Manual Pages¶
arpaname - translate IP addresses to the corresponding ARPA names¶
Synopsis¶
arpaname {ipaddress …}
Description¶
arpaname
translates IP addresses (IPv4 and IPv6) to the
corresponding IN-ADDR.ARPA or IP6.ARPA names.
See Also¶
BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
ddns-confgen - ddns key generation tool¶
Synopsis¶
tsig-keygen [-a algorithm] [-h] [-r randomfile] [name]
ddns-confgen [-a algorithm] [-h] [-k keyname] [-q] [-r randomfile] [-s name] [-z zone]
Description¶
tsig-keygen
and ddns-confgen
are invocation methods for a
utility that generates keys for use in TSIG signing. The resulting keys
can be used, for example, to secure dynamic DNS updates to a zone or for
the rndc
command channel.
When run as tsig-keygen
, a domain name can be specified on the
command line to be used as the name of the generated key. If no
name is specified, the default is tsig-key
.
When run as ddns-confgen
, the generated key is accompanied by
configuration text and instructions that can be used with nsupdate
and named
when setting up dynamic DNS, including an example
update-policy
statement. (This usage is similar to the rndc-confgen
command for setting up command-channel security.)
Note that named
itself can configure a local DDNS key for use with
nsupdate -l
; it does this when a zone is configured with
update-policy local;
. ddns-confgen
is only needed when a more
elaborate configuration is required: for instance, if nsupdate
is to
be used from a remote system.
Options¶
-a algorithm
This option specifies the algorithm to use for the TSIG key. Available choices are: hmac-md5, hmac-sha1, hmac-sha224, hmac-sha256, hmac-sha384, and hmac-sha512. The default is hmac-sha256. Options are case-insensitive, and the “hmac-” prefix may be omitted.
-h
This option prints a short summary of options and arguments.
-k keyname
This option specifies the key name of the DDNS authentication key. The default is
ddns-key
when neither the-s
nor-z
option is specified; otherwise, the default isddns-key
as a separate label followed by the argument of the option, e.g.,ddns-key.example.com.
The key name must have the format of a valid domain name, consisting of letters, digits, hyphens, and periods.-q
(ddns-confgen
only)This option enables quiet mode, which prints only the key, with no explanatory text or usage examples. This is essentially identical to
tsig-keygen
.-s name
(ddns-confgen
only)This option generates a configuration example to allow dynamic updates of a single hostname. The example
named.conf
text shows how to set an update policy for the specified name using the “name” nametype. The default key name isddns-key.name
. Note that the “self” nametype cannot be used, since the name to be updated may differ from the key name. This option cannot be used with the-z
option.-z zone
(ddns-confgen
only)This option generates a configuration example to allow dynamic updates of a zone. The example
named.conf
text shows how to set an update policy for the specified zone using the “zonesub” nametype, allowing updates to all subdomain names within that zone. This option cannot be used with the-s
option.
See Also¶
nsupdate(1), named.conf(5), named(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
delv - DNS lookup and validation utility¶
Synopsis¶
delv [@server] [ [-4] | [-6] ] [-a anchor-file] [-b address] [-c class] [-d level] [-i] [-m] [-p port#] [-q name] [-t type] [-x addr] [name] [type] [class] [queryopt…]
delv [-h]
delv [-v]
delv [queryopt…] [query…]
Description¶
delv
is a tool for sending DNS queries and validating the results,
using the same internal resolver and validator logic as named
.
delv
sends to a specified name server all queries needed to
fetch and validate the requested data; this includes the original
requested query, subsequent queries to follow CNAME or DNAME chains,
queries for DNSKEY, and DS records to establish a chain of trust for
DNSSEC validation. It does not perform iterative resolution, but
simulates the behavior of a name server configured for DNSSEC validating
and forwarding.
By default, responses are validated using the built-in DNSSEC trust anchor
for the root zone (“.”). Records returned by delv
are either fully
validated or were not signed. If validation fails, an explanation of the
failure is included in the output; the validation process can be traced
in detail. Because delv
does not rely on an external server to carry
out validation, it can be used to check the validity of DNS responses in
environments where local name servers may not be trustworthy.
Unless it is told to query a specific name server, delv
tries
each of the servers listed in /etc/resolv.conf
. If no usable server
addresses are found, delv
sends queries to the localhost
addresses (127.0.0.1 for IPv4, ::1 for IPv6).
When no command-line arguments or options are given, delv
performs an NS query for “.” (the root zone).
Simple Usage¶
A typical invocation of delv
looks like:
delv @server name type
where:
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
argument is a hostname,delv
resolves that name before querying that name server (note, however, that this initial lookup is not validated by DNSSEC).If no
server
argument is provided,delv
consults/etc/resolv.conf
; if an address is found there, it queries the name server at that address. If either of the-4
or-6
options is in use, then only addresses for the corresponding transport are tried. If no usable addresses are found,delv
sends queries to the localhost addresses (127.0.0.1 for IPv4, ::1 for IPv6).name
is the domain name to be looked up.
type
indicates what type of query is required - ANY, A, MX, etc.
type
can be any valid query type. If notype
argument is supplied,delv
performs a lookup for an A record.
Options¶
-a anchor-file
This option specifies a file from which to read DNSSEC trust anchors. The default is
/etc/bind.keys
, which is included with BIND 9 and contains one or more trust anchors for the root zone (“.”).Keys that do not match the root zone name are ignored. An alternate key name can be specified using the
+root=NAME
options.Note: When reading the trust anchor file,
delv
treatstrust-anchors
,initial-key
, andstatic-key
identically. That is, for a managed key, it is the initial key that is trusted; RFC 5011 key management is not supported.delv
does not consult the managed-keys database maintained bynamed
, which means that if either of the keys in/etc/bind.keys
is revoked and rolled over,/etc/bind.keys
must be updated to use DNSSEC validation indelv
.-b address
This 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, or0.0.0.0
, or::
. An optional source port may be specified by appending#<port>
-c class
This option sets the query class for the requested data. Currently, only class “IN” is supported in
delv
and any other value is ignored.-d level
This option sets the systemwide debug level to
level
. The allowed range is from 0 to 99. The default is 0 (no debugging). Debugging traces fromdelv
become more verbose as the debug level increases. See the+mtrace
,+rtrace
, and+vtrace
options below for additional debugging details.-h
This option displays the
delv
help usage output and exits.-i
This option sets insecure mode, which disables internal DNSSEC validation. (Note, however, that this does not set the CD bit on upstream queries. If the server being queried is performing DNSSEC validation, then it does not return invalid data; this can cause
delv
to time out. When it is necessary to examine invalid data to debug a DNSSEC problem, usedig +cd
.)-m
This option enables memory usage debugging.
-p port#
This option specifies a destination port to use for queries, instead of the standard DNS port number 53. This option is used with a name server that has been configured to listen for queries on a non-standard port number.
-q name
This option sets the query name to
name
. While the query name can be specified without using the-q
option, it is sometimes necessary to disambiguate names from types or classes (for example, when looking up the name “ns”, which could be misinterpreted as the type NS, or “ch”, which could be misinterpreted as class CH).-t type
This option sets the query type to
type
, which can be any valid query type supported in BIND 9 except for zone transfer types AXFR and IXFR. As with-q
, this is useful to distinguish query-name types or classes when they are ambiguous. It is sometimes necessary to disambiguate names from types.The default query type is “A”, unless the
-x
option is supplied to indicate a reverse lookup, in which case it is “PTR”.-v
This option prints the
delv
version and exits.-x addr
This option performs a reverse lookup, mapping an address to a name.
addr
is an IPv4 address in dotted-decimal notation, or a colon-delimited IPv6 address. When-x
is used, there is no need to provide thename
ortype
arguments;delv
automatically performs a lookup for a name like11.12.13.10.in-addr.arpa
and sets the query type to PTR. IPv6 addresses are looked up using nibble format under the IP6.ARPA domain.-4
This option forces
delv
to only use IPv4.-6
This option forces
delv
to only use IPv6.
Query Options¶
delv
provides a number of query options which affect the way results
are displayed, and in some cases the way lookups are performed.
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]cdflag
This option controls whether to set the CD (checking disabled) bit in queries sent by
delv
. This may be useful when troubleshooting DNSSEC problems from behind a validating resolver. A validating resolver blocks invalid responses, making it difficult to retrieve them for analysis. Setting the CD flag on queries causes the resolver to return invalid responses, whichdelv
can then validate internally and report the errors in detail.+[no]class
This option controls whether to display the CLASS when printing a record. The default is to display the CLASS.
+[no]ttl
This option controls whether to display the TTL when printing a record. The default is to display the TTL.
+[no]rtrace
This option toggles resolver fetch logging. This reports the name and type of each query sent by
delv
in the process of carrying out the resolution and validation process, including the original query and all subsequent queries to follow CNAMEs and to establish a chain of trust for DNSSEC validation.This is equivalent to setting the debug level to 1 in the “resolver” logging category. Setting the systemwide debug level to 1 using the
-d
option produces the same output, but affects other logging categories as well.+[no]mtrace
This option toggles message logging. This produces a detailed dump of the responses received by
delv
in the process of carrying out the resolution and validation process.This is equivalent to setting the debug level to 10 for the “packets” module of the “resolver” logging category. Setting the systemwide debug level to 10 using the
-d
option produces the same output, but affects other logging categories as well.+[no]vtrace
This option toggles validation logging. This shows the internal process of the validator as it determines whether an answer is validly signed, unsigned, or invalid.
This is equivalent to setting the debug level to 3 for the “validator” module of the “dnssec” logging category. Setting the systemwide debug level to 3 using the
-d
option produces the same output, but affects other logging categories as well.+[no]short
This option toggles between verbose and terse answers. The default is to print the answer in a verbose form.
+[no]comments
This option toggles the display of comment lines in the output. The default is to print comments.
+[no]rrcomments
This option toggles the display of per-record comments in the output (for example, human-readable key information about DNSKEY records). The default is to print per-record comments.
+[no]crypto
This option toggles the display of cryptographic fields in DNSSEC records. The contents of these fields are unnecessary to debug most DNSSEC validation failures and removing them makes it easier to see the common failures. The default is to display the fields. When omitted, they are replaced by the string
[omitted]
or, in the DNSKEY case, the key ID is displayed as the replacement, e.g.[ key id = value ]
.+[no]trust
This option controls whether to display the trust level when printing a record. The default is to display the trust level.
+[no]split[=W]
This option splits long hex- or base64-formatted fields in resource records into chunks of
W
characters (whereW
is rounded up to the nearest multiple of 4).+nosplit
or+split=0
causes fields not to be split at all. The default is 56 characters, or 44 characters when multiline mode is active.+[no]all
This option sets or clears the display options
+[no]comments
,+[no]rrcomments
, and+[no]trust
as a group.+[no]multiline
This option prints long records (such as RRSIG, DNSKEY, and 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
delv
output.+[no]dnssec
This option indicates whether to display RRSIG records in the
delv
output. The default is to do so. Note that (unlike indig
) this does not control whether to request DNSSEC records or to validate them. DNSSEC records are always requested, and validation always occurs unless suppressed by the use of-i
or+noroot
.+[no]root[=ROOT]
This option indicates whether to perform conventional DNSSEC validation, and if so, specifies the name of a trust anchor. The default is to validate using a trust anchor of “.” (the root zone), for which there is a built-in key. If specifying a different trust anchor, then
-a
must be used to specify a file containing the key.+[no]tcp
This option controls whether to use TCP when sending queries. The default is to use UDP unless a truncated response has been received.
+[no]unknownformat
This option prints all RDATA in unknown RR-type presentation format (RFC 3597). The default is to print RDATA for known types in the type’s presentation format.
+[no]yaml
This option prints response data in YAML format.
dig - DNS lookup utility¶
Synopsis¶
dig [@server] [-b address] [-c class] [-f filename] [-k filename] [-m] [-p port#] [-q name] [-t type] [-v] [-x addr] [-y [hmac:]name:key] [ [-4] | [-6] ] [name] [type] [class] [queryopt…]
dig [-h]
dig [global-queryopt…] [query…]
Description¶
dig
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. The BIND 9
implementation of dig
allows multiple lookups to be issued from the
command line.
Unless it is told to query a specific name server, dig
tries each
of the servers listed in /etc/resolv.conf
. If no usable server
addresses are found, dig
sends the query to the local host.
When no command-line arguments or options are given, dig
performs 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 -r
option disables this
feature, for scripts that need predictable behavior.
The IN and CH class names overlap with the IN and CH top-level domain
names. Either use the -t
and -c
options to specify the type and
class, use the -q
to specify the domain name, or use “IN.” and
“CH.” when looking up these top-level domains.
Simple Usage¶
A typical invocation of dig
looks like:
dig @server name type
where:
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
argument is a hostname,dig
resolves that name before querying that name server.If no
server
argument is provided,dig
consults/etc/resolv.conf
; if an address is found there, it queries the name server at that address. If either of the-4
or-6
options are in use, then only addresses for the corresponding transport are tried. If no usable addresses are found,dig
sends the query to the local host. The reply from the name server that responds is displayed.name
is the name of the resource record that is to be looked up.
type
indicates what type of query is required - ANY, A, MX, SIG, etc.
type
can be any valid query type. If notype
argument is supplied,dig
performs a lookup for an A record.
Options¶
-4
This option indicates that only IPv4 should be used.
-6
This option indicates that only IPv6 should be used.
-b address[#port]
This option sets the source IP address of the query. The
address
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
.-c class
This option sets the query class. The default
class
is IN; other classes are HS for Hesiod records or CH for Chaosnet records.-f file
This option sets batch mode, in which
dig
reads a list of lookup requests to process from the givenfile
. Each line in the file should be organized in the same way it would be presented as a query todig
using the command-line interface.-k keyfile
This option tells
named
to sign queries using TSIG using a key read from the given file. Key files can be generated usingtsig-keygen
. When using TSIG authentication withdig
, the name server that is queried needs to know the key and algorithm that is being used. In BIND, this is done by providing appropriatekey
andserver
statements innamed.conf
.-m
This option enables memory usage debugging.
-p port
This option sends the query to a non-standard port on the server, instead of the default port 53. This option is used to test a name server that has been configured to listen for queries on a non-standard port number.
-q name
This option specifies the domain name to query. This is useful to distinguish the
name
from other arguments.-r
This option indicates that options from
${HOME}/.digrc
should not be read. This is useful for scripts that need predictable behavior.-t type
This option indicates the resource record type to query, which can be any valid query type. If it is a resource record type supported in BIND 9, it can be given by the type mnemonic (such as
NS
orAAAA
). The default query type isA
, 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, set thetype
toixfr=N
. The incremental zone transfer contains all changes made to the zone since the serial number in the zone’s SOA record wasN
.All resource record types can be expressed as
TYPEnn
, wherenn
is the number of the type. If the resource record type is not supported in BIND 9, the result is displayed as described in RFC 3597.-u
This option indicates that print query times should be provided in microseconds instead of milliseconds.
-v
This option prints the version number and exits.
-x addr
This option sets simplified reverse lookups, for mapping addresses to names. The
addr
is an IPv4 address in dotted-decimal notation, or a colon-delimited IPv6 address. When the-x
option is used, there is no need to provide thename
,class
, andtype
arguments.dig
automatically performs a lookup for a name like94.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa
and sets the query type and class to PTR and IN respectively. IPv6 addresses are looked up using nibble format under the IP6.ARPA domain.-y [hmac:]keyname:secret
This option signs queries using TSIG with the given authentication key.
keyname
is the name of the key, andsecret
is the base64-encoded shared secret.hmac
is the name of the key algorithm; valid choices arehmac-md5
,hmac-sha1
,hmac-sha224
,hmac-sha256
,hmac-sha384
, orhmac-sha512
. Ifhmac
is not specified, the default ishmac-md5
; if MD5 was disabled, the default ishmac-sha256
.
Note
Only the -k
option should be used, rather than the -y
option,
because with -y
the shared secret is supplied as a command-line
argument in clear text. This may be visible in the output from ps1
or
in a history file maintained by the user’s shell.
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
. Keywords may be abbreviated, provided the
abbreviation is unambiguous; for example, +cd
is equivalent to
+cdflag
. The query options are:
+[no]aaflag
This option is a synonym for
+[no]aaonly
.+[no]aaonly
This option sets the
aa
flag in the query.+[no]additional
This option displays [or does not display] the additional section of a reply. The default is to display it.
+[no]adflag
This option sets [or does not set] the AD (authentic data) bit in the query. This requests the server to return whether all of the answer and authority sections have been validated as secure, according to the security policy of the server.
AD=1
indicates that all records have been validated as secure and the answer is not from a OPT-OUT range.AD=0
indicates that some part of the answer was insecure or not validated. This bit is set by default.+[no]all
This option sets or clears all display flags.
+[no]answer
This option displays [or does not display] the answer section of a reply. The default is to display it.
+[no]authority
This option displays [or does not display] the authority section of a reply. The default is to display it.
+[no]badcookie
This option retries the lookup with a new server cookie if a BADCOOKIE response is received.
+[no]besteffort
This option attempts to display the contents of messages which are malformed. The default is to not display malformed answers.
+bufsize[=B]
This option sets the UDP message buffer size advertised using EDNS0 to
B
bytes. The maximum and minimum sizes of this buffer are 65535 and 0, respectively.+bufsize=0
disables EDNS (use+bufsize=0 +edns
to send an EDNS message with an advertised size of 0 bytes).+bufsize
restores the default buffer size.+[no]cdflag
This option sets [or does not set] the CD (checking disabled) bit in the query. This requests the server to not perform DNSSEC validation of responses.
+[no]class
This option displays [or does not display] the CLASS when printing the record.
+[no]cmd
This option toggles the printing of the initial comment in the output, identifying the version of
dig
and the query options that have been applied. This option always has a global effect; it cannot be set globally and then overridden on a per-lookup basis. The default is to print this comment.+[no]comments
This option toggles the display of some comment lines in the output, with information about the packet header and OPT pseudosection, and the names of the response section. The default is to print these comments.
Other types of comments in the output are not affected by this option, but can be controlled using other command-line switches. These include
+[no]cmd
,+[no]question
,+[no]stats
, and+[no]rrcomments
.+[no]cookie=####
This option sends [or does not send] a COOKIE EDNS option, with an optional value. Replaying a COOKIE from a previous response allows the server to identify a previous client. The default is
+cookie
.+cookie
is also set when+trace
is set to better emulate the default queries from a nameserver.+[no]crypto
This option toggles the display of cryptographic fields in DNSSEC records. The contents of these fields are unnecessary for debugging most DNSSEC validation failures and removing them makes it easier to see the common failures. The default is to display the fields. When omitted, they are replaced by the string
[omitted]
or, in the DNSKEY case, the key ID is displayed as the replacement, e.g.[ key id = value ]
.+[no]defname
This option, which is deprecated, is treated as a synonym for
+[no]search
.+[no]dnssec
This option requests that DNSSEC records be sent by setting the DNSSEC OK (DO) bit in the OPT record in the additional section of the query.
