mnemonic is always last. The IN class
and TTL values are often omitted from examples in the interests of clarity.
The resource data or RDATA section of the RR are given using knowledge of the typical representation
for the data.
For example, we might show the RRs carried in a message as:
ISI.EDU. MX 10 VENERA.ISI.EDU.
MX 10 VAXA.ISI.EDU
VENERA.ISI.EDU A 128.9.0.32
A 10.1.0.52
VAXA.ISI.EDU A 10.2.0.27
A 128.9.0.33
The MX RRs have an RDATA section which consists of a 16-bit number followed by a domain name.
The address RRs use a standard IP address format to contain a 32-bit internet address.
The above example shows six RRs, with two RRs at each of three domain names.
Similarly we might see:
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XX.LCS.MIT.EDU. IN A 10.0.0.44
CH A MIT.EDU. 2420
This example shows two addresses for XX.LCS.MIT.EDU, each of a different class.
As described above, domain servers store information as a series of resource records, each of which
contains a particular piece of information about a given domain name (which is usually, but not always,
a host). The simplest way to think of a RR is as a typed pair of data, a domain name matched with a
relevant datum, and stored with some additional type information to help systems determine when the
RR is relevant.
MX records are used to control delivery of email. The data specified in the record is a priority and a
domain name. The priority controls the order in which email delivery is attempted, with the lowest
number first. If two priorities are the same, a server is chosen randomly. If no servers at a given priority
are responding, the mail transport agent will fall back to the next largest priority. Priority numbers do
not have any absolute meaning — they are relevant only respective to other MX records for that domain
name. The domain name given is the machine to which the mail will be delivered. It must have an
associated address record (A or AAAA) — CNAME is not sufficient.
For a given domain, if there is both a CNAME record and an MX record, the MX record is in error, and
will be ignored. Instead, the mail will be delivered to the server specified in the MX record pointed to
by the CNAME.
For example:
example.com. IN MX 10 mail.example.com.
IN MX 10 mail2.example.com.
IN MX 20 mail.backup.org.
mail.example.com. IN A 10.0.0.1
mail2.example.com. IN A 10.0.0.2
Mail delivery will be attempted to mail.example.com and mail2.example.com (in any order), and
if neither of those succeed, delivery to mail.backup.org will be attempted.
The time-to-live of the RR field is a 32-bit integer represented in units of seconds, and is primarily used
by resolvers when they cache RRs. The TTL describes how long a RR can be cached before it should be
discarded. The following three types of TTL are currently used in a zone file.
SOA The last field in the SOA is the negative caching TTL. This controls how
long other servers will cache no-such-domain (NXDOMAIN) responses
from you.
The maximum time for negative caching is 3 hours (3h).
$TTL The $TTL directive at the top of the zone file (before the SOA) gives a
default TTL for every RR without a specific TTL set.
RR TTLs Each RR can have a TTL as the second field in the RR, which will control
how long other servers can cache the it.
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All of these TTLs default to units of seconds, though units can be explicitly specified, for example,
1h30m.
Reverse name resolution (that is, translation from IP address to name) is achieved by means of the
in-addr.arpa domain and PTR records. Entries in the in-addr.arpa domain are made in least-to-most
significant order, read left to right. This is the opposite order to the way IP addresses are usually writ-
ten. Thus, a machine with an IP address of 10.1.2.3 would have a corresponding in-addr.arpa name of
3.2.1.10.in-addr.arpa. This name should have a PTR resource record whose data field is the name of the
machine or, optionally, multiple PTR records if the machine has more than one name. For example, in
the [example.com] domain:
$ORIGIN 2.1.10.in-addr.arpa
3 IN PTR foo.example.com.
N OTE
The $ORIGIN lines in the examples are for providing context to the examples
only-they do not necessarily appear in the actual usage. They are only used
here to indicate that the example is relative to the listed origin.
The Master File Format was initially defined in RFC 1035 and has subsequently been extended. While
the Master File Format itself is class independent all records in a Master File must be of the same class.
Master File Directives include $ORIGIN, $INCLUDE, and $TTL.
$ORIGIN example.com.
WWW CNAME MAIN-SERVER
is equivalent to
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Read and process the file filename as if it were included into the file at this point. If origin is specified
the file is processed with $ORIGIN set to that value, otherwise the current $ORIGIN is used.
The origin and the current domain name revert to the values they had prior to the $INCLUDE once the
file has been read.
N OTE
RFC 1035 specifies that the current origin should be restored after an $IN-
CLUDE, but it is silent on whether the current domain name should also be
restored. BIND 9 restores both of them. This could be construed as a devia-
tion from RFC 1035, a feature, or both.
range This can be one of two forms: start-stop or start-stop/step. If the first
form is used, then step is set to 1. All of start, stop and step must be
positive.
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CHAPTER 6. BIND 9 CONFIGURATION REFERENCE 6.3. ZONE FILE
lhs lhs describes the owner name of the resource records to be created.
Any single $ (dollar sign) symbols within the lhs side are replaced by
the iterator value. To get a $ in the output you need to escape the $
using a backslash \, e.g. \$. The $ may optionally be followed by
modifiers which change the offset from the iterator, field width and
base. Modifiers are introduced by a { immediately following the $
as ${offset[,width[,base]]}. For example, ${-20,3,d} subtracts 20 from
the current value, prints the result as a decimal in a zero-padded field
of width 3. Available output forms are decimal (d), octal (o) and hex-
adecimal (x or X for uppercase). The default modifier is ${0,0,d}. If the
lhs is not absolute, the current $ORIGIN is appended to the name.
For compatibility with earlier versions, $$ is still recognized as indi-
cating a literal $ in the output.
ttl Specifies the time-to-live of the generated records. If not specified this
will be inherited using the normal ttl inheritance rules.
class and ttl can be entered in either order.
class Specifies the class of the generated records. This must match the zone
class if it is specified.
class and ttl can be entered in either order.
type At present the only supported types are PTR, CNAME, DNAME, A,
AAAA and NS.
rhs A domain name. It is processed similarly to lhs.
The $GENERATE directive is a BIND extension and not part of the standard zone file format.
BIND 8 does not support the optional TTL and CLASS fields.
In addition to the standard textual format, BIND 9 supports the ability to read or dump to zone files
in other formats. The raw format is currently available as an additional format. It is a binary format
representing BIND 9’s internal data structure directly, thereby remarkably improving the loading time.
For a primary server, a zone file in the raw format is expected to be generated from a textual zone file
by the named-compilezone command. For a secondary server or for a dynamic zone, it is automatically
generated (if this format is specified by the masterfile-format option) when named dumps the zone
contents after zone transfer or when applying prior updates.
If a zone file in a binary format needs manual modification, it first must be converted to a textual form by
the named-compilezone command. All necessary modification should go to the text file, which should
then be converted to the binary form by the named-compilezone command again.
Although the raw format uses the network byte order and avoids architecture-dependent data align-
ment so that it is as much portable as possible, it is primarily expected to be used inside the same single
system. In order to export a zone file in the raw format or make a portable backup of the file, it is
recommended to convert the file to the standard textual representation.
81
Chapter 7
Access Control Lists (ACLs), are address match lists that you can set up and nickname for future use in
allow-notify, allow-query, allow-recursion, blackhole, allow-transfer, etc.
Using ACLs allows you to have finer control over who can access your name server, without cluttering
up your config files with huge lists of IP addresses.
It is a good idea to use ACLs, and to control access to your server. Limiting access to your server by
outside parties can help prevent spoofing and denial of service (DoS) attacks against your server.
Here is an example of how to properly apply ACLs:
// Set up an ACL called our-nets. Replace this with the real IP numbers.
acl our-nets { x.x.x.x/24; x.x.x.x/21; };
options {
...
...
allow-query { our-nets; };
allow-recursion { our-nets; };
...
blackhole { bogusnets; };
...
};
zone "example.com" {
type master;
file "m/example.com";
allow-query { any; };
};
This allows recursive queries of the server from the outside unless recursion has been previously dis-
abled.