+domain=somename
This option sets the search list to contain the single domain
somename
, as if specified in adomain
directive in/etc/resolv.conf
, and enables search list processing as if the+search
option were given.+dscp=value
This option sets the DSCP code point to be used when sending the query. Valid DSCP code points are in the range [0…63]. By default no code point is explicitly set.
+[no]edns[=#]
This option specifies the EDNS version to query with. Valid values are 0 to 255. Setting the EDNS version causes an EDNS query to be sent.
+noedns
clears the remembered EDNS version. EDNS is set to 0 by default.+[no]ednsflags[=#]
This option sets the must-be-zero EDNS flags bits (Z bits) to the specified value. Decimal, hex, and octal encodings are accepted. Setting a named flag (e.g., DO) is silently ignored. By default, no Z bits are set.
+[no]ednsnegotiation
This option enables/disables EDNS version negotiation. By default, EDNS version negotiation is enabled.
+[no]ednsopt[=code[:value]]
This option specifies the EDNS option with code point
code
and an optional payload ofvalue
as a hexadecimal string.code
can be either an EDNS option name (for example,NSID
orECS
) or an arbitrary numeric value.+noednsopt
clears the EDNS options to be sent.+[no]expire
This option sends an EDNS Expire option.
+[no]fail
This option indicates that
named
should try [or not try] the next server if a SERVFAIL is received. The default is to not try the next server, which is the reverse of normal stub resolver behavior.+[no]header-only
This option sends a query with a DNS header without a question section. The default is to add a question section. The query type and query name are ignored when this is set.
+[no]identify
This option shows [or does 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]idnin
This option processes [or does not process] IDN domain names on input. This requires
IDN SUPPORT
to have been enabled at compile time.The default is to process IDN input when standard output is a tty. The IDN processing on input is disabled when
dig
output is redirected to files, pipes, and other non-tty file descriptors.+[no]idnout
This option converts [or does not convert] puny code on output. This requires
IDN SUPPORT
to have been enabled at compile time.The default is to process puny code on output when standard output is a tty. The puny code processing on output is disabled when
dig
output is redirected to files, pipes, and other non-tty file descriptors.+[no]ignore
This option ignores [or does not ignore] truncation in UDP responses instead of retrying with TCP. By default, TCP retries are performed.
+[no]keepalive
This option sends [or does not send] an EDNS Keepalive option.
+[no]keepopen
This option keeps [or does not keep] the TCP socket open between queries, and reuses it rather than creating a new TCP socket for each lookup. The default is
+nokeepopen
.+[no]mapped
This option allows [or does not allow] mapped IPv4-over-IPv6 addresses to be used. The default is
+mapped
.+[no]multiline
This option prints [or does not 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.+ndots=D
This option sets the number of dots (
D
) that must appear inname
for it to be considered absolute. The default value is that defined using thendots
statement in/etc/resolv.conf
, or 1 if nondots
statement is present. Names with fewer dots are interpreted as relative names, and are searched for in the domains listed in thesearch
ordomain
directive in/etc/resolv.conf
if+search
is set.+[no]nsid
When enabled, this option includes an EDNS name server ID request when sending a query.
+[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. Addresses of servers that did not respond are also printed.+[no]onesoa
When enabled, this option prints only one (starting) SOA record when performing an AXFR. The default is to print both the starting and ending SOA records.
+[no]opcode=value
When enabled, this option sets (restores) the DNS message opcode to the specified value. The default value is QUERY (0).
+padding=value
This option pads the size of the query packet using the EDNS Padding option to blocks of
value
bytes. For example,+padding=32
causes a 48-byte query to be padded to 64 bytes. The default block size is 0, which disables padding; the maximum is 512. Values are ordinarily expected to be powers of two, such as 128; however, this is not mandatory. Responses to padded queries may also be padded, but only if the query uses TCP or DNS COOKIE.+[no]qr
This option toggles the display of the query message as it is sent. By default, the query is not printed.
+[no]question
This option toggles the display of the question section of a query when an answer is returned. The default is to print the question section as a comment.
+[no]raflag
This option sets [or does not set] the RA (Recursion Available) bit in the query. The default is
+noraflag
. This bit is ignored by the server for QUERY.+[no]rdflag
This option is a synonym for
+[no]recurse
.+[no]recurse
This option toggles 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 option is used.+retry=T
This option 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.+[no]rrcomments
This option toggles the display of per-record comments in the output (for example, human-readable key information about DNSKEY records). The default is not to print record comments unless multiline mode is active.
+[no]search
This option uses [or does 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.ndots
fromresolv.conf
(default 1), which may be overridden by+ndots
, determines whether the name is treated as relative and hence whether a search is eventually performed.+[no]short
This option toggles whether a terse answer is provided. The default is to print the answer in a verbose form. This option always has a global effect; it cannot be set globally and then overridden on a per-lookup basis.
+[no]showsearch
This option performs [or does not perform] a search showing intermediate results.
+[no]sigchase
This feature is now obsolete and has been removed; use
delv
instead.+split=W
This option splits long hex- or base64-formatted fields in resource records into chunks of
W
characters (whereW
is rounded up to the nearest multiple of 4).+nosplit
or+split=0
causes fields not to be split at all. The default is 56 characters, or 44 characters when multiline mode is active.+[no]stats
This option toggles the printing of statistics: when the query was made, the size of the reply, etc. The default behavior is to print the query statistics as a comment after each lookup.
+[no]subnet=addr[/prefix-length]
This option sends [or does not send] an EDNS CLIENT-SUBNET option with the specified IP address or network prefix.
dig +subnet=0.0.0.0/0
, or simplydig +subnet=0
for short, sends an EDNS CLIENT-SUBNET option with an empty address and a source prefix-length of zero, which signals a resolver that the client’s address information must not be used when resolving this query.+[no]tcflag
This option sets [or does not set] the TC (TrunCation) bit in the query. The default is
+notcflag
. This bit is ignored by the server for QUERY.+[no]tcp
This option uses [or does not use] TCP when querying name servers. The default behavior is to use UDP unless a type
any
orixfr=N
query is requested, in which case the default is TCP. AXFR queries always use TCP.+timeout=T
This option sets the timeout for a query to
T
seconds. The default timeout is 5 seconds. An attempt to setT
to less than 1 is silently set to 1.+[no]topdown
This feature is related to
dig +sigchase
, which is obsolete and has been removed. Usedelv
instead.+[no]trace
This option toggles 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 follows referrals from the root servers, showing the answer from each server that was used to resolve the lookup.If
@server
is also specified, it affects only the initial query for the root zone name servers.+dnssec
is also set when+trace
is set, to better emulate the default queries from a name server.+tries=T
This option sets the number of times to try UDP queries to server to
T
instead of the default, 3. IfT
is less than or equal to zero, the number of tries is silently rounded up to 1.+trusted-key=####
This option formerly specified trusted keys for use with
dig +sigchase
. This feature is now obsolete and has been removed; usedelv
instead.+[no]ttlid
This option displays [or does not display] the TTL when printing the record.
+[no]ttlunits
This option displays [or does not display] the TTL in friendly human-readable time units of
s
,m
,h
,d
, andw
, representing seconds, minutes, hours, days, and weeks. This implies+ttlid
.+[no]unexpected
This option accepts [or does not accept] answers from unexpected sources. By default,
dig
will not accept a reply from a source other than the one to which it sent the query.+[no]unknownformat
This option prints all RDATA in unknown RR type presentation format (RFC 3597). The default is to print RDATA for known types in the type’s presentation format.
+[no]vc
This option uses [or does not use] TCP when querying name servers. This alternate syntax to
+[no]tcp
is provided for backwards compatibility. Thevc
stands for “virtual circuit.”+[no]yaml
When enabled, this option prints the responses (and, if
+qr
is in use, also the outgoing queries) in a detailed YAML format.+[no]zflag
This option sets [or does not set] the last unassigned DNS header flag in a DNS query. This flag is off by default.
Multiple Queries¶
The BIND 9 implementation of dig
supports specifying multiple
queries on the command line (in addition 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 represents 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 supplied
on the command line. Any global query options (except +[no]cmd
and
+[no]short
options) can be overridden by a query-specific set of
query options. For example:
dig +qr www.isc.org any -x 127.0.0.1 isc.org ns +noqr
shows how dig
can 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
does 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 a domain name before sending
a request to a DNS server or displaying a reply from the server.
To turn off IDN support, use the parameters
+noidnin
and +noidnout
, or define the IDN_DISABLE
environment
variable.
Bugs¶
There are probably too many query options.
dnssec-cds - change DS records for a child zone based on CDS/CDNSKEY¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-cds [-a alg…] [-c class] [-D] {-d dsset-file} {-f child-file} [-i**[extension]] [-s** start-time] [-T ttl] [-u] [-v level] [-V] {domain}
Description¶
The dnssec-cds
command changes DS records at a delegation point
based on CDS or CDNSKEY records published in the child zone. If both CDS
and CDNSKEY records are present in the child zone, the CDS is preferred.
This enables a child zone to inform its parent of upcoming changes to
its key-signing keys (KSKs); by polling periodically with dnssec-cds
, the
parent can keep the DS records up-to-date and enable automatic rolling
of KSKs.
Two input files are required. The -f child-file
option specifies a
file containing the child’s CDS and/or CDNSKEY records, plus RRSIG and
DNSKEY records so that they can be authenticated. The -d path
option
specifies the location of a file containing the current DS records. For
example, this could be a dsset-
file generated by
dnssec-signzone
, or the output of dnssec-dsfromkey
, or the
output of a previous run of dnssec-cds
.
The dnssec-cds
command uses special DNSSEC validation logic
specified by RFC 7344. It requires that the CDS and/or CDNSKEY records
be validly signed by a key represented in the existing DS records. This
is typically the pre-existing KSK.
For protection against replay attacks, the signatures on the child
records must not be older than they were on a previous run of
dnssec-cds
. Their age is obtained from the modification time of the
dsset-
file, or from the -s
option.
To protect against breaking the delegation, dnssec-cds
ensures that
the DNSKEY RRset can be verified by every key algorithm in the new DS
RRset, and that the same set of keys are covered by every DS digest
type.
By default, replacement DS records are written to the standard output;
with the -i
option the input file is overwritten in place. The
replacement DS records are the same as the existing records, when no
change is required. The output can be empty if the CDS/CDNSKEY records
specify that the child zone wants to be insecure.
Warning
Be careful not to delete the DS records when dnssec-cds
fails!
Alternatively, dnssec-cds -u
writes an nsupdate
script to the
standard output. The -u
and -i
options can be used together to
maintain a dsset-
file as well as emit an nsupdate
script.
Options¶
-a algorithm
This option specifies a digest algorithm to use when converting CDNSKEY records to DS records. This option can be repeated, so that multiple DS records are created for each CDNSKEY record. This option has no effect when using CDS records.
The algorithm must be one of SHA-1, SHA-256, or SHA-384. These values are case-insensitive, and the hyphen may be omitted. If no algorithm is specified, the default is SHA-256.
-c class
This option specifies the DNS class of the zones.
-D
This option generates DS records from CDNSKEY records if both CDS and CDNSKEY records are present in the child zone. By default CDS records are preferred.
-d path
This specifies the location of the parent DS records. The path can be the name of a file containing the DS records; if it is a directory,
dnssec-cds
looks for adsset-
file for the domain inside the directory.To protect against replay attacks, child records are rejected if they were signed earlier than the modification time of the
dsset-
file. This can be adjusted with the-s
option.-f child-file
This option specifies the file containing the child’s CDS and/or CDNSKEY records, plus its DNSKEY records and the covering RRSIG records, so that they can be authenticated.
The examples below describe how to generate this file.
-iextension
This option updates the
dsset-
file in place, instead of writing DS records to the standard output.There must be no space between the
-i
and the extension. If no extension is provided, the olddsset-
is discarded. If an extension is present, a backup of the olddsset-
file is kept with the extension appended to its filename.To protect against replay attacks, the modification time of the
dsset-
file is set to match the signature inception time of the child records, provided that it is later than the file’s current modification time.-s start-time
This option specifies the date and time after which RRSIG records become acceptable. This can be either an absolute or a relative time. An absolute start time is indicated by a number in YYYYMMDDHHMMSS notation; 20170827133700 denotes 13:37:00 UTC on August 27th, 2017. A time relative to the
dsset-
file is indicated with-N
, which is N seconds before the file modification time. A time relative to the current time is indicated withnow+N
.If no start-time is specified, the modification time of the
dsset-
file is used.-T ttl
This option specifies a TTL to be used for new DS records. If not specified, the default is the TTL of the old DS records. If they had no explicit TTL, the new DS records also have no explicit TTL.
-u
This option writes an
nsupdate
script to the standard output, instead of printing the new DS reords. The output is empty if no change is needed.Note: The TTL of new records needs to be specified: it can be done in the original
dsset-
file, with the-T
option, or using thensupdate
ttl
command.-V
This option prints version information.
-v level
This option sets the debugging level. Level 1 is intended to be usefully verbose for general users; higher levels are intended for developers.
domain
This indicates the name of the delegation point/child zone apex.
Exit Status¶
The dnssec-cds
command exits 0 on success, or non-zero if an error
occurred.
If successful, the DS records may or may not need to be changed.
Examples¶
Before running dnssec-signzone
, ensure that the delegations
are up-to-date by running dnssec-cds
on every dsset-
file.
To fetch the child records required by dnssec-cds
, invoke
dig
as in the script below. It is acceptable if the dig
fails, since
dnssec-cds
performs all the necessary checking.
for f in dsset-*
do
d=${f#dsset-}
dig +dnssec +noall +answer $d DNSKEY $d CDNSKEY $d CDS |
dnssec-cds -i -f /dev/stdin -d $f $d
done
When the parent zone is automatically signed by named
,
dnssec-cds
can be used with nsupdate
to maintain a delegation as follows.
The dsset-
file allows the script to avoid having to fetch and
validate the parent DS records, and it maintains the replay attack
protection time.
dig +dnssec +noall +answer $d DNSKEY $d CDNSKEY $d CDS |
dnssec-cds -u -i -f /dev/stdin -d $f $d |
nsupdate -l
dnssec-dsfromkey - DNSSEC DS RR generation tool¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-dsfromkey [ -1 | -2 | -a alg ] [ -C ] [-T TTL] [-v level] [-K directory] {keyfile}
dnssec-dsfromkey [ -1 | -2 | -a alg ] [ -C ] [-T TTL] [-v level] [-c class] [-A] {-f file} [dnsname]
dnssec-dsfromkey [ -1 | -2 | -a alg ] [ -C ] [-T TTL] [-v level] [-c class] [-K directory] {-s} {dnsname}
dnssec-dsfromkey [ -h | -V ]
Description¶
The dnssec-dsfromkey
command outputs DS (Delegation Signer) resource records
(RRs), or CDS (Child DS) RRs with the -C
option.
The input keys can be specified in a number of ways:
By default, dnssec-dsfromkey
reads a key file named in the format
Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.key
, as generated by dnssec-keygen
.
With the -f file
option, dnssec-dsfromkey
reads keys from a zone
file or partial zone file (which can contain just the DNSKEY records).
With the -s
option, dnssec-dsfromkey
reads a keyset-
file,
as generated by dnssec-keygen
-C
.
Options¶
-1
This option is an abbreviation for
-a SHA1
.-2
This option is an abbreviation for
-a SHA-256
.-a algorithm
This option specifies a digest algorithm to use when converting DNSKEY records to DS records. This option can be repeated, so that multiple DS records are created for each DNSKEY record.
The algorithm must be one of SHA-1, SHA-256, or SHA-384. These values are case-insensitive, and the hyphen may be omitted. If no algorithm is specified, the default is SHA-256.
-A
This option indicates that ZSKs are to be included when generating DS records. Without this option, only keys which have the KSK flag set are converted to DS records and printed. This option is only useful in
-f
zone file mode.-c class
This option specifies the DNS class; the default is IN. This option is only useful in
-s
keyset or-f
zone file mode.-C
This option generates CDS records rather than DS records.
-f file
This option sets zone file mode, in which the final dnsname argument of
dnssec-dsfromkey
is the DNS domain name of a zone whose master file can be read fromfile
. If the zone name is the same asfile
, then it may be omitted.If
file
is-
, then the zone data is read from the standard input. This makes it possible to use the output of thedig
command as input, as in:dig dnskey example.com | dnssec-dsfromkey -f - example.com
-h
This option prints usage information.
-K directory
This option tells BIND 9 to look for key files or
keyset-
files indirectory
.-s
This option enables keyset mode, in which the final dnsname argument from
dnssec-dsfromkey
is the DNS domain name used to locate akeyset-
file.-T TTL
This option specifies the TTL of the DS records. By default the TTL is omitted.
-v level
This option sets the debugging level.
-V
This option prints version information.
Example¶
To build the SHA-256 DS RR from the Kexample.com.+003+26160
keyfile,
issue the following command:
dnssec-dsfromkey -2 Kexample.com.+003+26160
The command returns something similar to:
example.com. IN DS 26160 5 2 3A1EADA7A74B8D0BA86726B0C227AA85AB8BBD2B2004F41A868A54F0C5EA0B94
Files¶
The keyfile can be designated by the key identification
Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii
or the full file name Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.key
, as
generated by dnssec-keygen
.
The keyset file name is built from the directory
, the string
keyset-
, and the dnsname
.
Caveat¶
A keyfile error may return “file not found,” even if the file exists.
dnssec-importkey - import DNSKEY records from external systems so they can be managed¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-importkey [-K directory] [-L ttl] [-P date/offset] [-P sync date/offset] [-D date/offset] [-D sync date/offset] [-h] [-v level] [-V] {keyfile}
dnssec-importkey {-f filename} [-K directory] [-L ttl] [-P date/offset] [-P sync date/offset] [-D date/offset] [-D sync date/offset] [-h] [-v level] [-V] [dnsname]
Description¶
dnssec-importkey
reads a public DNSKEY record and generates a pair
of .key/.private files. The DNSKEY record may be read from an
existing .key file, in which case a corresponding .private file is
generated, or it may be read from any other file or from the standard
input, in which case both .key and .private files are generated.
The newly created .private file does not contain private key data, and
cannot be used for signing. However, having a .private file makes it
possible to set publication (-P
) and deletion (-D
) times for the
key, which means the public key can be added to and removed from the
DNSKEY RRset on schedule even if the true private key is stored offline.
Options¶
-f filename
This option indicates the zone file mode. Instead of a public keyfile name, the argument is the DNS domain name of a zone master file, which can be read from
filename
. If the domain name is the same asfilename
, then it may be omitted.If
filename
is set to"-"
, then the zone data is read from the standard input.-K directory
This option sets the directory in which the key files are to reside.
-L ttl
This option sets the default TTL to use for this key when it is converted into a DNSKEY RR. This is the TTL used when the key is imported into a zone, unless there was already a DNSKEY RRset in place, in which case the existing TTL takes precedence. Setting the default TTL to
0
ornone
removes it from the key.-h
This option emits a usage message and exits.
-v level
This option sets the debugging level.
-V
This option prints version information.
Timing Options¶
Dates can be expressed in the format YYYYMMDD or YYYYMMDDHHMMSS. If the
argument begins with a +
or -
, it is interpreted as an offset from
the present time. For convenience, if such an offset is followed by one
of the suffixes y
, mo
, w
, d
, h
, or mi
, then the offset is
computed in years (defined as 365 24-hour days, ignoring leap years),
months (defined as 30 24-hour days), weeks, days, hours, or minutes,
respectively. Without a suffix, the offset is computed in seconds. To
explicitly prevent a date from being set, use none
or never
.
-P date/offset
This option sets the date on which a key is to be published to the zone. After that date, the key is included in the zone but is not used to sign it.
-P sync date/offset
This option sets the date on which CDS and CDNSKEY records that match this key are to be published to the zone.
-D date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be deleted. After that date, the key is no longer included in the zone. (However, it may remain in the key repository.)
-D sync date/offset
This option sets the date on which the CDS and CDNSKEY records that match this key are to be deleted.
Files¶
A keyfile can be designed by the key identification Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii
or the full file name Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.key
, as generated by
dnssec-keygen
.
dnssec-checkds - DNSSEC delegation consistency checking tool¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-checkds
[-ddig path] [-Ddsfromkey path]
[-ffile] [-ldomain] [-sfile] {zone}
Description¶
dnssec-checkds
verifies the correctness of Delegation Signer (DS)
resource records for keys in a specified zone.
Options¶
-a algorithm
Specify a digest algorithm to use when converting the zones DNSKEY records to expected DS records. This option can be repeated, so that multiple records are checked for each DNSKEY record.
The algorithm must be one of SHA-1, SHA-256, or SHA-384. These values are case insensitive, and the hyphen may be omitted. If no algorithm is specified, the default is SHA-256.
-f file
If a
file
is specified, then the zone is read from that file to find the DNSKEY records. If not, then the DNSKEY records for the zone are looked up in the DNS.
-s file
Specifies a prepared dsset file, such as would be generated by
dnssec-signzone
, to use as a source for the DS RRset instead of querying the parent.
-d dig path
Specifies a path to a
dig
binary. Used for testing.
-D dsfromkey path
Specifies a path to a
dnssec-dsfromkey
binary. Used for testing.
See Also¶
dnssec-dsfromkey
(8), dnssec-keygen
(8),
dnssec-signzone
(8),
dnssec-coverage - checks future DNSKEY coverage for a zone¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-coverage
[-Kdirectory] [-llength]
[-ffile] [-dDNSKEY TTL] [-mmax TTL]
[-rinterval] [-ccompilezone path] [-k] [-z]
[zone…]
Description¶
dnssec-coverage
verifies that the DNSSEC keys for a given zone or a
set of zones have timing metadata set properly to ensure no future
lapses in DNSSEC coverage.
If zone
is specified, then keys found in the key repository matching
that zone are scanned, and an ordered list is generated of the events
scheduled for that key (i.e., publication, activation, inactivation,
deletion). The list of events is walked in order of occurrence. Warnings
are generated if any event is scheduled which could cause the zone to
enter a state in which validation failures might occur: for example, if
the number of published or active keys for a given algorithm drops to
zero, or if a key is deleted from the zone too soon after a new key is
rolled, and cached data signed by the prior key has not had time to
expire from resolver caches.
If zone
is not specified, then all keys in the key repository will
be scanned, and all zones for which there are keys will be analyzed.
(Note: This method of reporting is only accurate if all the zones that
have keys in a given repository share the same TTL parameters.)
Options¶
-K directory
Sets the directory in which keys can be found. Defaults to the current working directory.
-f file
If a
file
is specified, then the zone is read from that file; the largest TTL and the DNSKEY TTL are determined directly from the zone data, and the-m
and-d
options do not need to be specified on the command line.
-l duration
The length of time to check for DNSSEC coverage. Key events scheduled further into the future than
duration
will be ignored, and assumed to be correct.The value of
duration
can be set in seconds, or in larger units of time by adding a suffix: mi for minutes, h for hours, d for days, w for weeks, mo for months, y for years.
-m maximum TTL
Sets the value to be used as the maximum TTL for the zone or zones being analyzed when determining whether there is a possibility of validation failure. When a zone-signing key is deactivated, there must be enough time for the record in the zone with the longest TTL to have expired from resolver caches before that key can be purged from the DNSKEY RRset. If that condition does not apply, a warning will be generated.
The length of the TTL can be set in seconds, or in larger units of time by adding a suffix: mi for minutes, h for hours, d for days, w for weeks, mo for months, y for years.
This option is not necessary if the
-f
has been used to specify a zone file. If-f
has been specified, this option may still be used; it will override the value found in the file.If this option is not used and the maximum TTL cannot be retrieved from a zone file, a warning is generated and a default value of 1 week is used.
-d DNSKEY TTL
Sets the value to be used as the DNSKEY TTL for the zone or zones being analyzed when determining whether there is a possibility of validation failure. When a key is rolled (that is, replaced with a new key), there must be enough time for the old DNSKEY RRset to have expired from resolver caches before the new key is activated and begins generating signatures. If that condition does not apply, a warning will be generated.
The length of the TTL can be set in seconds, or in larger units of time by adding a suffix: mi for minutes, h for hours, d for days, w for weeks, mo for months, y for years.
This option is not necessary if
-f
has been used to specify a zone file from which the TTL of the DNSKEY RRset can be read, or if a default key TTL was set using ith the-L
todnssec-keygen
. If either of those is true, this option may still be used; it will override the values found in the zone file or the key file.If this option is not used and the key TTL cannot be retrieved from the zone file or the key file, then a warning is generated and a default value of 1 day is used.
-r resign interval
Sets the value to be used as the resign interval for the zone or zones being analyzed when determining whether there is a possibility of validation failure. This value defaults to 22.5 days, which is also the default in
named
. However, if it has been changed by thesig-validity-interval
option in named.conf, then it should also be changed here.The length of the interval can be set in seconds, or in larger units of time by adding a suffix: mi for minutes, h for hours, d for days, w for weeks, mo for months, y for years.
-k
Only check KSK coverage; ignore ZSK events. Cannot be used with
-z
.
-z
Only check ZSK coverage; ignore KSK events. Cannot be used with
-k
.
-c compilezone path
Specifies a path to a
named-compilezone
binary. Used for testing.
See Also¶
dnssec-checkds
(8), dnssec-dsfromkey
(8),
dnssec-keygen
(8), dnssec-signzone
(8)
dnssec-keymgr - Ensures correct DNSKEY coverage based on a defined policy¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-keymgr [-Kdirectory] [-cfile] [-f] [-k] [-q] [-v] [-z] [-gpath] [-spath] [zone…]
Description¶
dnssec-keymgr
is a high level Python wrapper to facilitate the key
rollover process for zones handled by BIND. It uses the BIND commands
for manipulating DNSSEC key metadata: dnssec-keygen
and
dnssec-settime
.
DNSSEC policy can be read from a configuration file (default /etc/dnssec-policy.conf), from which the key parameters, publication and rollover schedule, and desired coverage duration for any given zone can be determined. This file may be used to define individual DNSSEC policies on a per-zone basis, or to set a “default” policy used for all zones.
When dnssec-keymgr
runs, it examines the DNSSEC keys for one or more
zones, comparing their timing metadata against the policies for those
zones. If key settings do not conform to the DNSSEC policy (for example,
because the policy has been changed), they are automatically corrected.
A zone policy can specify a duration for which we want to ensure the key
correctness (coverage
). It can also specify a rollover period
(roll-period
). If policy indicates that a key should roll over
before the coverage period ends, then a successor key will automatically
be created and added to the end of the key series.
If zones are specified on the command line, dnssec-keymgr
will
examine only those zones. If a specified zone does not already have keys
in place, then keys will be generated for it according to policy.
If zones are not specified on the command line, then dnssec-keymgr
will search the key directory (either the current working directory or
the directory set by the -K
option), and check the keys for all the
zones represented in the directory.
Key times that are in the past will not be updated unless the -f
is
used (see below). Key inactivation and deletion times that are less than
five minutes in the future will be delayed by five minutes.
It is expected that this tool will be run automatically and unattended
(for example, by cron
).
Options¶
-c file
If
-c
is specified, then the DNSSEC policy is read fromfile
. (If not specified, then the policy is read from /etc/dnssec-policy.conf; if that file doesnt exist, a built-in global default policy is used.)
-f
Force: allow updating of key events even if they are already in the past. This is not recommended for use with zones in which keys have already been published. However, if a set of keys has been generated all of which have publication and activation dates in the past, but the keys have not been published in a zone as yet, then this option can be used to clean them up and turn them into a proper series of keys with appropriate rollover intervals.
-g keygen-path
Specifies a path to a
dnssec-keygen
binary. Used for testing. See also the-s
option.
-h
Print the
dnssec-keymgr
help summary and exit.
-K directory
Sets the directory in which keys can be found. Defaults to the current working directory.
-k
Only apply policies to KSK keys. See also the
-z
option.
-q
Quiet: suppress printing of
dnssec-keygen
anddnssec-settime
.
-s settime-path
Specifies a path to a
dnssec-settime
binary. Used for testing. See also the-g
option.
-v
Print the
dnssec-keymgr
version and exit.
-z
Only apply policies to ZSK keys. See also the
-k
option.
Policy Configuration¶
The dnssec-policy.conf file can specify three kinds of policies:
· Policy classes (
policy
name{ ... };
) can be inherited by zone policies or other policy classes; these can be used to create sets of different security profiles. For example, a policy classnormal
might specify 1024-bit key sizes, but a classextra
might specify 2048 bits instead;extra
would be used for zones that had unusually high security needs.
· Algorithm policies: (
algorithm-policy
algorithm{ ... };
) override default per-algorithm settings. For example, by default, RSASHA256 keys use 2048-bit key sizes for both KSK and ZSK. This can be modified usingalgorithm-policy
, and the new key sizes would then be used for any key of type RSASHA256.· Zone policies: (
zone
name{ ... };
) set policy for a single zone by name. A zone policy can inherit a policy class by including apolicy
option. Zone names beginning with digits (i.e., 0-9) must be quoted. If a zone does not have its own policy then the “default” policy applies.
Options that can be specified in policies:
algorithm
name;
The key algorithm. If no policy is defined, the default is RSASHA256.
coverage
duration;
The length of time to ensure that keys will be correct; no action will be taken to create new keys to be activated after this time. This can be represented as a number of seconds, or as a duration using human-readable units (examples: “1y” or “6 months”). A default value for this option can be set in algorithm policies as well as in policy classes or zone policies. If no policy is configured, the default is six months.
directory
path;
Specifies the directory in which keys should be stored.
key-size
keytype size;
Specifies the number of bits to use in creating keys. The keytype is either “zsk” or “ksk”. A default value for this option can be set in algorithm policies as well as in policy classes or zone policies. If no policy is configured, the default is 2048 bits for RSA keys.
keyttl
duration;
The key TTL. If no policy is defined, the default is one hour.
post-publish
keytype duration;
How long after inactivation a key should be deleted from the zone. Note: If
roll-period
is not set, this value is ignored. The keytype is either “zsk” or “ksk”. A default duration for this option can be set in algorithm policies as well as in policy classes or zone policies. The default is one month.
pre-publish
keytype duration;
How long before activation a key should be published. Note: If
roll-period
is not set, this value is ignored. The keytype is either “zsk” or “ksk”. A default duration for this option can be set in algorithm policies as well as in policy classes or zone policies. The default is one month.
roll-period
keytype duration;
How frequently keys should be rolled over. The keytype is either “zsk” or “ksk”. A default duration for this option can be set in algorithm policies as well as in policy classes or zone policies. If no policy is configured, the default is one year for ZSKs. KSKs do not roll over by default.
standby
keytype number;
Not yet implemented.
Remaining Work¶
· Enable scheduling of KSK rollovers using the
-P sync
and-D sync
options todnssec-keygen
anddnssec-settime
. Check the parent zone (as indnssec-checkds
) to determine when its safe for the key to roll.
· Allow configuration of standby keys and use of the REVOKE bit, for keys that use RFC 5011 semantics.
See Also¶
dnssec-coverage
(8), dnssec-keygen
(8),
dnssec-settime
(8), dnssec-checkds
(8)
dnssec-keyfromlabel - DNSSEC key generation tool¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-keyfromlabel {-l label} [-3] [-a algorithm] [-A date/offset] [-c class] [-D date/offset] [-D sync date/offset] [-E engine] [-f flag] [-G] [-I date/offset] [-i interval] [-k] [-K directory] [-L ttl] [-n nametype] [-P date/offset] [-P sync date/offset] [-p protocol] [-R date/offset] [-S key] [-t type] [-v level] [-V] [-y] {name}
Description¶
dnssec-keyfromlabel
generates a pair of key files that reference a
key object stored in a cryptographic hardware service module (HSM). The
private key file can be used for DNSSEC signing of zone data as if it
were a conventional signing key created by dnssec-keygen
, but the
key material is stored within the HSM and the actual signing takes
place there.
The name
of the key is specified on the command line. This must
match the name of the zone for which the key is being generated.
Options¶
-a algorithm
This option selects the cryptographic algorithm. The value of
algorithm
must be one of RSASHA1, NSEC3RSASHA1, RSASHA256, RSASHA512, ECDSAP256SHA256, ECDSAP384SHA384, ED25519, or ED448.If no algorithm is specified, RSASHA1 is used by default unless the
-3
option is specified, in which case NSEC3RSASHA1 is used instead. (If-3
is used and an algorithm is specified, that algorithm is checked for compatibility with NSEC3.)These values are case-insensitive. In some cases, abbreviations are supported, such as ECDSA256 for ECDSAP256SHA256 and ECDSA384 for ECDSAP384SHA384. If RSASHA1 is specified along with the
-3
option, then NSEC3RSASHA1 is used instead.Since BIND 9.12.0, this option is mandatory except when using the
-S
option, which copies the algorithm from the predecessory key. Previously, the default for newly generated keys was RSASHA1.-3
This option uses an NSEC3-capable algorithm to generate a DNSSEC key. If this option is used with an algorithm that has both NSEC and NSEC3 versions, then the NSEC3 version is used; for example,
dnssec-keygen -3a RSASHA1
specifies the NSEC3RSASHA1 algorithm.-E engine
This option specifies the cryptographic hardware to use.
When BIND 9 is built with OpenSSL, this needs to be set to the OpenSSL engine identifier that drives the cryptographic accelerator or hardware service module (usually
pkcs11
). When BIND is built with native PKCS#11 cryptography (--enable-native-pkcs11
), it defaults to the path of the PKCS#11 provider library specified via--with-pkcs11
.-l label
This option specifies the label for a key pair in the crypto hardware.
When BIND 9 is built with OpenSSL-based PKCS#11 support, the label is an arbitrary string that identifies a particular key. It may be preceded by an optional OpenSSL engine name, followed by a colon, as in
pkcs11:keylabel
.When BIND 9 is built with native PKCS#11 support, the label is a PKCS#11 URI string in the format
pkcs11:keyword\ =value[;\ keyword\ =value;...]
. Keywords includetoken
, which identifies the HSM;object
, which identifies the key; andpin-source
, which identifies a file from which the HSM’s PIN code can be obtained. The label is stored in the on-diskprivate
file.If the label contains a
pin-source
field, tools using the generated key files are able to use the HSM for signing and other operations without any need for an operator to manually enter a PIN. Note: Making the HSM’s PIN accessible in this manner may reduce the security advantage of using an HSM; use caution with this feature.-n nametype
This option 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-insensitive.-C
This option enables compatibility mode, which generates an old-style key, without any metadata. By default,
dnssec-keyfromlabel
includes the key’s creation date in the metadata stored with the private key; other dates may be set there as well, including publication date, activation date, etc. Keys that include this data may be incompatible with older versions of BIND; the-C
option suppresses them.-c class
This option indicates that the DNS record containing the key should have the specified class. If not specified, class IN is used.
-f flag
This option sets the specified flag in the
flag
field of the KEY/DNSKEY record. The only recognized flags are KSK (Key-Signing Key) and REVOKE.-G
This option generates a key, but does not publish it or sign with it. This option is incompatible with
-P
and-A
.-h
This option prints a short summary of the options and arguments to
dnssec-keyfromlabel
.-K directory
This option sets the directory in which the key files are to be written.
-k
This option generates KEY records rather than DNSKEY records.
-L
ttlThis option sets the default TTL to use for this key when it is converted into a DNSKEY RR. This is the TTL used when the key is imported into a zone, unless there was already a DNSKEY RRset in place, in which case the existing TTL would take precedence. Setting the default TTL to
0
ornone
removes it.-p protocol
This option sets the protocol value for the 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.
-S key
This option generates a key as an explicit successor to an existing key. The name, algorithm, size, and type of the key are set to match the predecessor. The activation date of the new key is set to the inactivation date of the existing one. The publication date is set to the activation date minus the prepublication interval, which defaults to 30 days.
-t type
This option indicates the type 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 to the ability to encrypt data.-v level
This option sets the debugging level.
-V
This option prints version information.
-y
This option allows DNSSEC key files to be generated even if the key ID would collide with that of an existing key, in the event of either key being revoked. (This is only safe to enable if RFC 5011 trust anchor maintenance is not used with either of the keys involved.)
Timing Options¶
Dates can be expressed in the format YYYYMMDD or YYYYMMDDHHMMSS. If the
argument begins with a +
or -
, it is interpreted as an offset from
the present time. For convenience, if such an offset is followed by one
of the suffixes y
, mo
, w
, d
, h
, or mi
, then the offset is
computed in years (defined as 365 24-hour days, ignoring leap years),
months (defined as 30 24-hour days), weeks, days, hours, or minutes,
respectively. Without a suffix, the offset is computed in seconds. To
explicitly prevent a date from being set, use none
or never
.
-P date/offset
This option sets the date on which a key is to be published to the zone. After that date, the key is included in the zone but is not used to sign it. If not set, and if the
-G
option has not been used, the default is the current date.-P sync date/offset
This option sets the date on which CDS and CDNSKEY records that match this key are to be published to the zone.
-A date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be activated. After that date, the key is included in the zone and used to sign it. If not set, and if the
-G
option has not been used, the default is the current date.-R date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be revoked. After that date, the key is flagged as revoked. It is included in the zone and is used to sign it.
-I date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be retired. After that date, the key is still included in the zone, but it is not used to sign it.
-D date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be deleted. After that date, the key is no longer included in the zone. (However, it may remain in the key repository.)