For more information on how to use ACLs to protect your server, see the AUSCERT advisory at:
83
7.2. CHROOT AND SETUID CHAPTER 7. BIND 9 SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
<ftp://ftp.auscert.org.au/pub/auscert/advisory/AL-1999.004.dns dos>
On UNIX servers, it is possible to run BIND in a chrooted environment (using the chroot() function) by
specifying the ”-t” option. This can help improve system security by placing BIND in a ”sandbox”,
which will limit the damage done if a server is compromised.
Another useful feature in the UNIX version of BIND is the ability to run the daemon as an unprivileged
user ( -u user ). We suggest running as an unprivileged user when using the chroot feature.
Here is an example command line to load BIND in a chroot sandbox, /var/named, and to run named
setuid to user 202:
/usr/local/bin/named -u 202 -t /var/named
In order for a chroot environment to work properly in a particular directory (for example, /var/
named), you will need to set up an environment that includes everything BIND needs to run. From
BIND’s point of view, /var/named is the root of the filesystem. You will need to adjust the values of
options like like directory and pid-file to account for this.
Unlike with earlier versions of BIND, you will typically not need to compile named statically nor install
shared libraries under the new root. However, depending on your operating system, you may need to
set up things like /dev/zero, /dev/random, /dev/log, and /etc/localtime.
Prior to running the named daemon, use the touch utility (to change file access and modification times)
or the chown utility (to set the user id and/or group id) on files to which you want BIND to write.
N OTE
Note that if the named daemon is running as an unprivileged user, it will not be
able to bind to new restricted ports if the server is reloaded.
Access to the dynamic update facility should be strictly limited. In earlier versions of BIND, the only
way to do this was based on the IP address of the host requesting the update, by listing an IP address
or network prefix in the allow-update zone option. This method is insecure since the source address of
the update UDP packet is easily forged. Also note that if the IP addresses allowed by the allow-update
option include the address of a slave server which performs forwarding of dynamic updates, the master
can be trivially attacked by sending the update to the slave, which will forward it to the master with its
own source IP address causing the master to approve it without question.
For these reasons, we strongly recommend that updates be cryptographically authenticated by means
of transaction signatures (TSIG). That is, the allow-update option should list only TSIG key names, not
IP addresses or network prefixes. Alternatively, the new update-policy option can be used.
84
CHAPTER 7. BIND 9 SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS 7.3. DYNAMIC UPDATE SECURITY
Some sites choose to keep all dynamically-updated DNS data in a subdomain and delegate that subdo-
main to a separate zone. This way, the top-level zone containing critical data such as the IP addresses of
public web and mail servers need not allow dynamic update at all.
85
Chapter 8
Troubleshooting
8.1.1 It’s not working; how can I figure out what’s wrong?
The best solution to solving installation and configuration issues is to take preventative measures by
setting up logging files beforehand. The log files provide a source of hints and information that can be
used to figure out what went wrong and how to fix the problem.
87
Appendix A
Appendices
A.1 Acknowledgments
Although the ”official” beginning of the Domain Name System occurred in 1984 with the publication of
RFC 920, the core of the new system was described in 1983 in RFCs 882 and 883. From 1984 to 1987, the
ARPAnet (the precursor to today’s Internet) became a testbed of experimentation for developing the new
naming/addressing scheme in a rapidly expanding, operational network environment. New RFCs were
written and published in 1987 that modified the original documents to incorporate improvements based
on the working model. RFC 1034, ”Domain Names-Concepts and Facilities”, and RFC 1035, ”Domain
Names-Implementation and Specification” were published and became the standards upon which all
DNS implementations are built.
The first working domain name server, called ”Jeeves”, was written in 1983-84 by Paul Mockapetris for
operation on DEC Tops-20 machines located at the University of Southern California’s Information Sci-
ences Institute (USC-ISI) and SRI International’s Network Information Center (SRI-NIC). A DNS server
for Unix machines, the Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND) package, was written soon after by a
group of graduate students at the University of California at Berkeley under a grant from the US Defense
Advanced Research Projects Administration (DARPA).
Versions of BIND through 4.8.3 were maintained by the Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) at
UC Berkeley. Douglas Terry, Mark Painter, David Riggle and Songnian Zhou made up the initial BIND
project team. After that, additional work on the software package was done by Ralph Campbell. Kevin
Dunlap, a Digital Equipment Corporation employee on loan to the CSRG, worked on BIND for 2 years,
from 1985 to 1987. Many other people also contributed to BIND development during that time: Doug
Kingston, Craig Partridge, Smoot Carl-Mitchell, Mike Muuss, Jim Bloom and Mike Schwartz. BIND
maintenance was subsequently handled by Mike Karels and O. Kure.
BIND versions 4.9 and 4.9.1 were released by Digital Equipment Corporation (now Compaq Computer
Corporation). Paul Vixie, then a DEC employee, became BIND’s primary caretaker. He was assisted
by Phil Almquist, Robert Elz, Alan Barrett, Paul Albitz, Bryan Beecher, Andrew Partan, Andy Cheren-
son, Tom Limoncelli, Berthold Paffrath, Fuat Baran, Anant Kumar, Art Harkin, Win Treese, Don Lewis,
Christophe Wolfhugel, and others.
BIND version 4.9.2 was sponsored by Vixie Enterprises. Paul Vixie became BIND’s principal archi-
tect/programmer.
BIND versions from 4.9.3 onward have been developed and maintained by the Internet Systems Con-
sortium and its predecessor, the Internet Software Consortium, with support being provided by ISC’s
sponsors. As co-architects/programmers, Bob Halley and Paul Vixie released the first production-ready
version of BIND version 8 in May 1997.
BIND development work is made possible today by the sponsorship of several corporations, and by the
tireless work efforts of numerous individuals.
89
A.2. GENERAL DNS REFERENCE INFORMATION APPENDIX A. APPENDICES
IPv6 addresses are 128-bit identifiers for interfaces and sets of interfaces which were introduced in the
DNS to facilitate scalable Internet routing. There are three types of addresses: Unicast, an identifier for
a single interface; Anycast, an identifier for a set of interfaces; and Multicast, an identifier for a set of
interfaces. Here we describe the global Unicast address scheme. For more information, see RFC 3587.
IPv6 unicast addresses consist of a global routing prefix, a subnet identifier, and an interface identifier.
The global routing prefix is provided by the upstream provider or ISP, and (roughly) corresponds to the
IPv4 network section of the address range. The subnet identifier is for local subnetting, much the same as
subnetting an IPv4 /16 network into /24 subnets. The interface identifier is the address of an individual
interface on a given network; in IPv6, addresses belong to interfaces rather than to machines.
The subnetting capability of IPv6 is much more flexible than that of IPv4: subnetting can be carried out
on bit boundaries, in much the same way as Classless InterDomain Routing (CIDR), and the DNS PTR
representation (”nibble” format) makes setting up reverse zones easier.
The Interface Identifier must be unique on the local link, and is usually generated automatically by
the IPv6 implementation, although it is usually possible to override the default setting if necessary. A
typical IPv6 address might look like: 2001:db8:201:9:a00:20ff:fe81:2b32
IPv6 address specifications often contain long strings of zeros, so the architects have included a short-
hand for specifying them. The double colon (‘::’) indicates the longest possible string of zeros that can
fit, and can be used only once in an address.
Specification documents for the Internet protocol suite, including the DNS, are published as part of the
Request for Comments (RFCs) series of technical notes. The standards themselves are defined by the
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). RFCs can
be obtained online via FTP at:
ftp://www.isi.edu/in-notes/RFCxxxx.txt <ftp://www.isi.edu/in-notes/>
(where xxxx is the number of the RFC). RFCs are also available via the Web at:
<http://www.ietf.org/rfc/>.
References
Standards
[RFC1034] Domain Names — Concepts and Facilities, P.V. Mockapetris, November 1987.
[RFC1035] Domain Names — Implementation and Specification, P. V. Mockapetris, November 1987.
[RFC974] Mail Routing and the Domain System, C. Partridge, January 1986.