-D sync date/offset
This option sets the date on which the CDS and CDNSKEY records that match this key are to be deleted.
-i interval
This option sets the prepublication interval for a key. If set, then the publication and activation dates must be separated by at least this much time. If the activation date is specified but the publication date is not, the publication date defaults to this much time before the activation date; conversely, if the publication date is specified but not the activation date, activation is set to this much time after publication.
If the key is being created as an explicit successor to another key, then the default prepublication interval is 30 days; otherwise it is zero.
As with date offsets, if the argument is followed by one of the suffixes
y
,mo
,w
,d
,h
, ormi
, the interval is measured in years, months, weeks, days, hours, or minutes, respectively. Without a suffix, the interval is measured in seconds.
Generated Key Files¶
When dnssec-keyfromlabel
completes successfully, it prints a string
of the form Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii
to the standard output. This is an
identification string for the key files it has generated.
nnnn
is the key name.aaa
is the numeric representation of the algorithm.iiiii
is the key identifier (or footprint).
dnssec-keyfromlabel
creates two files, with names based on the
printed string. Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.key
contains the public key, and
Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.private
contains the private key.
The .key
file contains a DNS KEY record that can be inserted into a
zone file (directly or with an $INCLUDE statement).
The .private
file contains algorithm-specific fields. For obvious
security reasons, this file does not have general read permission.
dnssec-keygen: DNSSEC key generation tool¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-keygen [-3] [-A date/offset] [-a algorithm] [-b keysize] [-C] [-c class] [-D date/offset] [-d bits] [-D sync date/offset] [-E engine] [-f flag] [-G] [-g generator] [-h] [-I date/offset] [-i interval] [-K directory] [-k policy] [-L ttl] [-l file] [-n nametype] [-P date/offset] [-P sync date/offset] [-p protocol] [-q] [-R date/offset] [-S key] [-s strength] [-T rrtype] [-t type] [-V] [-v level] {name}
Description¶
dnssec-keygen
generates keys for DNSSEC (Secure DNS), as defined in
RFC 2535 and RFC 4034. It can also generate keys for use with TSIG
(Transaction Signatures) as defined in RFC 2845, or TKEY (Transaction
Key) as defined in RFC 2930.
The name
of the key is specified on the command line. For DNSSEC
keys, this must match the name of the zone for which the key is being
generated.
The dnssec-keymgr
command acts as a wrapper
around dnssec-keygen
, generating and updating keys
as needed to enforce defined security policies such as key rollover
scheduling. Using dnssec-keymgr
may be preferable
to direct use of dnssec-keygen
.
Options¶
-3
This option uses an NSEC3-capable algorithm to generate a DNSSEC key. If this option is used with an algorithm that has both NSEC and NSEC3 versions, then the NSEC3 version is selected; for example,
dnssec-keygen -3a RSASHA1
specifies the NSEC3RSASHA1 algorithm.-a algorithm
This option selects the cryptographic algorithm. For DNSSEC keys, the value of
algorithm
must be one of RSASHA1, NSEC3RSASHA1, RSASHA256, RSASHA512, ECDSAP256SHA256, ECDSAP384SHA384, ED25519, or ED448. For TKEY, the value must be DH (Diffie-Hellman); specifying this value automatically sets the-T KEY
option as well.These values are case-insensitive. In some cases, abbreviations are supported, such as ECDSA256 for ECDSAP256SHA256 and ECDSA384 for ECDSAP384SHA384. If RSASHA1 is specified along with the
-3
option, NSEC3RSASHA1 is used instead.This parameter must be specified except when using the
-S
option, which copies the algorithm from the predecessor key.In prior releases, HMAC algorithms could be generated for use as TSIG keys, but that feature was removed in BIND 9.13.0. Use
tsig-keygen
to generate TSIG keys.-b keysize
This option specifies the number of bits in the key. The choice of key size depends on the algorithm used: RSA keys must be between 1024 and 4096 bits; Diffie-Hellman keys must be between 128 and 4096 bits. Elliptic curve algorithms do not need this parameter.
If the key size is not specified, some algorithms have pre-defined defaults. For example, RSA keys for use as DNSSEC zone-signing keys have a default size of 1024 bits; RSA keys for use as key-signing keys (KSKs, generated with
-f KSK
) default to 2048 bits.-C
This option enables compatibility mode, which generates an old-style key, without any timing metadata. By default,
dnssec-keygen
includes the key’s creation date in the metadata stored with the private key; other dates may be set there as well, including publication date, activation date, etc. Keys that include this data may be incompatible with older versions of BIND; the-C
option suppresses them.-c class
This option indicates that the DNS record containing the key should have the specified class. If not specified, class IN is used.
-d bits
This option specifies the key size in bits. For the algorithms RSASHA1, NSEC3RSASA1, RSASHA256, and RSASHA512 the key size must be between 1024 and 4096 bits; DH size is between 128 and 4096 bits. This option is ignored for algorithms ECDSAP256SHA256, ECDSAP384SHA384, ED25519, and ED448.
-E engine
This option specifies the cryptographic hardware to use, when applicable.
When BIND 9 is built with OpenSSL, this needs to be set to the OpenSSL engine identifier that drives the cryptographic accelerator or hardware service module (usually
pkcs11
). When BIND is built with native PKCS#11 cryptography (--enable-native-pkcs11
), it defaults to the path of the PKCS#11 provider library specified via--with-pkcs11
.-f flag
This option sets the specified flag in the flag field of the KEY/DNSKEY record. The only recognized flags are KSK (Key-Signing Key) and REVOKE.
-G
This option generates a key, but does not publish it or sign with it. This option is incompatible with
-P
and-A
.-g generator
This option indicates the generator to use if generating a Diffie-Hellman key. Allowed values are 2 and 5. If no generator is specified, a known prime from RFC 2539 is used if possible; otherwise the default is 2.
-h
This option prints a short summary of the options and arguments to
dnssec-keygen
.-K directory
This option sets the directory in which the key files are to be written.
-k policy
This option creates keys for a specific
dnssec-policy
. If a policy uses multiple keys,dnssec-keygen
generates multiple keys. This also creates a “.state” file to keep track of the key state.This option creates keys according to the
dnssec-policy
configuration, hence it cannot be used at the same time as many of the other options thatdnssec-keygen
provides.-L ttl
This option sets the default TTL to use for this key when it is converted into a DNSKEY RR. This is the TTL used when the key is imported into a zone, unless there was already a DNSKEY RRset in place, in which case the existing TTL takes precedence. If this value is not set and there is no existing DNSKEY RRset, the TTL defaults to the SOA TTL. Setting the default TTL to
0
ornone
is the same as leaving it unset.-l file
This option provides a configuration file that contains a
dnssec-policy
statement (matching the policy set with-k
).-n nametype
This option 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-insensitive. The default is ZONE for DNSKEY generation.-p protocol
This option sets the protocol value for the generated key, for use with
-T 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.-q
This option sets quiet mode, which suppresses unnecessary output, including progress indication. Without this option, when
dnssec-keygen
is run interactively to generate an RSA or DSA key pair, it prints a string of symbols tostderr
indicating the progress of the key generation. A.
indicates that a random number has been found which passed an initial sieve test;+
means a number has passed a single round of the Miller-Rabin primality test; and a space ( ) means that the number has passed all the tests and is a satisfactory key.-S key
This option creates a new key which is an explicit successor to an existing key. The name, algorithm, size, and type of the key are set to match the existing key. The activation date of the new key is set to the inactivation date of the existing one. The publication date is set to the activation date minus the prepublication interval, which defaults to 30 days.
-s strength
This option 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 rrtype
This option specifies the resource record type to use for the key.
rrtype
must be either DNSKEY or KEY. The default is DNSKEY when using a DNSSEC algorithm, but it can be overridden to KEY for use with SIG(0).-t type
This option indicates the type of the key for use with
-T 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 to the ability to encrypt data.-V
This option prints version information.
-v level
This option sets the debugging level.
Timing Options¶
Dates can be expressed in the format YYYYMMDD or YYYYMMDDHHMMSS. If the
argument begins with a +
or -
, it is interpreted as an offset from
the present time. For convenience, if such an offset is followed by one
of the suffixes y
, mo
, w
, d
, h
, or mi
, then the offset is
computed in years (defined as 365 24-hour days, ignoring leap years),
months (defined as 30 24-hour days), weeks, days, hours, or minutes,
respectively. Without a suffix, the offset is computed in seconds. To
explicitly prevent a date from being set, use none
or never
.
-P date/offset
This option sets the date on which a key is to be published to the zone. After that date, the key is included in the zone but is not used to sign it. If not set, and if the
-G
option has not been used, the default is the current date.-P sync date/offset
This option sets the date on which CDS and CDNSKEY records that match this key are to be published to the zone.
-A date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be activated. After that date, the key is included in the zone and used to sign it. If not set, and if the
-G
option has not been used, the default is the current date. If set, and-P
is not set, the publication date is set to the activation date minus the prepublication interval.-R date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be revoked. After that date, the key is flagged as revoked. It is included in the zone and is used to sign it.
-I date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be retired. After that date, the key is still included in the zone, but it is not used to sign it.
-D date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be deleted. After that date, the key is no longer included in the zone. (However, it may remain in the key repository.)
-D sync date/offset
This option sets the date on which the CDS and CDNSKEY records that match this key are to be deleted.
-i interval
This option sets the prepublication interval for a key. If set, then the publication and activation dates must be separated by at least this much time. If the activation date is specified but the publication date is not, the publication date defaults to this much time before the activation date; conversely, if the publication date is specified but not the activation date, activation is set to this much time after publication.
If the key is being created as an explicit successor to another key, then the default prepublication interval is 30 days; otherwise it is zero.
As with date offsets, if the argument is followed by one of the suffixes
y
,mo
,w
,d
,h
, ormi
, the interval is measured in years, months, weeks, days, hours, or minutes, respectively. Without a suffix, the interval is measured in seconds.
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 files, with names based on the printed
string. Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.key
contains the public key, and
Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.private
contains the private key.
The .key
file contains a DNSKEY or KEY record. When a zone is being
signed by named
or dnssec-signzone -S
, DNSKEY records are
included automatically. In other cases, the .key
file can be
inserted into a zone file manually or with an $INCLUDE
statement.
The .private
file contains algorithm-specific fields. For obvious
security reasons, this file does not have general read permission.
Example¶
To generate an ECDSAP256SHA256 zone-signing key for the zone
example.com
, issue the command:
dnssec-keygen -a ECDSAP256SHA256 example.com
The command prints a string of the form:
Kexample.com.+013+26160
In this example, dnssec-keygen
creates the files
Kexample.com.+013+26160.key
and Kexample.com.+013+26160.private
.
To generate a matching key-signing key, issue the command:
dnssec-keygen -a ECDSAP256SHA256 -f KSK example.com
dnssec-revoke - set the REVOKED bit on a DNSSEC key¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-revoke [-hr] [-v level] [-V] [-K directory] [-E engine] [-f] [-R] {keyfile}
Description¶
dnssec-revoke
reads a DNSSEC key file, sets the REVOKED bit on the
key as defined in RFC 5011, and creates a new pair of key files
containing the now-revoked key.
Options¶
-h
This option emits a usage message and exits.
-K directory
This option sets the directory in which the key files are to reside.
-r
This option indicates to remove the original keyset files after writing the new keyset files.
-v level
This option sets the debugging level.
-V
This option prints version information.
-E engine
This option specifies the cryptographic hardware to use, when applicable.
When BIND 9 is built with OpenSSL, this needs to be set to the OpenSSL engine identifier that drives the cryptographic accelerator or hardware service module (usually
pkcs11
). When BIND is built with native PKCS#11 cryptography (--enable-native-pkcs11
), it defaults to the path of the PKCS#11 provider library specified via--with-pkcs11
.-f
This option indicates a forced overwrite and causes
dnssec-revoke
to write the new key pair, even if a file already exists matching the algorithm and key ID of the revoked key.-R
This option prints the key tag of the key with the REVOKE bit set, but does not revoke the key.
dnssec-settime: set the key timing metadata for a DNSSEC key¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-settime [-f] [-K directory] [-L ttl] [-P date/offset] [-P ds date/offset] [-P sync date/offset] [-A date/offset] [-R date/offset] [-I date/offset] [-D date/offset] [-D ds date/offset] [-D sync date/offset] [-S key] [-i interval] [-h] [-V] [-v level] [-E engine] {keyfile} [-s] [-g state] [-d state date/offset] [-k state date/offset] [-r state date/offset] [-z state date/offset]
Description¶
dnssec-settime
reads a DNSSEC private key file and sets the key
timing metadata as specified by the -P
, -A
, -R
, -I
, and
-D
options. The metadata can then be used by dnssec-signzone
or
other signing software to determine when a key is to be published,
whether it should be used for signing a zone, etc.
If none of these options is set on the command line,
dnssec-settime
simply prints the key timing metadata already stored
in the key.
When key metadata fields are changed, both files of a key pair
(Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.key
and Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.private
) are
regenerated.
Metadata fields are stored in the private file. A human-readable description of the metadata is also placed in comments in the key file. The private file’s permissions are always set to be inaccessible to anyone other than the owner (mode 0600).
When working with state files, it is possible to update the timing metadata in
those files as well with -s
. With this option, it is also possible to update key
states with -d
(DS), -k
(DNSKEY), -r
(RRSIG of KSK), or -z
(RRSIG of ZSK). Allowed states are HIDDEN, RUMOURED, OMNIPRESENT, and
UNRETENTIVE.
The goal state of the key can also be set with -g
. This should be either
HIDDEN or OMNIPRESENT, representing whether the key should be removed from the
zone or published.
It is NOT RECOMMENDED to manipulate state files manually, except for testing purposes.
Options¶
-f
This option forces an update of an old-format key with no metadata fields. Without this option,
dnssec-settime
fails when attempting to update a legacy key. With this option, the key is recreated in the new format, but with the original key data retained. The key’s creation date is set to the present time. If no other values are specified, then the key’s publication and activation dates are also set to the present time.-K directory
This option sets the directory in which the key files are to reside.
-L ttl
This option sets the default TTL to use for this key when it is converted into a DNSKEY RR. This is the TTL used when the key is imported into a zone, unless there was already a DNSKEY RRset in place, in which case the existing TTL takes precedence. If this value is not set and there is no existing DNSKEY RRset, the TTL defaults to the SOA TTL. Setting the default TTL to
0
ornone
removes it from the key.-h
This option emits a usage message and exits.
-V
This option prints version information.
-v level
This option sets the debugging level.
-E engine
This option specifies the cryptographic hardware to use, when applicable.
When BIND 9 is built with OpenSSL, this needs to be set to the OpenSSL engine identifier that drives the cryptographic accelerator or hardware service module (usually
pkcs11
). When BIND is built with native PKCS#11 cryptography (--enable-native-pkcs11
), it defaults to the path of the PKCS#11 provider library specified via--with-pkcs11
.
Timing Options¶
Dates can be expressed in the format YYYYMMDD or YYYYMMDDHHMMSS. If the
argument begins with a +
or -
, it is interpreted as an offset from
the present time. For convenience, if such an offset is followed by one
of the suffixes y
, mo
, w
, d
, h
, or mi
, then the offset is
computed in years (defined as 365 24-hour days, ignoring leap years),
months (defined as 30 24-hour days), weeks, days, hours, or minutes,
respectively. Without a suffix, the offset is computed in seconds. To
explicitly prevent a date from being set, use none
or never
.
-P date/offset
This option sets the date on which a key is to be published to the zone. After that date, the key is included in the zone but is not used to sign it.
-P ds date/offset
This option Sets the date on which DS records that match this key have been seen in the parent zone.
-P sync date/offset
This option sets the date on which CDS and CDNSKEY records that match this key are to be published to the zone.
-A date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be activated. After that date, the key is included in the zone and used to sign it.
-R date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be revoked. After that date, the key is flagged as revoked. It is included in the zone and is used to sign it.
-I date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be retired. After that date, the key is still included in the zone, but it is not used to sign it.
-D date/offset
This option sets the date on which the key is to be deleted. After that date, the key is no longer included in the zone. (However, it may remain in the key repository.)
-D ds date/offset
This option sets the date on which the DS records that match this key have been seen removed from the parent zone.
-D sync date/offset
This option sets the date on which the CDS and CDNSKEY records that match this key are to be deleted.
-S predecessor key
This option selects a key for which the key being modified is an explicit successor. The name, algorithm, size, and type of the predecessor key must exactly match those of the key being modified. The activation date of the successor key is set to the inactivation date of the predecessor. The publication date is set to the activation date minus the prepublication interval, which defaults to 30 days.
-i interval
This option sets the prepublication interval for a key. If set, then the publication and activation dates must be separated by at least this much time. If the activation date is specified but the publication date is not, the publication date defaults to this much time before the activation date; conversely, if the publication date is specified but not the activation date, activation is set to this much time after publication.
If the key is being created as an explicit successor to another key, then the default prepublication interval is 30 days; otherwise it is zero.
As with date offsets, if the argument is followed by one of the suffixes
y
,mo
,w
,d
,h
, ormi
, the interval is measured in years, months, weeks, days, hours, or minutes, respectively. Without a suffix, the interval is measured in seconds.
Key State Options¶
To test dnssec-policy it may be necessary to construct keys with artificial state information; these options are used by the testing framework for that purpose, but should never be used in production.
Known key states are HIDDEN, RUMOURED, OMNIPRESENT, and UNRETENTIVE.
-s
This option indicates that when setting key timing data, the state file should also be updated.
-g state
This option sets the goal state for this key. Must be HIDDEN or OMNIPRESENT.
-d state date/offset
This option sets the DS state for this key as of the specified date, offset from the current date.
-k state date/offset
This option sets the DNSKEY state for this key as of the specified date, offset from the current date.
-r state date/offset
This option sets the RRSIG (KSK) state for this key as of the specified date, offset from the current date.
-z state date/offset
This option sets the RRSIG (ZSK) state for this key as of the specified date, offset from the current date.
Printing Options¶
dnssec-settime
can also be used to print the timing metadata
associated with a key.
-u
This option indicates that times should be printed in Unix epoch format.
-p C/P/Pds/Psync/A/R/I/D/Dds/Dsync/all
This option prints a specific metadata value or set of metadata values. The
-p
option may be followed by one or more of the following letters or strings to indicate which value or values to print:C
for the creation date,P
for the publication date,Pds` for the DS publication date, ``Psync
for the CDS and CDNSKEY publication date,A
for the activation date,R
for the revocation date,I
for the inactivation date,D
for the deletion date,Dds
for the DS deletion date, andDsync
for the CDS and CDNSKEY deletion date. To print all of the metadata, useall
.
dnssec-signzone - DNSSEC zone signing tool¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-signzone [-a] [-c class] [-d directory] [-D] [-E engine] [-e end-time] [-f output-file] [-g] [-h] [-i interval] [-I input-format] [-j jitter] [-K directory] [-k key] [-L serial] [-M maxttl] [-N soa-serial-format] [-o origin] [-O output-format] [-P] [-Q] [-q] [-R] [-S] [-s start-time] [-T ttl] [-t] [-u] [-v level] [-V] [-X extended end-time] [-x] [-z] [-3 salt] [-H iterations] [-A] {zonefile} [key…]
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) is determined by the presence or absence of a keyset
file for each child zone.
Options¶
-a
This option verifies all generated signatures.
-c class
This option specifies the DNS class of the zone.
-C
This option sets compatibility mode, in which a
keyset-zonename
file is generated in addition todsset-zonename
when signing a zone, for use by older versions ofdnssec-signzone
.-d directory
This option indicates the directory where BIND 9 should look for
dsset-
orkeyset-
files.-D
This option indicates that only those record types automatically managed by
dnssec-signzone
, i.e., RRSIG, NSEC, NSEC3 and NSEC3PARAM records, should be included in the output. If smart signing (-S
) is used, DNSKEY records are also included. The resulting file can be included in the original zone file with$INCLUDE
. This option cannot be combined with-O raw
,-O map
, or serial-number updating.-E engine
This option specifies the hardware to use for cryptographic operations, such as a secure key store used for signing, when applicable.
When BIND 9 is built with OpenSSL, this needs to be set to the OpenSSL engine identifier that drives the cryptographic accelerator or hardware service module (usually
pkcs11
). When BIND is built with native PKCS#11 cryptography (--enable-native-pkcs11
), it defaults to the path of the PKCS#11 provider library specified via--with-pkcs11
.-g
This option indicates that DS records for child zones should be generated from a
dsset-
orkeyset-
file. Existing DS records are removed.-K directory
This option specifies the directory to search for DNSSEC keys. If not specified, it defaults to the current directory.
-k key
This option tells BIND 9 to treat the specified key as a key-signing key, ignoring any key flags. This option may be specified multiple times.
-M maxttl
This option sets the maximum TTL for the signed zone. Any TTL higher than
maxttl
in the input zone is reduced tomaxttl
in the output. This provides certainty as to the largest possible TTL in the signed zone, which is useful to know when rolling keys. The maxttl is the longest possible time before signatures that have been retrieved by resolvers expire from resolver caches. Zones that are signed with this option should be configured to use a matchingmax-zone-ttl
innamed.conf
. (Note: This option is incompatible with-D
, because it modifies non-DNSSEC data in the output zone.)-s start-time
This option specifies 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 YYYYMMDDHHMMSS 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 nostart-time
is specified, the current time minus 1 hour (to allow for clock skew) is used.-e end-time
This option specifies 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 withnow+N
. If noend-time
is specified, 30 days from the start time is the default.end-time
must be later thanstart-time
.-X extended end-time
This option specifies the date and time when the generated RRSIG records for the DNSKEY RRset expire. This is to be used in cases when the DNSKEY signatures need to persist longer than signatures on other records; e.g., when the private component of the KSK is kept offline and the KSK signature is to be refreshed manually.
As with
end-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 withnow+N
. If noextended end-time
is specified, the value ofend-time
is used as the default. (end-time
, in turn, defaults to 30 days from the start time.)extended end-time
must be later thanstart-time
.-f output-file
This option indicates the name of the output file containing the signed zone. The default is to append
.signed
to the input filename. Ifoutput-file
is set to-
, then the signed zone is written to the standard output, with a default output format offull
.-h
This option prints a short summary of the options and arguments to
dnssec-signzone
.-V
This option prints version information.
-i interval
This option indicates that, when a previously signed zone is passed as input, records may be re-signed. 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 is replaced.The default cycle interval is one quarter of the difference between the signature end and start times. So if neither
end-time
norstart-time
is 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 are replaced.-I input-format
This option sets the format of the input zone file. Possible formats are
text
(the default),raw
, andmap
. 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. This option is not useful for non-dynamic zones.-j jitter
When signing a zone with a fixed signature lifetime, all RRSIG records issued at the time of signing expire simultaneously. If the zone is incrementally signed, i.e., a previously signed zone is passed as input to the signer, all expired signatures must be regenerated at approximately the same time. The
jitter
option specifies a jitter window that is 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 do not expire at the same time from all caches, there is less congestion than if all validators need to refetch at around the same time.
-L serial
When writing a signed zone to “raw” or “map” format, this option sets the “source serial” value in the header to the specified
serial
number. (This is expected to be used primarily for testing purposes.)-n ncpus
This option specifies the number of threads to use. By default, one thread is started for each detected CPU.
-N soa-serial-format
This option sets the SOA serial number format of the signed zone. Possible formats are
keep
(the default),increment
,unixtime
, anddate
.- keep
This format indicates that the SOA serial number should not be modified.
- increment
This format increments the SOA serial number using RFC 1982 arithmetic.
- unixtime
This format sets the SOA serial number to the number of seconds since the beginning of the Unix epoch, unless the serial number is already greater than or equal to that value, in which case it is simply incremented by one.
- date
This format sets the SOA serial number to today’s date, in YYYYMMDDNN format, unless the serial number is already greater than or equal to that value, in which case it is simply incremented by one.
-o origin
This option sets the zone origin. If not specified, the name of the zone file is assumed to be the origin.
-O output-format
This option sets the format of the output file containing the signed zone. Possible formats are
text
(the default), which is the standard textual representation of the zone;full
, which is text output in a format suitable for processing by external scripts; andmap
,raw
, andraw=N
, which store the zone in binary formats for rapid loading bynamed
.raw=N
specifies the format version of the raw zone file: if N is 0, the raw file can be read by any version ofnamed
; if N is 1, the file can be read by release 9.9.0 or higher. The default is 1.-P
This option disables post-sign verification tests.
The post-sign verification tests ensure that for each algorithm in use there is at least one non-revoked self-signed KSK key, that all revoked KSK keys are self-signed, and that all records in the zone are signed by the algorithm. This option skips these tests.
-Q
This option removes signatures from keys that are no longer active.
Normally, when a previously signed zone is passed as input to the signer, and a DNSKEY record has been removed and replaced with a new one, signatures from the old key that are still within their validity period are retained. This allows the zone to continue to validate with cached copies of the old DNSKEY RRset. The
-Q
option forcesdnssec-signzone
to remove signatures from keys that are no longer active. This enables ZSK rollover using the procedure described in RFC 4641#4.2.1.1 (“Pre-Publish Key Rollover”).-q
This option enables quiet mode, which suppresses unnecessary output. Without this option, when
dnssec-signzone
is run it prints three pieces of information to standard output: the number of keys in use; the algorithms used to verify the zone was signed correctly and other status information; and the filename containing the signed zone. With the option that output is suppressed, leaving only the filename.-R
This option removes signatures from keys that are no longer published.
This option is similar to
-Q
, except it forcesdnssec-signzone
to remove signatures from keys that are no longer published. This enables ZSK rollover using the procedure described in RFC 4641#4.2.1.2 (“Double Signature Zone Signing Key Rollover”).-S
This option enables smart signing, which instructs
dnssec-signzone
to search the key repository for keys that match the zone being signed, and to include them in the zone if appropriate.When a key is found, its timing metadata is examined to determine how it should be used, according to the following rules. Each successive rule takes priority over the prior ones:
If no timing metadata has been set for the key, the key is published in the zone and used to sign the zone.
If the key’s publication date is set and is in the past, the key is published in the zone.
If the key’s activation date is set and is in the past, the key is published (regardless of publication date) and used to sign the zone.
If the key’s revocation date is set and is in the past, and the key is published, then the key is revoked, and the revoked key is used to sign the zone.
If either the key’s unpublication or deletion date is set and in the past, the key is NOT published or used to sign the zone, regardless of any other metadata.
If the key’s sync publication date is set and is in the past, synchronization records (type CDS and/or CDNSKEY) are created.
If the key’s sync deletion date is set and is in the past, synchronization records (type CDS and/or CDNSKEY) are removed.
-T ttl
This option specifies a TTL to be used for new DNSKEY records imported into the zone from the key repository. If not specified, the default is the TTL value from the zone’s SOA record. This option is ignored when signing without
-S
, since DNSKEY records are not imported from the key repository in that case. It is also ignored if there are any pre-existing DNSKEY records at the zone apex, in which case new records’ TTL values are set to match them, or if any of the imported DNSKEY records had a default TTL value. In the event of a conflict between TTL values in imported keys, the shortest one is used.-t
This option prints statistics at completion.
-u
This option updates the NSEC/NSEC3 chain when re-signing a previously signed zone. With this option, a zone signed with NSEC can be switched to NSEC3, or a zone signed with NSEC3 can be switched to NSEC or to NSEC3 with different parameters. Without this option,
dnssec-signzone
retains the existing chain when re-signing.-v level
This option sets the debugging level.
-x
This option indicates that BIND 9 should only sign the DNSKEY, CDNSKEY, and CDS RRsets with key-signing keys, and should omit signatures from zone-signing keys. (This is similar to the
dnssec-dnskey-kskonly yes;
zone option innamed
.)-z
This option indicates that BIND 9 should ignore the KSK flag on keys when determining what to sign. This causes KSK-flagged keys to sign all records, not just the DNSKEY RRset. (This is similar to the
update-check-ksk no;
zone option innamed
.)-3 salt
This option generates an NSEC3 chain with the given hex-encoded salt. A dash (-) can be used to indicate that no salt is to be used when generating the NSEC3 chain.
-H iterations
This option indicates that, when generating an NSEC3 chain, BIND 9 should use this many iterations. The default is 10.
-A
This option indicates that, when generating an NSEC3 chain, BIND 9 should set the OPTOUT flag on all NSEC3 records and should not generate NSEC3 records for insecure delegations.
Using this option twice (i.e.,
-AA
) turns the OPTOUT flag off for all records. This is useful when using the-u
option to modify an NSEC3 chain which previously had OPTOUT set.zonefile
This option sets the file containing the zone to be signed.
key
This option specifies which keys should be used to sign the zone. If no keys are specified, the zone is examined for DNSKEY records at the zone apex. If these records are found and there are matching private keys in the current directory, they are used for signing.
Example¶
The following command signs the example.com
zone with the
ECDSAP256SHA256 key generated by dnssec-keygen
(Kexample.com.+013+17247). Because the -S
option is not being used,
the zone’s keys must be in the master file (db.example.com
). This
invocation looks for dsset
files in the current directory, so that
DS records can be imported from them (-g
).
% dnssec-signzone -g -o example.com db.example.com \
Kexample.com.+013+17247
db.example.com.signed
%
In the above example, dnssec-signzone
creates the file
db.example.com.signed
. This file should be referenced in a zone
statement in the named.conf
file.
This example re-signs a previously signed zone with default parameters. The private keys are assumed to be in the current directory.
% cp db.example.com.signed db.example.com
% dnssec-signzone -o example.com db.example.com
db.example.com.signed
%
dnssec-verify - DNSSEC zone verification tool¶
Synopsis¶
dnssec-verify [-c class] [-E engine] [-I input-format] [-o origin] [-q] [-v level] [-V] [-x] [-z] {zonefile}
Description¶
dnssec-verify
verifies that a zone is fully signed for each
algorithm found in the DNSKEY RRset for the zone, and that the
NSEC/NSEC3 chains are complete.
Options¶
-c class
This option specifies the DNS class of the zone.
-E engine
This option specifies the cryptographic hardware to use, when applicable.
When BIND 9 is built with OpenSSL, this needs to be set to the OpenSSL engine identifier that drives the cryptographic accelerator or hardware service module (usually
pkcs11
). When BIND is built with native PKCS#11 cryptography (--enable-native-pkcs11
), it defaults to the path of the PKCS#11 provider library specified via--with-pkcs11
.-I input-format
This option sets the format of the input zone file. Possible formats are
text
(the default) andraw
. 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 verified independently. This option is not useful for non-dynamic zones.-o origin
This option indicates the zone origin. If not specified, the name of the zone file is assumed to be the origin.
-v level
This option sets the debugging level.
-V
This option prints version information.
-q
This option sets quiet mode, which suppresses output. Without this option, when
dnssec-verify
is run it prints to standard output the number of keys in use, the algorithms used to verify the zone was signed correctly, and other status information. With this option, all non-error output is suppressed, and only the exit code indicates success.-x
This option verifies only that the DNSKEY RRset is signed with key-signing keys. Without this flag, it is assumed that the DNSKEY RRset is signed by all active keys. When this flag is set, it is not an error if the DNSKEY RRset is not signed by zone-signing keys. This corresponds to the
-x
option indnssec-signzone
.-z
This option indicates that the KSK flag on the keys should be ignored when determining whether the zone is correctly signed. Without this flag, it is assumed that there is a non-revoked, self-signed DNSKEY with the KSK flag set for each algorithm, and that RRsets other than DNSKEY RRset are signed with a different DNSKEY without the KSK flag set.
With this flag set, BIND 9 only requires that for each algorithm, there be at least one non-revoked, self-signed DNSKEY, regardless of the KSK flag state, and that other RRsets be signed by a non-revoked key for the same algorithm that includes the self-signed key; the same key may be used for both purposes. This corresponds to the
-z
option indnssec-signzone
.zonefile
This option indicates the file containing the zone to be signed.
dnstap-read - print dnstap data in human-readable form¶
Synopsis¶
dnstap-read [-m] [-p] [-x] [-y] {file}
Description¶
dnstap-read
reads dnstap
data from a specified file and prints
it in a human-readable format. By default, dnstap
data is printed in
a short summary format, but if the -y
option is specified, a
longer and more detailed YAML format is used.
Options¶
-m
This option indicates trace memory allocations, and is used for debugging memory leaks.
-p
This option prints the text form of the DNS message that was encapsulated in the
dnstap
frame, after printing thednstap
data.-x
This option prints a hex dump of the wire form of the DNS message that was encapsulated in the
dnstap
frame, after printing thednstap
data.-y
This option prints
dnstap
data in a detailed YAML format.
See Also¶
named(8), rndc(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
filter-aaaa.so - filter AAAA in DNS responses when A is present¶
Synopsis¶
plugin query “filter-aaaa.so” [{ parameters }];
Description¶
filter-aaaa.so
is a query plugin module for named
, enabling
named
to omit some IPv6 addresses when responding to clients.
Until BIND 9.12, this feature was implemented natively in named
and
enabled with the filter-aaaa
ACL and the filter-aaaa-on-v4
and
filter-aaaa-on-v6
options. These options are now deprecated in
named.conf
but can be passed as parameters to the
filter-aaaa.so
plugin, for example:
plugin query "/usr/local/lib/filter-aaaa.so" {
filter-aaaa-on-v4 yes;
filter-aaaa-on-v6 yes;
filter-aaaa { 192.0.2.1; 2001:db8:2::1; };
};
This module is intended to aid transition from IPv4 to IPv6 by withholding IPv6 addresses from DNS clients which are not connected to the IPv6 Internet, when the name being looked up has an IPv4 address available. Use of this module is not recommended unless absolutely necessary.
Note: This mechanism can erroneously cause other servers not to give AAAA records to their clients. If a recursing server with both IPv6 and IPv4 network connections queries an authoritative server using this mechanism via IPv4, it is denied AAAA records even if its client is using IPv6.
Options¶
filter-aaaa
This option specifies a list of client addresses for which AAAA filtering is to be applied. The default is
any
.filter-aaaa-on-v4
If set to
yes
, this option indicates that the DNS client is at an IPv4 address, infilter-aaaa
. If the response does not include DNSSEC signatures, then all AAAA records are deleted from the response. This filtering applies to all responses, not only authoritative ones.If set to
break-dnssec
, then AAAA records are deleted even when DNSSEC is enabled. As suggested by the name, this causes the response to fail to verify, because the DNSSEC protocol is designed to detect deletions.This mechanism can erroneously cause other servers not to give AAAA records to their clients. If a recursing server with both IPv6 and IPv4 network connections queries an authoritative server using this mechanism via IPv4, it is denied AAAA records even if its client is using IPv6.
filter-aaaa-on-v6
This option is identical to
filter-aaaa-on-v4
, except that it filters AAAA responses to queries from IPv6 clients instead of IPv4 clients. To filter all responses, set both options toyes
.
See Also¶
BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
host - DNS lookup utility¶
Synopsis¶
host [-aACdlnrsTUwv] [-c class] [-N ndots] [-p port] [-R number] [-t type] [-W wait] [-m flag] [ [-4] | [-6] ] [-v] [-V] {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
by default performs a reverse lookup for that address.
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
.
Options¶
-4
This option specifies that only IPv4 should be used for query transport. See also the
-6
option.-6
This option specifies that only IPv6 should be used for query transport. See also the
-4
option.-a
The
-a
(“all”) option is normally equivalent to-v -t ANY
. It also affects the behavior of the-l
list zone option.-A
The
-A
(“almost all”) option is equivalent to-a
, except that RRSIG, NSEC, and NSEC3 records are omitted from the output.-c class
This option specifies the query class, which can be used to lookup HS (Hesiod) or CH (Chaosnet) class resource records. The default class is IN (Internet).
-C
This option indicates that
named
should check consistency, meaning thathost
queries the SOA records for zonename
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.-d
This option prints debugging traces, and is equivalent to the
-v
verbose option.-l
This option tells
named` to list the zone, meaning the ``host
command performs a zone transfer of zonename
and prints out the NS, PTR, and address records (A/AAAA).Together, the
-l -a
options print all records in the zone.-N ndots
This option specifies the number of dots (
ndots
) that have to be inname
for it to be considered absolute. The default value is that defined using thendots
statement in/etc/resolv.conf
, or 1 if nondots
statement is present. Names with fewer dots are interpreted as relative names, and are searched for in the domains listed in thesearch
ordomain
directive in/etc/resolv.conf
.-p port
This option specifies the port to query on the server. The default is 53.
-r
This option specifies a non-recursive query; setting this option clears the RD (recursion desired) bit in the query. This means that the name server receiving the query does not attempt to resolve
name
. The-r
option enableshost
to mimic the behavior of a name server by making non-recursive queries, and expecting to receive answers to those queries that can be referrals to other name servers.-R number
This option specifies the number of retries for UDP queries. If
number
is negative or zero, the number of retries is silently set to 1. The default value is 1, or the value of theattempts
option in/etc/resolv.conf
, if set.-s
This option tells
named
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 behavior.-t type
This option specifies the query type. The
type
argument can be any recognized query type: CNAME, NS, SOA, TXT, DNSKEY, AXFR, etc.When no query type is specified,
host
automatically selects an appropriate query type. By default, it looks for A, AAAA, and MX records. If the-C
option is given, queries are made for SOA records. Ifname
is a dotted-decimal IPv4 address or colon-delimited IPv6 address,host
queries for PTR records.If a query type of IXFR is chosen, the starting serial number can be specified by appending an equals sign (=), followed by the starting serial number, e.g.,
-t IXFR=12345678
.-T
;-U
This option specifies TCP or UDP. By default,
host
uses UDP when making queries; the-T
option makes it use a TCP connection when querying the name server. TCP is automatically selected for queries that require it, such as zone transfer (AXFR) requests. TypeANY
queries default to TCP, but can be forced to use UDP initially via-U
.-m flag
This option sets memory usage debugging: the flag can be
record
,usage
, ortrace
. The-m
option can be specified more than once to set multiple flags.-v
This option sets verbose output, and is equivalent to the
-d
debug option. Verbose output can also be enabled by setting thedebug
option in/etc/resolv.conf
.-V
This option prints the version number and exits.