Proposed Standards
90
APPENDIX A. APPENDICES A.3. BIBLIOGRAPHY (AND SUGGESTED READING)
[RFC2136] Dynamic Updates in the Domain Name System, P. Vixie, S. Thomson, Y. Rekhter, and J.
Bound, April 1997.
[RFC2181] Clarifications to the DNS Specification, R., R. Bush Elz, July 1997.
[RFC2308] Negative Caching of DNS Queries, M. Andrews, March 1998.
[RFC2671] Extension Mechanisms for DNS (EDNS0), P. Vixie, August 1997.
[RFC2672] Non-Terminal DNS Name Redirection, M. Crawford, August 1999.
[RFC2845] Secret Key Transaction Authentication for DNS (TSIG), P. Vixie, O. Gudmundsson, D. East-
lake, 3rd, and B. Wellington, May 2000.
[RFC2930] Secret Key Establishment for DNS (TKEY RR), D. Eastlake, 3rd, September 2000.
[RFC2931] DNS Request and Transaction Signatures (SIG(0)s), D. Eastlake, 3rd, September 2000.
[RFC3007] Secure Domain Name System (DNS) Dynamic Update, B. Wellington, November 2000.
[RFC3645] Generic Security Service Algorithm for Secret Key Transaction Authentication for DNS (GSS-
TSIG), S. Kwan, P. Garg, J. Gilroy, L. Esibov, J. Westhead, and R. Hall, October 2003.
[RFC1535] A Security Problem and Proposed Correction With Widely Deployed DNS Software., E.
Gavron, October 1993.
[RFC1536] Common DNS Implementation Errors and Suggested Fixes, A. Kumar, J. Postel, C. Neuman,
P. Danzig, and S. Miller, October 1993.
[RFC1982] Serial Number Arithmetic, R. Elz and R. Bush, August 1996.
[RFC4074] Common Misbehaviour Against DNS Queries for IPv6 Addresses, Y. Morishita and T. Jinmei,
May 2005.
[RFC1183] New DNS RR Definitions, C.F. Everhart, L. A. Mamakos, R. Ullmann, and P. Mockapetris,
October 1990.
[RFC1706] DNS NSAP Resource Records, B. Manning and R. Colella, October 1994.
[RFC1876] A Means for Expressing Location Information in the Domain Name System, C. Davis, P. Vixie,
T., and I. Dickinson, January 1996.
[RFC2052] A DNS RR for Specifying the Location of Services., A. Gulbrandsen and P. Vixie, October
1996.
91
A.3. BIBLIOGRAPHY (AND SUGGESTED READING) APPENDIX A. APPENDICES
[RFC2163] Using the Internet DNS to Distribute MIXER Conformant Global Address Mapping, A. Al-
locchio, January 1998.
[RFC2168] Resolution of Uniform Resource Identifiers using the Domain Name System, R. Daniel and M.
Mealling, June 1997.
[RFC2230] Key Exchange Delegation Record for the DNS, R. Atkinson, October 1997.
[RFC2536] DSA KEYs and SIGs in the Domain Name System (DNS), D. Eastlake, 3rd, March 1999.
[RFC2537] RSA/MD5 KEYs and SIGs in the Domain Name System (DNS), D. Eastlake, 3rd, March
1999.
[RFC2538] Storing Certificates in the Domain Name System (DNS), D. Eastlake, 3rd and O. Gudmunds-
son, March 1999.
[RFC2539] Storage of Diffie-Hellman Keys in the Domain Name System (DNS), D. Eastlake, 3rd, March
1999.
[RFC2540] Detached Domain Name System (DNS) Information, D. Eastlake, 3rd, March 1999.
[RFC2782] A DNS RR for specifying the location of services (DNS SRV), A. GulbrandsenP. VixieL. Esi-
bov, February 2000.
[RFC2915] The Naming Authority Pointer (NAPTR) DNS Resource Record, M. MeallingR. Daniel,
September 2000.
[RFC3110] RSA/SHA-1 SIGs and RSA KEYs in the Domain Name System (DNS), D. Eastlake, 3rd, May
2001.
[RFC3123] A DNS RR Type for Lists of Address Prefixes (APL RR), P. Koch, June 2001.
[RFC3596] DNS Extensions to support IP version 6, S. Thomson, C. Huitema, V. Ksinant, and M.
Souissi, October 2003.
[RFC3597] Handling of Unknown DNS Resource Record (RR) Types, A. Gustafsson, September 2003.
[RFC1101] DNS Encoding of Network Names and Other Types, P. V. Mockapetris, April 1989.
[RFC1123] Requirements for Internet Hosts - Application and Support, Braden, October 1989.
[RFC1591] Domain Name System Structure and Delegation, J. Postel, March 1994.
[RFC2317] Classless IN-ADDR.ARPA Delegation, H. Eidnes, G. de Groot, and P. Vixie, March 1998.
[RFC2826] IAB Technical Comment on the Unique DNS Root, Internet Architecture Board, May 2000.
[RFC2929] Domain Name System (DNS) IANA Considerations, D. Eastlake, 3rd, E. Brunner-Williams,
and B. Manning, September 2000.
DNS Operations
92
APPENDIX A. APPENDICES A.3. BIBLIOGRAPHY (AND SUGGESTED READING)
[RFC2825] A Tangled Web: Issues of I18N, Domain Names, and the Other Internet protocols, IAB and R.
Daigle, May 2000.
[RFC3490] Internationalizing Domain Names in Applications (IDNA), P. Faltstrom, P. Hoffman, and A.
Costello, March 2003.
[RFC3491] Nameprep: A Stringprep Profile for Internationalized Domain Names, P. Hoffman and M.
Blanchet, March 2003.
[RFC3492] Punycode: A Bootstring encoding of Unicode for Internationalized Domain Names in Applica-
tions (IDNA), A. Costello, March 2003.
[RFC1464] Using the Domain Name System To Store Arbitrary String Attributes, R. Rosenbaum, May
1993.
[RFC1713] Tools for DNS Debugging, A. Romao, November 1994.
[RFC1794] DNS Support for Load Balancing, T. Brisco, April 1995.
[RFC2240] A Legal Basis for Domain Name Allocation, O. Vaughan, November 1997.
[RFC2345] Domain Names and Company Name Retrieval, J. Klensin, T. Wolf, and G. Oglesby, May
1998.
[RFC2352] A Convention For Using Legal Names as Domain Names, O. Vaughan, May 1998.
[RFC2352] A Convention For Using Legal Names as Domain Names, O. Vaughan, May 1998.
[RFC3071] Reflections on the DNS, RFC 1591, and Categories of Domains, J. Klensin, February 2001.
[RFC3258] Distributing Authoritative Name Servers via Shared Unicast Addresses, T. Hardie, April
2002.
[RFC3901] DNS IPv6 Transport Operational Guidelines, A. Durand and J. Ihren, September 2004.
[RFC1712] DNS Encoding of Geographical Location, C. Farrell, M. Schulze, S. Pleitner, and D. Baldoni,
November 1994.
[RFC2673] Binary Labels in the Domain Name System, M. Crawford, August 1999.
[RFC2874] DNS Extensions to Support IPv6 Address Aggregation and Renumbering, M. Crawford and
C. Huitema, July 2000.
[RFC2065] Domain Name System Security Extensions, D. Eastlake, 3rd and C. Kaufman, January
1997.
[RFC2137] Secure Domain Name System Dynamic Update, D. Eastlake, 3rd, April 1997.
[RFC2535] Domain Name System Security Extensions, D. Eastlake, 3rd, March 1999.
[RFC3008] Domain Name System Security (DNSSEC) Signing Authority, B. Wellington, November
2000.
[RFC3090] DNS Security Extension Clarification on Zone Status, E. Lewis, March 2001.
[RFC3445] Limiting the Scope of the KEY Resource Record (RR), D. Massey and S. Rose, December
2002.
93
A.3. BIBLIOGRAPHY (AND SUGGESTED READING) APPENDIX A. APPENDICES
[RFC3655] Redefinition of DNS Authenticated Data (AD) bit, B. Wellington and O. Gudmundsson,
November 2003.
[RFC3658] Delegation Signer (DS) Resource Record (RR), O. Gudmundsson, December 2003.