-w
This option sets “wait forever”: the query timeout is set to the maximum possible. See also the
-W
option.-W wait
This options sets the length of the wait timeout, indicating that
named
should wait for up towait
seconds for a reply. Ifwait
is less than 1, the wait interval is set to 1 second.By default,
host
waits for 5 seconds for UDP responses and 10 seconds for TCP connections. These defaults can be overridden by thetimeout
option in/etc/resolv.conf
.See also the
-w
option.
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 a domain name before sending
a request to a DNS server or displaying a reply from the server.
To turn off IDN support, define the IDN_DISABLE
environment variable. IDN support is disabled if the variable is set
when host
runs.
Files¶
/etc/resolv.conf
See Also¶
dig(1), named(8).
mdig - DNS pipelined lookup utility¶
Synopsis¶
mdig {@server} [-f filename] [-h] [-v] [ [-4] | [-6] ] [-m] [-b address] [-p port#] [-c class] [-t type] [-i] [-x addr] [plusopt…]
mdig {-h}
mdig [@server] {global-opt…} { {local-opt…} {query} …}
Description¶
mdig
is a multiple/pipelined query version of dig
: instead of
waiting for a response after sending each query, it begins by sending
all queries. Responses are displayed in the order in which they are
received, not in the order the corresponding queries were sent.
mdig
options are a subset of the dig
options, and are divided
into “anywhere options,” which can occur anywhere, “global options,” which
must occur before the query name (or they are ignored with a warning),
and “local options,” which apply to the next query on the command line.
The @server
option is a mandatory global option. It is the name or IP
address of the name server to query. (Unlike dig
, this value is not
retrieved from /etc/resolv.conf
.) It can be an IPv4 address in
dotted-decimal notation, an IPv6 address in colon-delimited notation, or
a hostname. When the supplied server
argument is a hostname,
mdig
resolves that name before querying the name server.
mdig
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
.
Anywhere Options¶
-f
This option makes
mdig
operate in batch mode by reading a list of lookup requests to process from the filefilename
. The file contains a number of queries, one per line. Each entry in the file should be organized in the same way they would be presented as queries tomdig
using the command-line interface.-h
This option causes
mdig
to print detailed help information, with the full list of options, and exit.-v
This option causes
mdig
to print the version number and exit.
Global Options¶
-4
This option forces
mdig
to only use IPv4 query transport.-6
This option forces
mdig
to only use IPv6 query transport.-b address
This 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>”-m
This option enables memory usage debugging.
-p port#
This option is used when a non-standard port number is to be queried.
port#
is the port number thatmdig
sends its queries to, instead of the standard DNS port number 53. This option is used to test a name server that has been configured to listen for queries on a non-standard port number.
The global query options are:
+[no]additional
This option displays [or does not display] the additional section of a reply. The default is to display it.
+[no]all
This option sets or clears all display flags.
+[no]answer
This option displays [or does not display] the answer section of a reply. The default is to display it.
+[no]authority
This option displays [or does not display] the authority section of a reply. The default is to display it.
+[no]besteffort
This option attempts to display [or does not display] the contents of messages which are malformed. The default is to not display malformed answers.
+burst
This option delays queries until the start of the next second.
+[no]cl
This option displays [or does not display] the CLASS when printing the record.
+[no]comments
This option toggles the display of comment lines in the output. The default is to print comments.
+[no]continue
This option toggles continuation on errors (e.g. timeouts).
+[no]crypto
This option toggles the display of cryptographic fields in DNSSEC records. The contents of these fields are unnecessary to debug most DNSSEC validation failures and removing them makes it easier to see the common failures. The default is to display the fields. When omitted, they are replaced by the string “[omitted]”; in the DNSKEY case, the key ID is displayed as the replacement, e.g.,
[ key id = value ]
.+dscp[=value]
This option sets the DSCP code point to be used when sending the query. Valid DSCP code points are in the range [0…63]. By default no code point is explicitly set.
+[no]multiline
This option toggles printing of 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
mdig
output.+[no]question
This option prints [or does 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]rrcomments
This option toggles the display of per-record comments in the output (for example, human-readable key information about DNSKEY records). The default is not to print record comments unless multiline mode is active.
+[no]short
This option provides [or does not provide] a terse answer. The default is to print the answer in a verbose form.
+split=W
This option splits long hex- or base64-formatted fields in resource records into chunks of
W
characters (whereW
is rounded up to the nearest multiple of 4).+nosplit
or+split=0
causes fields not to be split. The default is 56 characters, or 44 characters when multiline mode is active.+[no]tcp
This option uses [or does not use] TCP when querying name servers. The default behavior is to use UDP.
+[no]ttlid
This option displays [or does not display] the TTL when printing the record.
+[no]ttlunits
This option displays [or does not display] the TTL in friendly human-readable time units of “s”, “m”, “h”, “d”, and “w”, representing seconds, minutes, hours, days, and weeks. This implies +ttlid.
+[no]vc
This option uses [or does not use] TCP when querying name servers. This alternate syntax to
+[no]tcp
is provided for backwards compatibility. Thevc
stands for “virtual circuit”.
Local Options¶
-c class
This option sets the query class to
class
. It can be any valid query class which is supported in BIND 9. The default query class is “IN”.-t type
This option sets the query type to
type
. It can be any valid query type which is supported in BIND 9. The default query type is “A”, unless the-x
option is supplied to indicate a reverse lookup with the “PTR” query type.-x addr
Reverse lookups - mapping addresses to names - are simplified by this option.
addr
is an IPv4 address in dotted-decimal notation, or a colon-delimited IPv6 address.mdig
automatically performs a lookup for a query name like11.12.13.10.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.
The local query options are:
+[no]aaflag
This is a synonym for
+[no]aaonly
.+[no]aaonly
This sets the
aa
flag in the query.+[no]adflag
This sets [or does not set] the AD (authentic data) bit in the query. This requests the server to return whether all of the answer and authority sections have all been validated as secure, according to the security policy of the server. AD=1 indicates that all records have been validated as secure and the answer is not from a OPT-OUT range. AD=0 indicates that some part of the answer was insecure or not validated. This bit is set by default.
+bufsize=B
This sets 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 cause a EDNS query to be sent.+[no]cdflag
This sets [or does not set] the CD (checking disabled) bit in the query. This requests the server to not perform DNSSEC validation of responses.
+[no]cookie=####
This sends [or does not send] a COOKIE EDNS option, with an optional value. Replaying a COOKIE from a previous response allows the server to identify a previous client. The default is
+nocookie
.+[no]dnssec
This requests that DNSSEC records be sent by setting the DNSSEC OK (DO) bit in the OPT record in the additional section of the query.
+[no]edns[=#]
This specifies [or does not specify] the EDNS version to query with. Valid values are 0 to 255. Setting the EDNS version causes an EDNS query to be sent.
+noedns
clears the remembered EDNS version. EDNS is set to 0 by default.+[no]ednsflags[=#]
This sets the must-be-zero EDNS flag bits (Z bits) to the specified value. Decimal, hex, and octal encodings are accepted. Setting a named flag (e.g. DO) is silently ignored. By default, no Z bits are set.
+[no]ednsopt[=code[:value]]
This specifies [or does not specify] an EDNS option with code point
code
and an optional payload ofvalue
as a hexadecimal string.+noednsopt
clears the EDNS options to be sent.+[no]expire
This toggles sending of an EDNS Expire option.
+[no]nsid
This toggles inclusion of an EDNS name server ID request when sending a query.
+[no]recurse
This toggles the setting of the RD (recursion desired) bit in the query. This bit is set by default, which means
mdig
normally sends recursive queries.+retry=T
This 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.+[no]subnet=addr[/prefix-length]
This sends [or does not send] an EDNS Client Subnet option with the specified IP address or network prefix.
mdig +subnet=0.0.0.0/0
, or simplymdig +subnet=0
This sends an EDNS client-subnet option with an empty address and a source prefix-length of zero, which signals a resolver that the client’s address information must not be used when resolving this query.
+timeout=T
This sets the timeout for a query to
T
seconds. The default timeout is 5 seconds for UDP transport and 10 for TCP. An attempt to setT
to less than 1 results in a query timeout of 1 second being applied.+tries=T
This sets the number of times to try UDP queries to server to
T
instead of the default, 3. IfT
is less than or equal to zero, the number of tries is silently rounded up to 1.+udptimeout=T
This sets the timeout between UDP query retries to
T
.+[no]unknownformat
This prints [or does not print] all RDATA in unknown RR-type presentation format (see RFC 3597). The default is to print RDATA for known types in the type’s presentation format.
+[no]yaml
This toggles printing of the responses in a detailed YAML format.
+[no]zflag
This sets [or does not set] the last unassigned DNS header flag in a DNS query. This flag is off by default.
named-checkconf - named configuration file syntax checking tool¶
Synopsis¶
named-checkconf [-chjlvz] [-p [-x ]] [-t directory] {filename}
Description¶
named-checkconf
checks the syntax, but not the semantics, of a
named
configuration file. The file, along with all files included by it, is parsed and checked for syntax
errors. If no file is specified,
/etc/named.conf
is read by default.
Note: files that named
reads in separate parser contexts, such as
rndc.key
and bind.keys
, are not automatically read by
named-checkconf
. Configuration errors in these files may cause
named
to fail to run, even if named-checkconf
was successful.
However, named-checkconf
can be run on these files explicitly.
Options¶
-h
This option prints the usage summary and exits.
-j
When loading a zonefile, this option instructs
named
to read the journal if it exists.-l
This option lists all the configured zones. Each line of output contains the zone name, class (e.g. IN), view, and type (e.g. primary or secondary).
-c
This option specifies that only the “core” configuration should be checked. This suppresses the loading of plugin modules, and causes all parameters to
plugin
statements to be ignored.-i
This option ignores warnings on deprecated options.
-p
This option prints out the
named.conf
and included files in canonical form if no errors were detected. See also the-x
option.-t directory
This option instructs
named
to chroot todirectory
, so thatinclude
directives in the configuration file are processed as if run by a similarly chrootednamed
.-v
This option prints the version of the
named-checkconf
program and exits.-x
When printing the configuration files in canonical form, this option obscures shared secrets by replacing them with strings of question marks (
?
). This allows the contents ofnamed.conf
and related files to be shared - for example, when submitting bug reports - without compromising private data. This option cannot be used without-p
.-z
This option performs a test load of all zones of type
primary
found innamed.conf
.filename
This indicates the name of the configuration file to be checked. If not specified, it defaults to
/etc/named.conf
.
Return Values¶
named-checkconf
returns an exit status of 1 if errors were detected
and 0 otherwise.
See Also¶
named(8), named-checkzone(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
named-checkzone, named-compilezone - zone file validity checking or converting tool¶
Synopsis¶
named-checkzone [-d] [-h] [-j] [-q] [-v] [-c class] [-f format] [-F format] [-J filename] [-i mode] [-k mode] [-m mode] [-M mode] [-n mode] [-l ttl] [-L serial] [-o filename] [-r mode] [-s style] [-S mode] [-t directory] [-T mode] [-w directory] [-D] [-W mode] {zonename} {filename}
named-compilezone [-d] [-j] [-q] [-v] [-c class] [-C mode] [-f format] [-F format] [-J filename] [-i mode] [-k mode] [-m mode] [-n mode] [-l ttl] [-L serial] [-r mode] [-s style] [-t directory] [-T mode] [-w directory] [-D] [-W mode] {-o filename} {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
configuring them into a name server.
named-compilezone
is similar to named-checkzone
, but it always
dumps the zone contents to a specified file in a specified format.
It also applies stricter check levels by default, since the
dump output is used as an actual zone file loaded by named
.
When manually specified otherwise, the check levels must at least be as
strict as those specified in the named
configuration file.
Options¶
-d
This option enables debugging.
-h
This option prints the usage summary and exits.
-q
This option sets quiet mode, which only sets an exit code to indicate successful or failed completion.
-v
This option prints the version of the
named-checkzone
program and exits.-j
When loading a zone file, this option tells
named
to read the journal if it exists. The journal file name is assumed to be the zone file name with the string.jnl
appended.-J filename
When loading the zone file, this option tells
named
to read the journal from the given file, if it exists. This implies-j
.-c class
This option specifies the class of the zone. If not specified,
IN
is assumed.-i mode
This option performs post-load zone integrity checks. Possible modes are
full
(the default),full-sibling
,local
,local-sibling
, andnone
.Mode
full
checks that MX records refer to A or AAAA records (both in-zone and out-of-zone hostnames). Modelocal
only checks MX records which refer to in-zone hostnames.Mode
full
checks that SRV records refer to A or AAAA records (both in-zone and out-of-zone hostnames). Modelocal
only checks SRV records which refer to in-zone hostnames.Mode
full
checks that delegation NS records refer to A or AAAA records (both in-zone and out-of-zone hostnames). It also checks that glue address records in the zone match those advertised by the child. Modelocal
only checks NS records which refer to in-zone hostnames or verifies that some required glue exists, i.e., when the name server is in a child zone.Modes
full-sibling
andlocal-sibling
disable sibling glue checks, but are otherwise the same asfull
andlocal
, respectively.Mode
none
disables the checks.-f format
This option specifies the format of the zone file. Possible formats are
text
(the default),raw
, andmap
.-F format
This option specifies the format of the output file specified. For
named-checkzone
, this does not have any effect unless it dumps the zone contents.Possible formats are
text
(the default), which is the standard textual representation of the zone, andmap
,raw
, andraw=N
, which store the zone in a binary format for rapid loading bynamed
.raw=N
specifies the format version of the raw zone file: ifN
is 0, the raw file can be read by any version ofnamed
; if N is 1, the file can only be read by release 9.9.0 or higher. The default is 1.-k mode
This option performs
check-names
checks with the specified failure mode. Possible modes arefail
(the default fornamed-compilezone
),warn
(the default fornamed-checkzone
), andignore
.-l ttl
This option sets a maximum permissible TTL for the input file. Any record with a TTL higher than this value causes the zone to be rejected. This is similar to using the
max-zone-ttl
option innamed.conf
.-L serial
When compiling a zone to
raw
ormap
format, this option sets the “source serial” value in the header to the specified serial number. This is expected to be used primarily for testing purposes.-m mode
This option specifies whether MX records should be checked to see if they are addresses. Possible modes are
fail
,warn
(the default), andignore
.-M mode
This option checks whether a MX record refers to a CNAME. Possible modes are
fail
,warn
(the default), andignore
.-n mode
This option specifies whether NS records should be checked to see if they are addresses. Possible modes are
fail
(the default fornamed-compilezone
),warn
(the default fornamed-checkzone
), andignore
.-o filename
This option writes the zone output to
filename
. Iffilename
is-
, then the zone output is written to standard output. This is mandatory fornamed-compilezone
.-r mode
This option checks for records that are treated as different by DNSSEC but are semantically equal in plain DNS. Possible modes are
fail
,warn
(the default), andignore
.-s style
This option specifies the style of the dumped zone file. Possible styles are
full
(the default) andrelative
. Thefull
format is most suitable for processing automatically by a separate script. The relative format is more human-readable and is thus suitable for editing by hand. Fornamed-checkzone
, this does not have any effect unless it dumps the zone contents. It also does not have any meaning if the output format is not text.-S mode
This option checks whether an SRV record refers to a CNAME. Possible modes are
fail
,warn
(the default), andignore
.-t directory
This option tells
named
to chroot todirectory
, so thatinclude
directives in the configuration file are processed as if run by a similarly chrootednamed
.-T mode
This option checks whether Sender Policy Framework (SPF) records exist and issues a warning if an SPF-formatted TXT record is not also present. Possible modes are
warn
(the default) andignore
.-w directory
This option instructs
named
to chdir todirectory
, so that relative filenames in master file$INCLUDE
directives work. This is similar to the directory clause innamed.conf
.-D
This option dumps the zone file in canonical format. This is always enabled for
named-compilezone
.-W mode
This option specifies 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
(the default) andignore
.zonename
This indicates the domain name of the zone being checked.
filename
This is the name of the zone file.
Return Values¶
named-checkzone
returns an exit status of 1 if errors were detected
and 0 otherwise.
named-journalprint - print zone journal in human-readable form¶
Synopsis¶
named-journalprint {journal}
Description¶
named-journalprint
prints the contents of a zone journal file in a
human-readable form.
Journal files are automatically created by named
when changes are
made to dynamic zones (e.g., by nsupdate
). They record each addition
or deletion of a resource record, in binary format, allowing the changes
to be re-applied to the zone when the server is restarted after a
shutdown or crash. By default, the name of the journal file is formed by
appending the extension .jnl
to the name of the corresponding zone
file.
named-journalprint
converts the contents of a given journal file
into a human-readable text format. Each line begins with add
or del
,
to indicate whether the record was added or deleted, and continues with
the resource record in master-file format.
See Also¶
named(8), nsupdate(1), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
named-nzd2nzf - convert an NZD database to NZF text format¶
Synopsis¶
named-nzd2nzf {filename}
Description¶
named-nzd2nzf
converts an NZD database to NZF format and prints it
to standard output. This can be used to review the configuration of
zones that were added to named
via rndc addzone
. It can also be
used to restore the old file format when rolling back from a newer
version of BIND to an older version.
Arguments¶
filename
This is the name of the
.nzd
file whose contents should be printed.
See Also¶
BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
named-rrchecker - syntax checker for individual DNS resource records¶
Synopsis¶
named-rrchecker [-h] [-o origin] [-p] [-u] [-C] [-T] [-P]
Description¶
named-rrchecker
reads a individual DNS resource record from standard
input and checks whether it is syntactically correct.
Options¶
-h
This option prints out the help menu.
-o origin
This option specifies the origin to be used when interpreting the record.
-p
This option prints out the resulting record in canonical form. If there is no canonical form defined, the record is printed in unknown record format.
-u
This option prints out the resulting record in unknown record form.