[RFC3755] Legacy Resolver Compatibility for Delegation Signer (DS), S. Weiler, May 2004.
[RFC3757] Domain Name System KEY (DNSKEY) Resource Record (RR) Secure Entry Point (SEP) Flag,
O. Kolkman, J. Schlyter, and E. Lewis, April 2004.
[RFC3845] DNS Security (DNSSEC) NextSECure (NSEC) RDATA Format, J. Schlyter, August 2004.
Internet Drafts (IDs) are rough-draft working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force. They
are, in essence, RFCs in the preliminary stages of development. Implementors are cautioned not to
regard IDs as archival, and they should not be quoted or cited in any formal documents unless accom-
panied by the disclaimer that they are ”works in progress.” IDs have a lifespan of six months after which
they are deleted unless updated by their authors.
References
[1] DNS and BIND, Paul Albitz and Cricket Liu, Copyright
c 1998 Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly
and Associates.
94
Appendix B
Manual pages
B.1 dig
Name
Synopsis
dig [@server] [-b address] [-c class] [-f filename] [-k filename] [-p
port#] [-q name] [-t type] [-x addr] [-y [hmac:]name:key] [-4] [-6]
[name] [type] [class] [queryopt...]
dig [-h]
dig [global-queryopt...] [query...]
DESCRIPTION
dig (domain information groper) is a flexible tool for interrogating DNS name servers. It performs DNS
lookups and displays the answers that are returned from the name server(s) that were queried. Most
DNS administrators use dig to troubleshoot DNS problems because of its flexibility, ease of use and
clarity of output. Other lookup tools tend to have less functionality than dig.
Although dig is normally used with command-line arguments, it also has a batch mode of operation
for reading lookup requests from a file. A brief summary of its command-line arguments and options is
printed when the -h option is given. Unlike earlier versions, the BIND9 implementation of dig allows
multiple lookups to be issued from the command line.
Unless it is told to query a specific name server, dig will try each of the servers listed in /etc/resolv.
conf.
When no command line arguments or options are given, will perform an NS query for ”.” (the root).
It is possible to set per-user defaults for dig via ${HOME}/.digrc. This file is read and any options in
it are applied before the command line arguments.
The IN and CH class names overlap with the IN and CH top level domains names. Either use the -t
and -c options to specify the type and class or use the -q the specify the domain name or use ”IN.” and
”CH.” when looking up these top level domains.
95
B.1. DIG APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
SIMPLE USAGE
server is the name or IP address of the name server to query. This can be an IPv4 address in dotted-
decimal notation or an IPv6 address in colon-delimited notation. When the supplied server ar-
gument is a hostname, dig resolves that name before querying that name server. If no server ar-
gument is provided, dig consults /etc/resolv.conf and queries the name servers listed there.
The reply from the name server that responds is displayed.
type indicates what type of query is required — ANY, A, MX, SIG, etc. type can be any valid query
type. If no type argument is supplied, dig will perform a lookup for an A record.
OPTIONS
The -b option sets the source IP address of the query to address. This must be a valid address on one
of the host’s network interfaces or ”0.0.0.0” or ”::”. An optional port may be specified by appending
”#<port>”
The default query class (IN for internet) is overridden by the -c option. class is any valid class, such
as HS for Hesiod records or CH for CHAOSNET records.
The -f option makes dig operate in batch mode by reading a list of lookup requests to process from
the file filename. The file contains a number of queries, one per line. Each entry in the file should be
organised in the same way they would be presented as queries to dig using the command-line interface.
If a non-standard port number is to be queried, the -p option is used. port# is the port number that
dig will send its queries instead of the standard DNS port number 53. This option would be used to test
a name server that has been configured to listen for queries on a non-standard port number.
The -4 option forces dig to only use IPv4 query transport. The -6 option forces dig to only use IPv6
query transport.
The -t option sets the query type to type. It can be any valid query type which is supported in BIND9.
The default query type ”A”, unless the -x option is supplied to indicate a reverse lookup. A zone
transfer can be requested by specifying a type of AXFR. When an incremental zone transfer (IXFR) is
required, type is set to ixfr=N. The incremental zone transfer will contain the changes made to the
zone since the serial number in the zone’s SOA record was N.
The -q option sets the query name to name. This useful do distingish the name from other arguments.
Reverse lookups - mapping addresses to names - are simplified by the -x option. addr is an IPv4
address in dotted-decimal notation, or a colon-delimited IPv6 address. When this option is used, there
is no need to provide the name, class and type arguments. dig automatically performs a lookup for a
name like 11.12.13.10.in-addr.arpa and sets the query type and class to PTR and IN respectively.
By default, IPv6 addresses are looked up using nibble format under the IP6.ARPA domain. To use the
older RFC1886 method using the IP6.INT domain specify the -i option. Bit string labels (RFC2874) are
now experimental and are not attempted.
To sign the DNS queries sent by dig and their responses using transaction signatures (TSIG), specify a
TSIG key file using the -k option. You can also specify the TSIG key itself on the command line using
the -y option; hmac is the type of the TSIG, default HMAC-MD5, name is the name of the TSIG key
and key is the actual key. The key is a base-64 encoded string, typically generated by dnssec-keygen(8).
Caution should be taken when using the -y option on multi-user systems as the key can be visible in
the output from ps(1) or in the shell’s history file. When using TSIG authentication with dig, the name
96
APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.1. DIG
server that is queried needs to know the key and algorithm that is being used. In BIND, this is done by
providing appropriate key and server statements in named.conf.
QUERY OPTIONS
dig provides a number of query options which affect the way in which lookups are made and the results
displayed. Some of these set or reset flag bits in the query header, some determine which sections of the
answer get printed, and others determine the timeout and retry strategies.
Each query option is identified by a keyword preceded by a plus sign (+). Some keywords set or reset an
option. These may be preceded by the string no to negate the meaning of that keyword. Other keywords
assign values to options like the timeout interval. They have the form +keyword=value. The query
options are:
+[no]tcp Use [do not use] TCP when querying name servers. The default behaviour is to use UDP
unless an AXFR or IXFR query is requested, in which case a TCP connection is used.
+[no]vc Use [do not use] TCP when querying name servers. This alternate syntax to +[no]tcp is
provided for backwards compatibility. The ”vc” stands for ”virtual circuit”.
+[no]ignore Ignore truncation in UDP responses instead of retrying with TCP. By default, TCP retries
are performed.
+domain=somename Set the search list to contain the single domain somename, as if specified in a
domain directive in /etc/resolv.conf, and enable search list processing as if the +search
option were given.
+[no]search Use [do not use] the search list defined by the searchlist or domain directive in resolv.
conf (if any). The search list is not used by default.
+[no]adflag Set [do not set] the AD (authentic data) bit in the query. The AD bit currently has a
standard meaning only in responses, not in queries, but the ability to set the bit in the query is
provided for completeness.
+[no]cdflag Set [do not set] the CD (checking disabled) bit in the query. This requests the server to
not perform DNSSEC validation of responses.
+[no]cl Display [do not display] the CLASS when printing the record.
+[no]ttlid Display [do not display] the TTL when printing the record.
97
B.1. DIG APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
+[no]recurse Toggle the setting of the RD (recursion desired) bit in the query. This bit is set by
default, which means dig normally sends recursive queries. Recursion is automatically disabled
when the +nssearch or +trace query options are used.
+[no]nssearch When this option is set, dig attempts to find the authoritative name servers for the
zone containing the name being looked up and display the SOA record that each name server has
for the zone.
+[no]trace Toggle tracing of the delegation path from the root name servers for the name being
looked up. Tracing is disabled by default. When tracing is enabled, dig makes iterative queries
to resolve the name being looked up. It will follow referrals from the root servers, showing the
answer from each server that was used to resolve the lookup.
+[no]cmd toggles the printing of the initial comment in the output identifying the version of dig and
the query options that have been applied. This comment is printed by default.
+[no]short Provide a terse answer. The default is to print the answer in a verbose form.
+[no]identify Show [or do not show] the IP address and port number that supplied the answer
when the +short option is enabled. If short form answers are requested, the default is not to
show the source address and port number of the server that provided the answer.
+[no]comments Toggle the display of comment lines in the output. The default is to print comments.
+[no]stats This query option toggles the printing of statistics: when the query was made, the size of
the reply and so on. The default behaviour is to print the query statistics.
+[no]qr Print [do not print] the query as it is sent. By default, the query is not printed.
+[no]question Print [do not print] the question section of a query when an answer is returned. The
default is to print the question section as a comment.
+[no]answer Display [do not display] the answer section of a reply. The default is to display it.
+[no]authority Display [do not display] the authority section of a reply. The default is to display it.
+[no]additional Display [do not display] the additional section of a reply. The default is to display
it.
+time=T Sets the timeout for a query to T seconds. The default time out is 5 seconds. An attempt to
set T to less than 1 will result in a query timeout of 1 second being applied.
+tries=T Sets the number of times to try UDP queries to server to T instead of the default, 3. If T is
less than or equal to zero, the number of tries is silently rounded up to 1.
+retry=T Sets the number of times to retry UDP queries to server to T instead of the default, 2. Unlike
+tries, this does not include the initial query.
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APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.1. DIG
+ndots=D Set the number of dots that have to appear in name to D for it to be considered absolute.
The default value is that defined using the ndots statement in /etc/resolv.conf, or 1 if no
ndots statement is present. Names with fewer dots are interpreted as relative names and will be
searched for in the domains listed in the search or domain directive in /etc/resolv.conf.
+bufsize=B Set the UDP message buffer size advertised using EDNS0 to B bytes. The maximum and
minimum sizes of this buffer are 65535 and 0 respectively. Values outside this range are rounded
up or down appropriately. Values other than zero will cause a EDNS query to be sent.
+edns=# Specify the EDNS version to query with. Valid values are 0 to 255. Setting the EDNS version
will cause a EDNS query to be sent. +noedns clears the remembered EDNS version.
+[no]multiline Print records like the SOA records in a verbose multi-line format with human-
readable comments. The default is to print each record on a single line, to facilitate machine
parsing of the dig output.
+[no]fail Do not try the next server if you receive a SERVFAIL. The default is to not try the next
server which is the reverse of normal stub resolver behaviour.
+[no]besteffort Attempt to display the contents of messages which are malformed. The default is
to not display malformed answers.
+[no]dnssec Requests DNSSEC records be sent by setting the DNSSEC OK bit (DO) in the OPT record
in the additional section of the query.
+[no]sigchase Chase DNSSEC signature chains. Requires dig be compiled with -DDIG SIGCHASE.
+trusted-key=#### Specifies a file containing trusted keys to be used with +sigchase. Each DNSKEY
record must be on its own line.
If not specified dig will look for /etc/trusted-key.key then trusted-key.key in the cur-
rent directory.
Requires dig be compiled with -DDIG SIGCHASE.
+[no]topdown When chasing DNSSEC signature chains perform a top down validation. Requires dig
be compiled with -DDIG SIGCHASE.
MULTIPLE QUERIES
The BIND 9 implementation of dig supports specifying multiple queries on the command line (in addi-
tion to supporting the -f batch file option). Each of those queries can be supplied with its own set of
flags, options and query options.
In this case, each query argument represent an individual query in the command-line syntax described
above. Each consists of any of the standard options and flags, the name to be looked up, an optional
query type and class and any query options that should be applied to that query.
A global set of query options, which should be applied to all queries, can also be supplied. These global
query options must precede the first tuple of name, class, type, options, flags, and query options sup-
plied on the command line. Any global query options (except the +[no]cmd option) can be overridden
by a query-specific set of query options. For example:
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B.2. HOST APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
shows how dig could be used from the command line to make three lookups: an ANY query for www.
isc.org, a reverse lookup of 127.0.0.1 and a query for the NS records of isc.org. A global query
option of +qr is applied, so that dig shows the initial query it made for each lookup. The final query
has a local query option of +noqr which means that dig will not print the initial query when it looks up
the NS records for isc.org.
IDN SUPPORT
If dig has been built with IDN (internationalized domain name) support, it can accept and display non-
ASCII domain names. dig appropriately converts character encoding of domain name before sending
a request to DNS server or displaying a reply from the server. If you’d like to turn off the IDN support
for some reason, defines the IDN DISABLE environment variable. The IDN support is disabled if the
variable is set when dig runs.
FILES
/etc/resolv.conf
${HOME}/.digrc
SEE ALSO
BUGS
B.2 host
Name
Synopsis
host [-aCdlnrsTwv] [-c class] [-N ndots] [-R number] [-t type] [-W wait]
[-m flag] [-4] [-6] name [server]
DESCRIPTION
host is a simple utility for performing DNS lookups. It is normally used to convert names to IP addresses
and vice versa. When no arguments or options are given, host prints a short summary of its command
line arguments and options.
name is the domain name that is to be looked up. It can also be a dotted-decimal IPv4 address or a colon-
delimited IPv6 address, in which case host will by default perform a reverse lookup for that address.
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APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.2. HOST
server is an optional argument which is either the name or IP address of the name server that host
should query instead of the server or servers listed in /etc/resolv.conf.
The -a (all) option is equivalent to setting the -v option and asking host to make a query of type ANY.
When the -C option is used, host will attempt to display the SOA records for zone name from all the
listed authoritative name servers for that zone. The list of name servers is defined by the NS records
that are found for the zone.
The -c option instructs to make a DNS query of class class. This can be used to lookup Hesiod or
Chaosnet class resource records. The default class is IN (Internet).
Verbose output is generated by host when the -d or -v option is used. The two options are equivalent.
They have been provided for backwards compatibility. In previous versions, the -d option switched on
debugging traces and -v enabled verbose output.
List mode is selected by the -l option. This makes host perform a zone transfer for zone name. Transfer
the zone printing out the NS, PTR and address records (A/AAAA). If combined with -a all records will
be printed.
The -i option specifies that reverse lookups of IPv6 addresses should use the IP6.INT domain as defined
in RFC1886. The default is to use IP6.ARPA.
The -N option sets the number of dots that have to be in name for it to be considered absolute. The
default value is that defined using the ndots statement in /etc/resolv.conf, or 1 if no ndots state-
ment is present. Names with fewer dots are interpreted as relative names and will be searched for in the
domains listed in the search or domain directive in /etc/resolv.conf.
The number of UDP retries for a lookup can be changed with the -R option. number indicates how
many times host will repeat a query that does not get answered. The default number of retries is 1. If
number is negative or zero, the number of retries will default to 1.
Non-recursive queries can be made via the -r option. Setting this option clears the RD — recursion
desired — bit in the query which host makes. This should mean that the name server receiving the query
will not attempt to resolve name. The -r option enables host to mimic the behaviour of a name server
by making non-recursive queries and expecting to receive answers to those queries that are usually
referrals to other name servers.
By default host uses UDP when making queries. The -T option makes it use a TCP connection when
querying the name server. TCP will be automatically selected for queries that require it, such as zone
transfer (AXFR) requests.
The -4 option forces host to only use IPv4 query transport. The -6 option forces host to only use IPv6
query transport.
The -t option is used to select the query type. type can be any recognised query type: CNAME, NS,
SOA, SIG, KEY, AXFR, etc. When no query type is specified, host automatically selects an appropriate
query type. By default it looks for A records, but if the -C option was given, queries will be made for
SOA records, and if name is a dotted-decimal IPv4 address or colon-delimited IPv6 address, host will
query for PTR records. If a query type of IXFR is chosen the starting serial number can be specified by
appending an equal followed by the starting serial number (e.g. -t IXFR=12345678).
The time to wait for a reply can be controlled through the -W and -w options. The -W option makes host
wait for wait seconds. If wait is less than one, the wait interval is set to one second. When the -w
option is used, host will effectively wait forever for a reply. The time to wait for a response will be set
to the number of seconds given by the hardware’s maximum value for an integer quantity.
The -s option tells host not to send the query to the next nameserver if any server responds with a
SERVFAIL response, which is the reverse of normal stub resolver behaviour.