-C
,-T
, and-P
These options print out the known class, standard type, and private type mnemonics, respectively.
named.conf - configuration file for named¶
Synopsis¶
named.conf
Description¶
named.conf
is the configuration file for named
. 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
ACL¶
acl string { address_match_element; ... };
CONTROLS¶
controls {
inet ( ipv4_address | ipv6_address |
* ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] allow
{ address_match_element; ... } [
keys { string; ... } ] [ read-only
boolean ];
unix quoted_string perm integer
owner integer group integer [
keys { string; ... } ] [ read-only
boolean ];
};
DLZ¶
dlz string {
database string;
search boolean;
};
DNSSEC-POLICY¶
dnssec-policy string {
dnskey-ttl duration;
keys { ( csk | ksk | zsk ) [ ( key-directory ) ] lifetime
duration_or_unlimited algorithm string [ integer ]; ... };
max-zone-ttl duration;
nsec3param [ iterations integer ] [ optout boolean ] [
salt-length integer ];
parent-ds-ttl duration;
parent-propagation-delay duration;
publish-safety duration;
retire-safety duration;
signatures-refresh duration;
signatures-validity duration;
signatures-validity-dnskey duration;
zone-propagation-delay duration;
};
DYNDB¶
dyndb string quoted_string {
unspecified-text };
KEY¶
key string {
algorithm string;
secret string;
};
LOGGING¶
logging {
category string { string; ... };
channel string {
buffered boolean;
file quoted_string [ versions ( unlimited | integer ) ]
[ size size ] [ suffix ( increment | timestamp ) ];
null;
print-category boolean;
print-severity boolean;
print-time ( iso8601 | iso8601-utc | local | boolean );
severity log_severity;
stderr;
syslog [ syslog_facility ];
};
};
MANAGED-KEYS¶
See DNSSEC-KEYS.
managed-keys { string ( static-key
| initial-key | static-ds |
initial-ds ) integer integer
integer quoted_string; ... };, deprecated
MASTERS¶
masters string [ port integer ] [ dscp
integer ] { ( primaries | ipv4_address
[ port integer ] | ipv6_address [ port
integer ] ) [ key string ]; ... };
OPTIONS¶
options {
allow-new-zones boolean;
allow-notify { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query-cache { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query-cache-on { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query-on { address_match_element; ... };
allow-recursion { address_match_element; ... };
allow-recursion-on { address_match_element; ... };
allow-transfer { address_match_element; ... };
allow-update { address_match_element; ... };
allow-update-forwarding { address_match_element; ... };
also-notify [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { ( primaries |
ipv4_address [ port integer ] | ipv6_address [ port
integer ] ) [ key string ]; ... };
alt-transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * )
] [ dscp integer ];
alt-transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer |
* ) ] [ dscp integer ];
answer-cookie boolean;
attach-cache string;
auth-nxdomain boolean; // default changed
auto-dnssec ( allow | maintain | off );
automatic-interface-scan boolean;
avoid-v4-udp-ports { portrange; ... };
avoid-v6-udp-ports { portrange; ... };
bindkeys-file quoted_string;
blackhole { address_match_element; ... };
cache-file quoted_string;
catalog-zones { zone string [ default-masters [ port integer ]
[ dscp integer ] { ( primaries | ipv4_address [ port
integer ] | ipv6_address [ port integer ] ) [ key
string ]; ... } ] [ zone-directory quoted_string ] [
in-memory boolean ] [ min-update-interval duration ]; ... };
check-dup-records ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-integrity boolean;
check-mx ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-mx-cname ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-names ( primary | master |
secondary | slave | response ) (
fail | warn | ignore );
check-sibling boolean;
check-spf ( warn | ignore );
check-srv-cname ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-wildcard boolean;
clients-per-query integer;
cookie-algorithm ( aes | siphash24 );
cookie-secret string;
coresize ( default | unlimited | sizeval );
datasize ( default | unlimited | sizeval );
deny-answer-addresses { address_match_element; ... } [
except-from { string; ... } ];
deny-answer-aliases { string; ... } [ except-from { string; ...
} ];
dialup ( notify | notify-passive | passive | refresh | boolean );
directory quoted_string;
disable-algorithms string { string;
... };
disable-ds-digests string { string;
... };
disable-empty-zone string;
dns64 netprefix {
break-dnssec boolean;
clients { address_match_element; ... };
exclude { address_match_element; ... };
mapped { address_match_element; ... };
recursive-only boolean;
suffix ipv6_address;
};
dns64-contact string;
dns64-server string;
dnskey-sig-validity integer;
dnsrps-enable boolean;
dnsrps-options { unspecified-text };
dnssec-accept-expired boolean;
dnssec-dnskey-kskonly boolean;
dnssec-loadkeys-interval integer;
dnssec-must-be-secure string boolean;
dnssec-policy string;
dnssec-secure-to-insecure boolean;
dnssec-update-mode ( maintain | no-resign );
dnssec-validation ( yes | no | auto );
dnstap { ( all | auth | client | forwarder |
resolver | update ) [ ( query | response ) ];
... };
dnstap-identity ( quoted_string | none |
hostname );
dnstap-output ( file | unix ) quoted_string [
size ( unlimited | size ) ] [ versions (
unlimited | integer ) ] [ suffix ( increment
| timestamp ) ];
dnstap-version ( quoted_string | none );
dscp integer;
dual-stack-servers [ port integer ] { ( quoted_string [ port
integer ] [ dscp integer ] | ipv4_address [ port
integer ] [ dscp integer ] | ipv6_address [ port
integer ] [ dscp integer ] ); ... };
dump-file quoted_string;
edns-udp-size integer;
empty-contact string;
empty-server string;
empty-zones-enable boolean;
fetch-quota-params integer fixedpoint fixedpoint fixedpoint;
fetches-per-server integer [ ( drop | fail ) ];
fetches-per-zone integer [ ( drop | fail ) ];
files ( default | unlimited | sizeval );
flush-zones-on-shutdown boolean;
forward ( first | only );
forwarders [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { ( ipv4_address
| ipv6_address ) [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ]; ... };
fstrm-set-buffer-hint integer;
fstrm-set-flush-timeout integer;
fstrm-set-input-queue-size integer;
fstrm-set-output-notify-threshold integer;
fstrm-set-output-queue-model ( mpsc | spsc );
fstrm-set-output-queue-size integer;
fstrm-set-reopen-interval duration;
geoip-directory ( quoted_string | none );
glue-cache boolean;
heartbeat-interval integer;
hostname ( quoted_string | none );
inline-signing boolean;
interface-interval duration;
ixfr-from-differences ( primary | master | secondary | slave |
boolean );
keep-response-order { address_match_element; ... };
key-directory quoted_string;
lame-ttl duration;
listen-on [ port integer ] [ dscp
integer ] {
address_match_element; ... };
listen-on-v6 [ port integer ] [ dscp
integer ] {
address_match_element; ... };
lmdb-mapsize sizeval;
lock-file ( quoted_string | none );
managed-keys-directory quoted_string;
masterfile-format ( map | raw | text );
masterfile-style ( full | relative );
match-mapped-addresses boolean;
max-cache-size ( default | unlimited | sizeval | percentage );
max-cache-ttl duration;
max-clients-per-query integer;
max-journal-size ( default | unlimited | sizeval );
max-ncache-ttl duration;
max-records integer;
max-recursion-depth integer;
max-recursion-queries integer;
max-refresh-time integer;
max-retry-time integer;
max-rsa-exponent-size integer;
max-stale-ttl duration;
max-transfer-idle-in integer;
max-transfer-idle-out integer;
max-transfer-time-in integer;
max-transfer-time-out integer;
max-udp-size integer;
max-zone-ttl ( unlimited | duration );
memstatistics boolean;
memstatistics-file quoted_string;
message-compression boolean;
min-cache-ttl duration;
min-ncache-ttl duration;
min-refresh-time integer;
min-retry-time integer;
minimal-any boolean;
minimal-responses ( no-auth | no-auth-recursive | boolean );
multi-master boolean;
new-zones-directory quoted_string;
no-case-compress { address_match_element; ... };
nocookie-udp-size integer;
notify ( explicit | master-only | primary-only | boolean );
notify-delay integer;
notify-rate integer;
notify-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] [
dscp integer ];
notify-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ]
[ dscp integer ];
notify-to-soa boolean;
nta-lifetime duration;
nta-recheck duration;
nxdomain-redirect string;
pid-file ( quoted_string | none );
port integer;
preferred-glue string;
prefetch integer [ integer ];
provide-ixfr boolean;
qname-minimization ( strict | relaxed | disabled | off );
query-source ( ( [ address ] ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] ) | ( [ [ address ] ( ipv4_address | * ) ]
port ( integer | * ) ) ) [ dscp integer ];
query-source-v6 ( ( [ address ] ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] ) | ( [ [ address ] ( ipv6_address | * ) ]
port ( integer | * ) ) ) [ dscp integer ];
querylog boolean;
random-device ( quoted_string | none );
rate-limit {
all-per-second integer;
errors-per-second integer;
exempt-clients { address_match_element; ... };
ipv4-prefix-length integer;
ipv6-prefix-length integer;
log-only boolean;
max-table-size integer;
min-table-size integer;
nodata-per-second integer;
nxdomains-per-second integer;
qps-scale integer;
referrals-per-second integer;
responses-per-second integer;
slip integer;
window integer;
};
recursing-file quoted_string;
recursion boolean;
recursive-clients integer;
request-expire boolean;
request-ixfr boolean;
request-nsid boolean;
require-server-cookie boolean;
reserved-sockets integer;
resolver-nonbackoff-tries integer;
resolver-query-timeout integer;
resolver-retry-interval integer;
response-padding { address_match_element; ... } block-size
integer;
response-policy { zone string [ add-soa boolean ] [ log
boolean ] [ max-policy-ttl duration ] [ min-update-interval
duration ] [ policy ( cname | disabled | drop | given | no-op
| nodata | nxdomain | passthru | tcp-only quoted_string ) ] [
recursive-only boolean ] [ nsip-enable boolean ] [
nsdname-enable boolean ]; ... } [ add-soa boolean ] [
break-dnssec boolean ] [ max-policy-ttl duration ] [
min-update-interval duration ] [ min-ns-dots integer ] [
nsip-wait-recurse boolean ] [ qname-wait-recurse boolean ]
[ recursive-only boolean ] [ nsip-enable boolean ] [
nsdname-enable boolean ] [ dnsrps-enable boolean ] [
dnsrps-options { unspecified-text } ];
root-delegation-only [ exclude { string; ... } ];
root-key-sentinel boolean;
rrset-order { [ class string ] [ type string ] [ name
quoted_string ] string string; ... };
secroots-file quoted_string;
send-cookie boolean;
serial-query-rate integer;
serial-update-method ( date | increment | unixtime );
server-id ( quoted_string | none | hostname );
servfail-ttl duration;
session-keyalg string;
session-keyfile ( quoted_string | none );
session-keyname string;
sig-signing-nodes integer;
sig-signing-signatures integer;
sig-signing-type integer;
sig-validity-interval integer [ integer ];
sortlist { address_match_element; ... };
stacksize ( default | unlimited | sizeval );
stale-answer-client-timeout ( disabled | off | integer );
stale-answer-enable boolean;
stale-answer-ttl duration;
stale-cache-enable boolean;
stale-refresh-time duration;
startup-notify-rate integer;
statistics-file quoted_string;
synth-from-dnssec boolean;
tcp-advertised-timeout integer;
tcp-clients integer;
tcp-idle-timeout integer;
tcp-initial-timeout integer;
tcp-keepalive-timeout integer;
tcp-listen-queue integer;
tkey-dhkey quoted_string integer;
tkey-domain quoted_string;
tkey-gssapi-credential quoted_string;
tkey-gssapi-keytab quoted_string;
transfer-format ( many-answers | one-answer );
transfer-message-size integer;
transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] [
dscp integer ];
transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * )
] [ dscp integer ];
transfers-in integer;
transfers-out integer;
transfers-per-ns integer;
trust-anchor-telemetry boolean; // experimental
try-tcp-refresh boolean;
update-check-ksk boolean;
use-alt-transfer-source boolean;
use-v4-udp-ports { portrange; ... };
use-v6-udp-ports { portrange; ... };
v6-bias integer;
validate-except { string; ... };
version ( quoted_string | none );
zero-no-soa-ttl boolean;
zero-no-soa-ttl-cache boolean;
zone-statistics ( full | terse | none | boolean );
};
PLUGIN¶
plugin ( query ) string [ { unspecified-text
} ];
PRIMARIES¶
primaries string [ port integer ] [ dscp
integer ] { ( primaries | ipv4_address
[ port integer ] | ipv6_address [ port
integer ] ) [ key string ]; ... };
SERVER¶
server netprefix {
bogus boolean;
edns boolean;
edns-udp-size integer;
edns-version integer;
keys server_key;
max-udp-size integer;
notify-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] [
dscp integer ];
notify-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ]
[ dscp integer ];
padding integer;
provide-ixfr boolean;
query-source ( ( [ address ] ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] ) | ( [ [ address ] ( ipv4_address | * ) ]
port ( integer | * ) ) ) [ dscp integer ];
query-source-v6 ( ( [ address ] ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] ) | ( [ [ address ] ( ipv6_address | * ) ]
port ( integer | * ) ) ) [ dscp integer ];
request-expire boolean;
request-ixfr boolean;
request-nsid boolean;
send-cookie boolean;
tcp-keepalive boolean;
tcp-only boolean;
transfer-format ( many-answers | one-answer );
transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] [
dscp integer ];
transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * )
] [ dscp integer ];
transfers integer;
};
STATISTICS-CHANNELS¶
statistics-channels {
inet ( ipv4_address | ipv6_address |
* ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] [
allow { address_match_element; ...
} ];
};
TRUST-ANCHORS¶
trust-anchors { string ( static-key |
initial-key | static-ds | initial-ds )
integer integer integer
quoted_string; ... };
TRUSTED-KEYS¶
Deprecated - see DNSSEC-KEYS.
trusted-keys { string integer
integer integer
quoted_string; ... };, deprecated
VIEW¶
view string [ class ] {
allow-new-zones boolean;
allow-notify { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query-cache { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query-cache-on { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query-on { address_match_element; ... };
allow-recursion { address_match_element; ... };
allow-recursion-on { address_match_element; ... };
allow-transfer { address_match_element; ... };
allow-update { address_match_element; ... };
allow-update-forwarding { address_match_element; ... };
also-notify [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { ( primaries |
ipv4_address [ port integer ] | ipv6_address [ port
integer ] ) [ key string ]; ... };
alt-transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * )
] [ dscp integer ];
alt-transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer |
* ) ] [ dscp integer ];
attach-cache string;
auth-nxdomain boolean; // default changed
auto-dnssec ( allow | maintain | off );
cache-file quoted_string;
catalog-zones { zone string [ default-masters [ port integer ]
[ dscp integer ] { ( primaries | ipv4_address [ port
integer ] | ipv6_address [ port integer ] ) [ key
string ]; ... } ] [ zone-directory quoted_string ] [
in-memory boolean ] [ min-update-interval duration ]; ... };
check-dup-records ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-integrity boolean;
check-mx ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-mx-cname ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-names ( primary | master |
secondary | slave | response ) (
fail | warn | ignore );
check-sibling boolean;
check-spf ( warn | ignore );
check-srv-cname ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-wildcard boolean;
clients-per-query integer;
deny-answer-addresses { address_match_element; ... } [
except-from { string; ... } ];
deny-answer-aliases { string; ... } [ except-from { string; ...