The -m can be used to set the memory usage debugging flags record, usage and trace.
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B.3. DNSSEC-KEYGEN APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
IDN SUPPORT
If host has been built with IDN (internationalized domain name) support, it can accept and display non-
ASCII domain names. host appropriately converts character encoding of domain name before sending
a request to DNS server or displaying a reply from the server. If you’d like to turn off the IDN support
for some reason, defines the IDN DISABLE environment variable. The IDN support is disabled if the
variable is set when host runs.
FILES
/etc/resolv.conf
SEE ALSO
dig(1), named(8).
B.3 dnssec-keygen
Name
Synopsis
DESCRIPTION
dnssec-keygen generates keys for DNSSEC (Secure DNS), as defined in RFC 2535 and RFC <TBA\>. It
can also generate keys for use with TSIG (Transaction Signatures), as defined in RFC 2845.
OPTIONS
-a algorithm Selects the cryptographic algorithm. The value of algorithm must be one of RSAMD5
(RSA) or RSASHA1, DSA, DH (Diffie Hellman), or HMAC-MD5. These values are case insensitive.
Note 1: that for DNSSEC, RSASHA1 is a mandatory to implement algorithm, and DSA is recom-
mended. For TSIG, HMAC-MD5 is mandatory.
Note 2: HMAC-MD5 and DH automatically set the -k flag.
-b keysize Specifies the number of bits in the key. The choice of key size depends on the algorithm
used. RSAMD5 / RSASHA1 keys must be between 512 and 2048 bits. Diffie Hellman keys must
be between 128 and 4096 bits. DSA keys must be between 512 and 1024 bits and an exact multiple
of 64. HMAC-MD5 keys must be between 1 and 512 bits.
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APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.3. DNSSEC-KEYGEN
-n nametype Specifies the owner type of the key. The value of nametype must either be ZONE (for a
DNSSEC zone key (KEY/DNSKEY)), HOST or ENTITY (for a key associated with a host (KEY)),
USER (for a key associated with a user(KEY)) or OTHER (DNSKEY). These values are case insen-
sitive.
-c class Indicates that the DNS record containing the key should have the specified class. If not speci-
fied, class IN is used.
-f flag Set the specified flag in the flag field of the KEY/DNSKEY record. The only recognized flag is
KSK (Key Signing Key) DNSKEY.
-g generator If generating a Diffie Hellman key, use this generator. Allowed values are 2 and 5. If
no generator is specified, a known prime from RFC 2539 will be used if possible; otherwise the
default is 2.
-p protocol Sets the protocol value for the generated key. The protocol is a number between 0 and
255. The default is 3 (DNSSEC). Other possible values for this argument are listed in RFC 2535 and
its successors.
-r randomdev Specifies the source of randomness. If the operating system does not provide a /dev/
random or equivalent device, the default source of randomness is keyboard input. randomdev
specifies the name of a character device or file containing random data to be used instead of the
default. The special value keyboard indicates that keyboard input should be used.
-s strength Specifies the strength value of the key. The strength is a number between 0 and 15, and
currently has no defined purpose in DNSSEC.
-t type Indicates the use of the key. type must be one of AUTHCONF, NOAUTHCONF, NOAUTH, or
NOCONF. The default is AUTHCONF. AUTH refers to the ability to authenticate data, and CONF
the ability to encrypt data.
GENERATED KEYS
When dnssec-keygen completes successfully, it prints a string of the form Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii to the
standard output. This is an identification string for the key it has generated.
• nnnn is the key name.
• aaa is the numeric representation of the algorithm.
• iiiii is the key identifier (or footprint).
dnssec-keygen creates two file, with names based on the printed string. Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.key
contains the public key, and Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.private contains the private key.
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B.4. DNSSEC-SIGNZONE APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
The .key file contains a DNS KEY record that can be inserted into a zone file (directly or with a $IN-
CLUDE statement).
The .private file contains algorithm specific fields. For obvious security reasons, this file does not
have general read permission.
Both .key and .private files are generated for symmetric encryption algorithm such as HMAC-MD5,
even though the public and private key are equivalent.
EXAMPLE
To generate a 768-bit DSA key for the domain example.com, the following command would be issued:
dnssec-keygen -a DSA -b 768 -n ZONE example.com
The command would print a string of the form:
Kexample.com.+003+26160
In this example, dnssec-keygen creates the files Kexample.com.+003+26160.key and Kexample.
com.+003+26160.private
SEE ALSO
dnssec-signzone(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual, RFC 2535, RFC 2845, RFC 2539.
AUTHOR
B.4 dnssec-signzone
Name
Synopsis
DESCRIPTION
dnssec-signzone signs a zone. It generates NSEC and RRSIG records and produces a signed version of
the zone. The security status of delegations from the signed zone (that is, whether the child zones are
secure or not) is determined by the presence or absence of a keyset file for each child zone.
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APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.4. DNSSEC-SIGNZONE
OPTIONS
-k key Treat specified key as a key signing key ignoring any key flags. This option may be specified
multiple times.
-l domain Generate a DLV set in addition to the key (DNSKEY) and DS sets. The domain is appended
to the name of the records.
-g Generate DS records for child zones from keyset files. Existing DS records will be removed.
-s start-time Specify the date and time when the generated RRSIG records become valid. This can be
either an absolute or relative time. An absolute start time is indicated by a number in YYYYMMD-
DHHMMSS notation; 20000530144500 denotes 14:45:00 UTC on May 30th, 2000. A relative start
time is indicated by +N, which is N seconds from the current time. If no start-time is specified,
the current time minus 1 hour (to allow for clock skew) is used.
-e end-time Specify the date and time when the generated RRSIG records expire. As with start-time,
an absolute time is indicated in YYYYMMDDHHMMSS notation. A time relative to the start time
is indicated with +N, which is N seconds from the start time. A time relative to the current time
is indicated with now+N. If no end-time is specified, 30 days from the start time is used as a
default.
-f output-file The name of the output file containing the signed zone. The default is to append .
signed to the input file.
-i interval When a previously signed zone is passed as input, records may be resigned. The interval
option specifies the cycle interval as an offset from the current time (in seconds). If a RRSIG record
expires after the cycle interval, it is retained. Otherwise, it is considered to be expiring soon, and
it will be replaced.
The default cycle interval is one quarter of the difference between the signature end and start times.
So if neither end-time or start-time are specified, dnssec-signzone generates signatures that
are valid for 30 days, with a cycle interval of 7.5 days. Therefore, if any existing RRSIG records are
due to expire in less than 7.5 days, they would be replaced.
-I input-format The format of the input zone file. Possible formats are ”text” (default) and ”raw”.
This option is primarily intended to be used for dynamic signed zones so that the dumped zone
file in a non-text format containing updates can be signed directly. The use of this option does not
make much sense for non-dynamic zones.
-j jitter When signing a zone with a fixed signature lifetime, all RRSIG records issued at the time of
signing expires simultaneously. If the zone is incrementally signed, i.e. a previously signed zone is
passed as input to the signer, all expired signatures has to be regenerated at about the same time.
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B.4. DNSSEC-SIGNZONE APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
The jitter option specifies a jitter window that will be used to randomize the signature expire
time, thus spreading incremental signature regeneration over time.
Signature lifetime jitter also to some extent benefits validators and servers by spreading out cache
expiration, i.e. if large numbers of RRSIGs don’t expire at the same time from all caches there will
be less congestion than if all validators need to refetch at mostly the same time.
-n ncpus Specifies the number of threads to use. By default, one thread is started for each detected
CPU.
-N soa-serial-format The SOA serial number format of the signed zone. Possible formats are
”keep” (default), ”increment” and ”unixtime”.
”increment” Increment the SOA serial number using RFC 1982 arithmetics.
”unixtime” Set the SOA serial number to the number of seconds since epoch.
-o origin The zone origin. If not specified, the name of the zone file is assumed to be the origin.
-O output-format The format of the output file containing the signed zone. Possible formats are
”text” (default) and ”raw”.
-p Use pseudo-random data when signing the zone. This is faster, but less secure, than using real
random data. This option may be useful when signing large zones or when the entropy source is
limited.
-r randomdev Specifies the source of randomness. If the operating system does not provide a /dev/
random or equivalent device, the default source of randomness is keyboard input. randomdev
specifies the name of a character device or file containing random data to be used instead of the
default. The special value keyboard indicates that keyboard input should be used.
key The keys used to sign the zone. If no keys are specified, the default all zone keys that have private
key files in the current directory.
EXAMPLE
The following command signs the example.com zone with the DSA key generated in the dnssec-
keygen man page. The zone’s keys must be in the zone. If there are keyset files associated with
child zones, they must be in the current directory. example.com, the following command would be
issued:
dnssec-signzone -o example.com db.example.com Kexample.com.+003+26160
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APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.5. NAMED-CHECKCONF
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
B.5 named-checkconf
Name
Synopsis
DESCRIPTION
named-checkconf checks the syntax, but not the semantics, of a named configuration file.
OPTIONS
-t directory chroot to directory so that include directives in the configuration file are processed as
if run by a similarly chrooted named.
filename The name of the configuration file to be checked. If not specified, it defaults to /etc/named.
conf.
RETURN VALUES
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B.6. NAMED-CHECKZONE APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
B.6 named-checkzone
Name
Synopsis
named-checkzone [-d] [-j] [-q] [-v] [-c class] [-f format] [-F format] [-i
mode] [-k mode] [-m mode] [-M mode] [-n mode] [-o filename] [-s style]
[-S mode] [-t directory] [-w directory] [-D] [-W mode] zonename
filename
named-compilezone [-d] [-j] [-q] [-v] [-c class] [-C mode] [-f format] [-F
format] [-i mode] [-k mode] [-m mode] [-n mode] [-o filename] [-s
style] [-t directory] [-w directory] [-D] [-W mode] zonename filename
DESCRIPTION
named-checkzone checks the syntax and integrity of a zone file. It performs the same checks as named
does when loading a zone. This makes named-checkzone useful for checking zone files before config-
uring them into a name server.
named-compilezone is similar to named-checkzone, but it always dumps the zone contents to a spec-
ified file in a specified format. Additionally, it applies stricter check levels by default, since the dump
output will be used as an actual zone file loaded by named. When manaully specified otherwise, the
check levels must at least be as strict as those specified in the named configuration file.
OPTIONS
-d Enable debugging.
-c class Specify the class of the zone. If not specified ”IN” is assumed.
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APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.6. NAMED-CHECKZONE
-i mode Perform post load zone integrity checks. Possible modes are ”full” (default), ”full-sibling”,
”local”, ”local-sibling” and ”none”.
Mode ”full” checks that MX records refer to A or AAAA record (both in-zone and out-of-zone
hostnames). Mode ”local” only checks MX records which refer to in-zone hostnames.
Mode ”full” checks that SRV records refer to A or AAAA record (both in-zone and out-of-zone
hostnames). Mode ”local” only checks SRV records which refer to in-zone hostnames.
Mode ”full” checks that delegation NS records refer to A or AAAA record (both in-zone and out-
of-zone hostnames). It also checks that glue addresses records in the zone match those advertised
by the child. Mode ”local” only checks NS records which refer to in-zone hostnames or that some
required glue exists, that is when the nameserver is in a child zone.
Mode ”full-sibling” and ”local-sibling” disable sibling glue checks but are otherwise the same as
”full” and ”local” respectively.
Mode ”none” disables the checks.
-f format Specify the format of the zone file. Possible formats are ”text” (default) and ”raw”.
-F format Specify the format of the output file specified. Possible formats are ”text” (default) and
”raw”. For named-checkzone, this does not cause any effects unless it dumps the zone contents.
-k mode Perform ”check-names” checks with the specified failure mode. Possible modes are ”fail”
(default for named-compilezone), ”warn” (default for named-checkzone) and ”ignore”.
-m mode Specify whether MX records should be checked to see if they are addresses. Possible modes
are ”fail”, ”warn” (default) and ”ignore”.
-M mode Check if a MX record refers to a CNAME. Possible modes are ”fail”, ”warn” (default) and
”ignore”.
-n mode Specify whether NS records should be checked to see if they are addresses. Possible modes are
”fail” (default for named-compilezone), ”warn” (default for named-checkzone) and ”ignore”.
-s style Specify the style of the dumped zone file. Possible styles are ”full” (default) and ”relative”.
The full format is most suitable for processing automatically by a separate script. On the other
hand, the relative format is more human-readable and is thus suitable for editing by hand. For
named-checkzone this does not cause any effects unless it dumps the zone contents. It also does
not have any meaning if the output format is not text.
-S mode Check if a SRV record refers to a CNAME. Possible modes are ”fail”, ”warn” (default) and
”ignore”.
-t directory chroot to directory so that include directives in the configuration file are processed as
if run by a similarly chrooted named.
-w directory chdir to directory so that relative filenames in master file $INCLUDE directives
work. This is similar to the directory clause in named.conf.
-D Dump zone file in canonical format. This is always enabled for named-compilezone.
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B.7. NAMED APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
-W mode Specify whether to check for non-terminal wildcards. Non-terminal wildcards are almost
always the result of a failure to understand the wildcard matching algorithm (RFC 1034). Possible
modes are ”warn” (default) and ”ignore”.
RETURN VALUES
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
B.7 named
Name
Synopsis
named [-4] [-6] [-c config-file] [-d debug-level] [-f] [-g] [-n #cpus] [-p
port] [-s] [-t directory] [-u user] [-v] [-x cache-file]
DESCRIPTION
named is a Domain Name System (DNS) server, part of the BIND 9 distribution from ISC. For more
information on the DNS, see RFCs 1033, 1034, and 1035.
When invoked without arguments, named will read the default configuration file /etc/named.conf,
read any initial data, and listen for queries.
OPTIONS
-4 Use IPv4 only even if the host machine is capable of IPv6. -4 and -6 are mutually exclusive.
-6 Use IPv6 only even if the host machine is capable of IPv4. -4 and -6 are mutually exclusive.
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APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.7. NAMED
-c config-file Use config-file as the configuration file instead of the default, /etc/named.
conf. To ensure that reloading the configuration file continues to work after the server has
changed its working directory due to to a possible directory option in the configuration file,
config-file should be an absolute pathname.
-d debug-level Set the daemon’s debug level to debug-level. Debugging traces from named be-
come more verbose as the debug level increases.
-g Run the server in the foreground and force all logging to stderr.
-n #cpus Create #cpus worker threads to take advantage of multiple CPUs. If not specified, named
will try to determine the number of CPUs present and create one thread per CPU. If it is unable to
determine the number of CPUs, a single worker thread will be created.
-p port Listen for queries on port port. If not specified, the default is port 53.
N OTE
-t directory chroot() to directory after processing the command line arguments, but before
reading the configuration file.
WARNING
This option should be used in conjunction with the -u option, as chrooting
a process running as root doesn’t enhance security on most systems; the
way chroot() is defined allows a process with root privileges to escape
a chroot jail.
-u user setuid() to user after completing privileged operations, such as creating sockets that listen
on privileged ports.
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B.7. NAMED APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
N OTE
On Linux, named uses the kernel’s capability mechanism to drop all root
privileges except the ability to bind() to a privileged port and set pro-
cess resource limits. Unfortunately, this means that the -u option only
works when named is run on kernel 2.2.18 or later, or kernel 2.3.99-pre3
or later, since previous kernels did not allow privileges to be retained after
setuid().
-x cache-file Load data from cache-file into the cache of the default view.
WARNING
SIGNALS
In routine operation, signals should not be used to control the nameserver; rndc should be used instead.
CONFIGURATION
The named configuration file is too complex to describe in detail here. A complete description is pro-
vided in the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
FILES
SEE ALSO
RFC 1033, RFC 1034, RFC 1035, rndc(8), lwresd(8), named.conf(5), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Man-
ual.
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APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.8. RNDC
AUTHOR
B.8 rndc
Name
Synopsis
rndc [-b source-address] [-c config-file] [-k key-file] [-s server] [-p
port] [-V] [-y key id] command
DESCRIPTION
rndc controls the operation of a name server. It supersedes the ndc utility that was provided in old BIND
releases. If rndc is invoked with no command line options or arguments, it prints a short summary of
the supported commands and the available options and their arguments.
rndc communicates with the name server over a TCP connection, sending commands authenticated with
digital signatures. In the current versions of rndc and named named the only supported authentication
algorithm is HMAC-MD5, which uses a shared secret on each end of the connection. This provides
TSIG-style authentication for the command request and the name server’s response. All commands
sent over the channel must be signed by a key id known to the server.
rndc reads a configuration file to determine how to contact the name server and decide what algorithm
and key it should use.
OPTIONS
-b source-address Use source-address as the source address for the connection to the server.
Multiple instances are permitted to allow setting of both the IPv4 and IPv6 source addresses.
-c config-file Use config-file as the configuration file instead of the default, /etc/rndc.conf.
-k key-file Use key-file as the key file instead of the default, /etc/rndc.key. The key in /etc/
rndc.key will be used to authenticate commands sent to the server if the config-file does not
exist.
-s server server is the name or address of the server which matches a server statement in the con-
figuration file for rndc. If no server is supplied on the command line, the host named by the
default-server clause in the option statement of the configuration file will be used.
-p port Send commands to TCP port port instead of BIND 9’s default control channel port, 953.
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-y keyid Use the key keyid from the configuration file. keyid must be known by named with the
same algorithm and secret string in order for control message validation to succeed. If no keyid
is specified, rndc will first look for a key clause in the server statement of the server being used,
or if no server statement is present for that host, then the default-key clause of the options state-
ment. Note that the configuration file contains shared secrets which are used to send authenticated
control commands to name servers. It should therefore not have general read or write access.
For the complete set of commands supported by rndc, see the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual
or run rndc without arguments to see its help message.
LIMITATIONS
rndc does not yet support all the commands of the BIND 8 ndc utility.
There is currently no way to provide the shared secret for a key id without using the configuration file.
Several error messages could be clearer.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
B.9 rndc.conf
Name
Synopsis
rndc.conf
DESCRIPTION
rndc.conf is the configuration file for rndc, the BIND 9 name server control utility. This file has a
similar structure and syntax to named.conf. Statements are enclosed in braces and terminated with
a semi-colon. Clauses in the statements are also semi-colon terminated. The usual comment styles are
supported:
C style: /* */
C++ style: // to end of line
Unix style: # to end of line
rndc.conf is much simpler than named.conf. The file uses three statements: an options statement, a
server statement and a key statement.
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The options statement contains five clauses. The default-server clause is followed by the name
or address of a name server. This host will be used when no name server is given as an argument to
rndc. The default-key clause is followed by the name of a key which is identified by a key state-
ment. If no keyid is provided on the rndc command line, and no key clause is found in a match-
ing server statement, this default key will be used to authenticate the server’s commands and re-
sponses. The default-port clause is followed by the port to connect to on the remote name server.
If no port option is provided on the rndc command line, and no port clause is found in a matching
server statement, this default port will be used to connect. The default-source-address and
default-source-address-v6 clauses which can be used to set the IPv4 and IPv6 source addresses
respectively.
After the server keyword, the server statement includes a string which is the hostname or address for
a name server. The statement has three possible clauses: key, port and addresses. The key name
must match the name of a key statement in the file. The port number specifies the port to connect to. If
an addresses clause is supplied these addresses will be used instead of the server name. Each address
can take a optional port. If an source-address or source-address-v6 of supplied then these will
be used to specify the IPv4 and IPv6 source addresses respectively.
The key statement begins with an identifying string, the name of the key. The statement has two
clauses. algorithm identifies the encryption algorithm for rndc to use; currently only HMAC-MD5
is supported. This is followed by a secret clause which contains the base-64 encoding of the algorithm’s
encryption key. The base-64 string is enclosed in double quotes.
There are two common ways to generate the base-64 string for the secret. The BIND 9 program rndc-
confgen can be used to generate a random key, or the mmencode program, also known as mimencode,
can be used to generate a base-64 string from known input. mmencode does not ship with BIND 9 but
is available on many systems. See the EXAMPLE section for sample command lines for each.
EXAMPLE
options {
default-server localhost;
default-key samplekey;
};
server localhost {
key samplekey;
};
server testserver {
key testkey;
addresses { localhost port 5353; };
};
key samplekey {
algorithm hmac-md5;
secret "6FMfj43Osz4lyb24OIe2iGEz9lf1llJO+lz";
};
key testkey {
algorithm hmac-md5;
secret "R3HI8P6BKw9ZwXwN3VZKuQ==";
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In the above example, rndc will by default use the server at localhost (127.0.0.1) and the key called sam-
plekey. Commands to the localhost server will use the samplekey key, which must also be defined in the
server’s configuration file with the same name and secret. The key statement indicates that samplekey
uses the HMAC-MD5 algorithm and its secret clause contains the base-64 encoding of the HMAC-MD5
secret enclosed in double quotes.
If rndc -s testserver is used then rndc will connect to server on localhost port 5353 using the key testkey.
To generate a random secret with rndc-confgen:
rndc-confgen
A complete rndc.conf file, including the randomly generated key, will be written to the standard
output. Commented out key and controls statements for named.conf are also printed.
To generate a base-64 secret with mmencode:
echo "known plaintext for a secret" | mmencode
The name server must be configured to accept rndc connections and to recognize the key specified in
the rndc.conf file, using the controls statement in named.conf. See the sections on the controls
statement in the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual for details.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
B.10 rndc-confgen
Name
Synopsis
rndc-confgen [-a] [-b keysize] [-c keyfile] [-h] [-k keyname] [-p port] [-r
randomfile] [-s address] [-t chrootdir] [-u user]
DESCRIPTION
rndc-confgen generates configuration files for rndc. It can be used as a convenient alternative to writ-
ing the rndc.conf file and the corresponding controls and key statements in named.conf by hand.
Alternatively, it can be run with the -a option to set up a rndc.key file and avoid the need for a rndc.
conf file and a controls statement altogether.
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APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES B.10. RNDC-CONFGEN
OPTIONS
-a Do automatic rndc configuration. This creates a file rndc.key in /etc (or whatever sysconfdir
was specified as when BIND was built) that is read by both rndc and named on startup. The rndc.
key file defines a default command channel and authentication key allowing rndc to communicate
with named on the local host with no further configuration.
Running rndc-confgen -a allows BIND 9 and rndc to be used as drop-in replacements for BIND 8
and ndc, with no changes to the existing BIND 8 named.conf file.
If a more elaborate configuration than that generated by rndc-confgen -a is required, for example
if rndc is to be used remotely, you should run rndc-confgen without the -a option and set up a
rndc.conf and named.conf as directed.
-b keysize Specifies the size of the authentication key in bits. Must be between 1 and 512 bits; the
default is 128.
-c keyfile Used with the -a option to specify an alternate location for rndc.key.
-k keyname Specifies the key name of the rndc authentication key. This must be a valid domain name.
The default is rndc-key.
-p port Specifies the command channel port where named listens for connections from rndc. The
default is 953.
-r randomfile Specifies a source of random data for generating the authorization. If the operating
system does not provide a /dev/random or equivalent device, the default source of randomness
is keyboard input. randomdev specifies the name of a character device or file containing random
data to be used instead of the default. The special value keyboard indicates that keyboard input
should be used.
-s address Specifies the IP address where named listens for command channel connections from rndc.
The default is the loopback address 127.0.0.1.
-t chrootdir Used with the -a option to specify a directory where named will run chrooted. An ad-
ditional copy of the rndc.key will be written relative to this directory so that it will be found by
the chrooted named.
-u user Used with the -a option to set the owner of the rndc.key file generated. If -t is also specified
only the file in the chroot area has its owner changed.
EXAMPLES
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B.10. RNDC-CONFGEN APPENDIX B. MANUAL PAGES
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
118