} ];
dialup ( notify | notify-passive | passive | refresh | boolean );
disable-algorithms string { string;
... };
disable-ds-digests string { string;
... };
disable-empty-zone string;
dlz string {
database string;
search boolean;
};
dns64 netprefix {
break-dnssec boolean;
clients { address_match_element; ... };
exclude { address_match_element; ... };
mapped { address_match_element; ... };
recursive-only boolean;
suffix ipv6_address;
};
dns64-contact string;
dns64-server string;
dnskey-sig-validity integer;
dnsrps-enable boolean;
dnsrps-options { unspecified-text };
dnssec-accept-expired boolean;
dnssec-dnskey-kskonly boolean;
dnssec-loadkeys-interval integer;
dnssec-must-be-secure string boolean;
dnssec-policy string;
dnssec-secure-to-insecure boolean;
dnssec-update-mode ( maintain | no-resign );
dnssec-validation ( yes | no | auto );
dnstap { ( all | auth | client | forwarder |
resolver | update ) [ ( query | response ) ];
... };
dual-stack-servers [ port integer ] { ( quoted_string [ port
integer ] [ dscp integer ] | ipv4_address [ port
integer ] [ dscp integer ] | ipv6_address [ port
integer ] [ dscp integer ] ); ... };
dyndb string quoted_string {
unspecified-text };
edns-udp-size integer;
empty-contact string;
empty-server string;
empty-zones-enable boolean;
fetch-quota-params integer fixedpoint fixedpoint fixedpoint;
fetches-per-server integer [ ( drop | fail ) ];
fetches-per-zone integer [ ( drop | fail ) ];
forward ( first | only );
forwarders [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { ( ipv4_address
| ipv6_address ) [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ]; ... };
glue-cache boolean;
inline-signing boolean;
ixfr-from-differences ( primary | master | secondary | slave |
boolean );
key string {
algorithm string;
secret string;
};
key-directory quoted_string;
lame-ttl duration;
lmdb-mapsize sizeval;
managed-keys { string (
static-key | initial-key
| static-ds | initial-ds
) integer integer
integer
quoted_string; ... };, deprecated
masterfile-format ( map | raw | text );
masterfile-style ( full | relative );
match-clients { address_match_element; ... };
match-destinations { address_match_element; ... };
match-recursive-only boolean;
max-cache-size ( default | unlimited | sizeval | percentage );
max-cache-ttl duration;
max-clients-per-query integer;
max-journal-size ( default | unlimited | sizeval );
max-ncache-ttl duration;
max-records integer;
max-recursion-depth integer;
max-recursion-queries integer;
max-refresh-time integer;
max-retry-time integer;
max-stale-ttl duration;
max-transfer-idle-in integer;
max-transfer-idle-out integer;
max-transfer-time-in integer;
max-transfer-time-out integer;
max-udp-size integer;
max-zone-ttl ( unlimited | duration );
message-compression boolean;
min-cache-ttl duration;
min-ncache-ttl duration;
min-refresh-time integer;
min-retry-time integer;
minimal-any boolean;
minimal-responses ( no-auth | no-auth-recursive | boolean );
multi-master boolean;
new-zones-directory quoted_string;
no-case-compress { address_match_element; ... };
nocookie-udp-size integer;
notify ( explicit | master-only | primary-only | boolean );
notify-delay integer;
notify-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] [
dscp integer ];
notify-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ]
[ dscp integer ];
notify-to-soa boolean;
nta-lifetime duration;
nta-recheck duration;
nxdomain-redirect string;
plugin ( query ) string [ {
unspecified-text } ];
preferred-glue string;
prefetch integer [ integer ];
provide-ixfr boolean;
qname-minimization ( strict | relaxed | disabled | off );
query-source ( ( [ address ] ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] ) | ( [ [ address ] ( ipv4_address | * ) ]
port ( integer | * ) ) ) [ dscp integer ];
query-source-v6 ( ( [ address ] ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] ) | ( [ [ address ] ( ipv6_address | * ) ]
port ( integer | * ) ) ) [ dscp integer ];
rate-limit {
all-per-second integer;
errors-per-second integer;
exempt-clients { address_match_element; ... };
ipv4-prefix-length integer;
ipv6-prefix-length integer;
log-only boolean;
max-table-size integer;
min-table-size integer;
nodata-per-second integer;
nxdomains-per-second integer;
qps-scale integer;
referrals-per-second integer;
responses-per-second integer;
slip integer;
window integer;
};
recursion boolean;
request-expire boolean;
request-ixfr boolean;
request-nsid boolean;
require-server-cookie boolean;
resolver-nonbackoff-tries integer;
resolver-query-timeout integer;
resolver-retry-interval integer;
response-padding { address_match_element; ... } block-size
integer;
response-policy { zone string [ add-soa boolean ] [ log
boolean ] [ max-policy-ttl duration ] [ min-update-interval
duration ] [ policy ( cname | disabled | drop | given | no-op
| nodata | nxdomain | passthru | tcp-only quoted_string ) ] [
recursive-only boolean ] [ nsip-enable boolean ] [
nsdname-enable boolean ]; ... } [ add-soa boolean ] [
break-dnssec boolean ] [ max-policy-ttl duration ] [
min-update-interval duration ] [ min-ns-dots integer ] [
nsip-wait-recurse boolean ] [ qname-wait-recurse boolean ]
[ recursive-only boolean ] [ nsip-enable boolean ] [
nsdname-enable boolean ] [ dnsrps-enable boolean ] [
dnsrps-options { unspecified-text } ];
root-delegation-only [ exclude { string; ... } ];
root-key-sentinel boolean;
rrset-order { [ class string ] [ type string ] [ name
quoted_string ] string string; ... };
send-cookie boolean;
serial-update-method ( date | increment | unixtime );
server netprefix {
bogus boolean;
edns boolean;
edns-udp-size integer;
edns-version integer;
keys server_key;
max-udp-size integer;
notify-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | *
) ] [ dscp integer ];
notify-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer
| * ) ] [ dscp integer ];
padding integer;
provide-ixfr boolean;
query-source ( ( [ address ] ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port
( integer | * ) ] ) | ( [ [ address ] (
ipv4_address | * ) ] port ( integer | * ) ) ) [
dscp integer ];
query-source-v6 ( ( [ address ] ( ipv6_address | * ) [
port ( integer | * ) ] ) | ( [ [ address ] (
ipv6_address | * ) ] port ( integer | * ) ) ) [
dscp integer ];
request-expire boolean;
request-ixfr boolean;
request-nsid boolean;
send-cookie boolean;
tcp-keepalive boolean;
tcp-only boolean;
transfer-format ( many-answers | one-answer );
transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer |
* ) ] [ dscp integer ];
transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] [ dscp integer ];
transfers integer;
};
servfail-ttl duration;
sig-signing-nodes integer;
sig-signing-signatures integer;
sig-signing-type integer;
sig-validity-interval integer [ integer ];
sortlist { address_match_element; ... };
stale-answer-client-timeout ( disabled | off | integer );
stale-answer-enable boolean;
stale-answer-ttl duration;
stale-cache-enable boolean;
stale-refresh-time duration;
synth-from-dnssec boolean;
transfer-format ( many-answers | one-answer );
transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] [
dscp integer ];
transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * )
] [ dscp integer ];
trust-anchor-telemetry boolean; // experimental
trust-anchors { string ( static-key |
initial-key | static-ds | initial-ds
) integer integer integer
quoted_string; ... };
trusted-keys { string
integer integer
integer
quoted_string; ... };, deprecated
try-tcp-refresh boolean;
update-check-ksk boolean;
use-alt-transfer-source boolean;
v6-bias integer;
validate-except { string; ... };
zero-no-soa-ttl boolean;
zero-no-soa-ttl-cache boolean;
zone string [ class ] {
allow-notify { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query-on { address_match_element; ... };
allow-transfer { address_match_element; ... };
allow-update { address_match_element; ... };
allow-update-forwarding { address_match_element; ... };
also-notify [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { (
primaries | ipv4_address [ port integer ] |
ipv6_address [ port integer ] ) [ key string ];
... };
alt-transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] [ dscp integer ];
alt-transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] [ dscp integer ];
auto-dnssec ( allow | maintain | off );
check-dup-records ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-integrity boolean;
check-mx ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-mx-cname ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-names ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-sibling boolean;
check-spf ( warn | ignore );
check-srv-cname ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-wildcard boolean;
database string;
delegation-only boolean;
dialup ( notify | notify-passive | passive | refresh |
boolean );
dlz string;
dnskey-sig-validity integer;
dnssec-dnskey-kskonly boolean;
dnssec-loadkeys-interval integer;
dnssec-policy string;
dnssec-secure-to-insecure boolean;
dnssec-update-mode ( maintain | no-resign );
file quoted_string;
forward ( first | only );
forwarders [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { (
ipv4_address | ipv6_address ) [ port integer ] [
dscp integer ]; ... };
in-view string;
inline-signing boolean;
ixfr-from-differences boolean;
journal quoted_string;
key-directory quoted_string;
masterfile-format ( map | raw | text );
masterfile-style ( full | relative );
masters [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { ( primaries
| ipv4_address [ port integer ] | ipv6_address [
port integer ] ) [ key string ]; ... };
max-journal-size ( default | unlimited | sizeval );
max-records integer;
max-refresh-time integer;
max-retry-time integer;
max-transfer-idle-in integer;
max-transfer-idle-out integer;
max-transfer-time-in integer;
max-transfer-time-out integer;
max-zone-ttl ( unlimited | duration );
min-refresh-time integer;
min-retry-time integer;
multi-master boolean;
notify ( explicit | master-only | primary-only | boolean );
notify-delay integer;
notify-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | *
) ] [ dscp integer ];
notify-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer
| * ) ] [ dscp integer ];
notify-to-soa boolean;
primaries [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { (
primaries | ipv4_address [ port integer ] |
ipv6_address [ port integer ] ) [ key string ];
... };
request-expire boolean;
request-ixfr boolean;
serial-update-method ( date | increment | unixtime );
server-addresses { ( ipv4_address | ipv6_address ); ... };
server-names { string; ... };
sig-signing-nodes integer;
sig-signing-signatures integer;
sig-signing-type integer;
sig-validity-interval integer [ integer ];
transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer |
* ) ] [ dscp integer ];
transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port (
integer | * ) ] [ dscp integer ];
try-tcp-refresh boolean;
type ( primary | master | secondary | slave | mirror |
delegation-only | forward | hint | redirect |
static-stub | stub );
update-check-ksk boolean;
update-policy ( local | { ( deny | grant ) string (
6to4-self | external | krb5-self | krb5-selfsub |
krb5-subdomain | ms-self | ms-selfsub | ms-subdomain |
name | self | selfsub | selfwild | subdomain | tcp-self
| wildcard | zonesub ) [ string ] rrtypelist; ... };
use-alt-transfer-source boolean;
zero-no-soa-ttl boolean;
zone-statistics ( full | terse | none | boolean );
};
zone-statistics ( full | terse | none | boolean );
};
ZONE¶
zone string [ class ] {
allow-notify { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query { address_match_element; ... };
allow-query-on { address_match_element; ... };
allow-transfer { address_match_element; ... };
allow-update { address_match_element; ... };
allow-update-forwarding { address_match_element; ... };
also-notify [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { ( primaries |
ipv4_address [ port integer ] | ipv6_address [ port
integer ] ) [ key string ]; ... };
alt-transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * )
] [ dscp integer ];
alt-transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer |
* ) ] [ dscp integer ];
auto-dnssec ( allow | maintain | off );
check-dup-records ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-integrity boolean;
check-mx ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-mx-cname ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-names ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-sibling boolean;
check-spf ( warn | ignore );
check-srv-cname ( fail | warn | ignore );
check-wildcard boolean;
database string;
delegation-only boolean;
dialup ( notify | notify-passive | passive | refresh | boolean );
dlz string;
dnskey-sig-validity integer;
dnssec-dnskey-kskonly boolean;
dnssec-loadkeys-interval integer;
dnssec-policy string;
dnssec-secure-to-insecure boolean;
dnssec-update-mode ( maintain | no-resign );
file quoted_string;
forward ( first | only );
forwarders [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { ( ipv4_address
| ipv6_address ) [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ]; ... };
in-view string;
inline-signing boolean;
ixfr-from-differences boolean;
journal quoted_string;
key-directory quoted_string;
masterfile-format ( map | raw | text );
masterfile-style ( full | relative );
masters [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { ( primaries |
ipv4_address [ port integer ] | ipv6_address [ port
integer ] ) [ key string ]; ... };
max-journal-size ( default | unlimited | sizeval );
max-records integer;
max-refresh-time integer;
max-retry-time integer;
max-transfer-idle-in integer;
max-transfer-idle-out integer;
max-transfer-time-in integer;
max-transfer-time-out integer;
max-zone-ttl ( unlimited | duration );
min-refresh-time integer;
min-retry-time integer;
multi-master boolean;
notify ( explicit | master-only | primary-only | boolean );
notify-delay integer;
notify-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] [
dscp integer ];
notify-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ]
[ dscp integer ];
notify-to-soa boolean;
primaries [ port integer ] [ dscp integer ] { ( primaries |
ipv4_address [ port integer ] | ipv6_address [ port
integer ] ) [ key string ]; ... };
request-expire boolean;
request-ixfr boolean;
serial-update-method ( date | increment | unixtime );
server-addresses { ( ipv4_address | ipv6_address ); ... };
server-names { string; ... };
sig-signing-nodes integer;
sig-signing-signatures integer;
sig-signing-type integer;
sig-validity-interval integer [ integer ];
transfer-source ( ipv4_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * ) ] [
dscp integer ];
transfer-source-v6 ( ipv6_address | * ) [ port ( integer | * )
] [ dscp integer ];
try-tcp-refresh boolean;
type ( primary | master | secondary | slave | mirror |
delegation-only | forward | hint | redirect | static-stub |
stub );
update-check-ksk boolean;
update-policy ( local | { ( deny | grant ) string ( 6to4-self |
external | krb5-self | krb5-selfsub | krb5-subdomain | ms-self
| ms-selfsub | ms-subdomain | name | self | selfsub | selfwild
| subdomain | tcp-self | wildcard | zonesub ) [ string ]
rrtypelist; ... };
use-alt-transfer-source boolean;
zero-no-soa-ttl boolean;
zone-statistics ( full | terse | none | boolean );
};
Files¶
/etc/named.conf
See Also¶
ddns-confgen(8), named(8), named-checkconf(8), rndc(8), rndc-confgen(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
named - Internet domain name server¶
Synopsis¶
named [ [-4] | [-6] ] [-c config-file] [-d debug-level] [-D string] [-E engine-name] [-f] [-g] [-L logfile] [-M option] [-m flag] [-n #cpus] [-p port] [-s] [-S #max-socks] [-t directory] [-U #listeners] [-u user] [-v] [-V] [-X lock-file] [-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 RFC 1033,
RFC 1034, and RFC 1035.
When invoked without arguments, named
reads the default
configuration file /etc/named.conf
, reads any initial data, and
listens for queries.
Options¶
-4
This option tells
named
to use only IPv4, even if the host machine is capable of IPv6.-4
and-6
are mutually exclusive.-6
This option tells
named
to use only IPv6, even if the host machine is capable of IPv4.-4
and-6
are mutually exclusive.-c config-file
This option tells
named
to useconfig-file
as its configuration file instead of the default,/etc/named.conf
. To ensure that the configuration file can be reloaded after the server has changed its working directory due to to a possibledirectory
option in the configuration file,config-file
should be an absolute pathname.-d debug-level
This option sets the daemon’s debug level to
debug-level
. Debugging traces fromnamed
become more verbose as the debug level increases.-D string
This option specifies a string that is used to identify a instance of
named
in a process listing. The contents ofstring
are not examined.-E engine-name
When applicable, this option specifies the hardware to use for cryptographic operations, such as a secure key store used for signing.
When BIND 9 is built with OpenSSL, this needs to be set to the OpenSSL engine identifier that drives the cryptographic accelerator or hardware service module (usually
pkcs11
). When BIND is built with native PKCS#11 cryptography (--enable-native-pkcs11
), it defaults to the path of the PKCS#11 provider library specified via--with-pkcs11
.-f
This option runs the server in the foreground (i.e., do not daemonize).
-g
This option runs the server in the foreground and forces all logging to
stderr
.-L logfile
This option sets the log to the file
logfile
by default, instead of the system log.-M option
This option sets the default memory context options. If set to
external
, the internal memory manager is bypassed in favor of system-provided memory allocation functions. If set tofill
, blocks of memory are filled with tag values when allocated or freed, to assist debugging of memory problems.nofill
disables this behavior, and is the default unlessnamed
has been compiled with developer options.-m flag
This option turns on memory usage debugging flags. Possible flags are
usage
,trace
,record
,size
, andmctx
. These correspond to theISC_MEM_DEBUGXXXX
flags described in<isc/mem.h>
.-n #cpus
This option creates
#cpus
worker threads to take advantage of multiple CPUs. If not specified,named
tries to determine the number of CPUs present and creates one thread per CPU. If it is unable to determine the number of CPUs, a single worker thread is created.-p port
This option listens for queries on
port
. If not specified, the default is port 53.-s
This option writes memory usage statistics to
stdout
on exit.
Note
This option is mainly of interest to BIND 9 developers and may be removed or changed in a future release.
-S #max-socks
This option allows
named
to use up to#max-socks
sockets. The default value is 21000 on systems built with default configuration options, and 4096 on systems built withconfigure --with-tuning=small
.
Warning
This option should be unnecessary for the vast majority of users.
The use of this option could even be harmful, because the specified
value may exceed the limitation of the underlying system API. It
is therefore set only when the default configuration causes
exhaustion of file descriptors and the operational environment is
known to support the specified number of sockets. Note also that
the actual maximum number is normally slightly fewer than the
specified value, because named
reserves some file descriptors
for its internal use.
-t directory
This option tells
named
to chroot todirectory
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 #listeners
This option tells
named
the number of#listeners
worker threads to listen on, for incoming UDP packets on each address. If not specified,named
calculates a default value based on the number of detected CPUs: 1 for 1 CPU, and the number of detected CPUs minus one for machines with more than 1 CPU. This cannot be increased to a value higher than the number of CPUs. If-n
has been set to a higher value than the number of detected CPUs, then-U
may be increased as high as that value, but no higher. On Windows, the number of UDP listeners is hardwired to 1 and this option has no effect.-u user
This option sets the setuid to
user
after completing privileged operations, such as creating sockets that listen on privileged ports.
Note
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 process 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
.
-v
This option reports the version number and exits.
-V
This option reports the version number and build options, and exits.
-X lock-file
This option acquires a lock on the specified file at runtime; this helps to prevent duplicate
named
instances from running simultaneously. Use of this option overrides thelock-file
option innamed.conf
. If set tonone
, the lock file check is disabled.-x cache-file
This option loads data from
cache-file
into the cache of the default view.
Warning
This option must not be used in normal operations. It is only of interest to BIND 9 developers and may be removed or changed in a future release.
Signals¶
In routine operation, signals should not be used to control the
nameserver; rndc
should be used instead.
- SIGHUP
This signal forces a reload of the server.
- SIGINT, SIGTERM
These signals shut down the server.
The result of sending any other signals to the server is undefined.
Configuration¶
The named
configuration file is too complex to describe in detail
here. A complete description is provided in the BIND 9 Administrator
Reference Manual.
named
inherits the umask
(file creation mode mask) from the
parent process. If files created by named
, such as journal files,
need to have custom permissions, the umask
should be set explicitly
in the script used to start the named
process.
Files¶
/etc/named.conf
The default configuration file.
/var/run/named/named.pid
The default process-id file.
nsec3hash - generate NSEC3 hash¶
Synopsis¶
nsec3hash {salt} {algorithm} {iterations} {domain}
nsec3hash -r {algorithm} {flags} {iterations} {salt} {domain}
Description¶
nsec3hash
generates an NSEC3 hash based on a set of NSEC3
parameters. This can be used to check the validity of NSEC3 records in a
signed zone.
If this command is invoked as nsec3hash -r
, it takes arguments in
order, matching the first four fields of an NSEC3 record followed by the
domain name: algorithm
, flags
, iterations
, salt
, domain
. This makes it
convenient to copy and paste a portion of an NSEC3 or NSEC3PARAM record
into a command line to confirm the correctness of an NSEC3 hash.
Arguments¶
salt
This is the salt provided to the hash algorithm.
algorithm
This is a number indicating the hash algorithm. Currently the only supported hash algorithm for NSEC3 is SHA-1, which is indicated by the number 1; consequently “1” is the only useful value for this argument.
flags
This is provided for compatibility with NSEC3 record presentation format, but is ignored since the flags do not affect the hash.
iterations
This is the number of additional times the hash should be performed.
domain
This is the domain name to be hashed.
nslookup - query Internet name servers interactively¶
Synopsis¶
nslookup [-option] [name | -] [server]
Description¶
nslookup
is a program to query Internet domain name servers.
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 prints just the name and requested
information for a host or domain.
Arguments¶
Interactive mode is entered in the following cases:
when no arguments are given (the default name server is used);
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.
Options can also be specified on the command line if they precede the arguments and are prefixed with a hyphen. For example, to change the default query type to host information, with an initial timeout of 10 seconds, type:
nslookup -query=hinfo -timeout=10
The -version
option causes nslookup
to print the version number
and immediately exit.
Interactive Commands¶
host [server]
This command looks up information for
host
using the current default server or usingserver
, if specified. Ifhost
is an Internet address and the query type is A or PTR, the name of the host is returned. Ifhost
is a name and does not have a trailing period (.
), the search list is used to qualify the name.To look up a host not in the current domain, append a period to the name.
server domain
|lserver domain
These commands change the default server to
domain
;lserver
uses the initial server to look up information aboutdomain
, whileserver
uses the current default server. If an authoritative answer cannot be found, the names of servers that might have the answer are returned.root
This command is not implemented.
finger
This command is not implemented.
ls
This command is not implemented.
view
This command is not implemented.
help
This command is not implemented.
?
This command is not implemented.
exit
This command exits the program.
set keyword[=value]
This command is used to change state information that affects the lookups. Valid keywords are:
all
This keyword prints the current values of the frequently used options to
set
. Information about the current default server and host is also printed.class=value
This keyword changes the query class to one of:
IN
the Internet class
CH
the Chaos class
HS
the Hesiod class
ANY
wildcard
The class specifies the protocol group of the information. The default is
IN
; the abbreviation for this keyword iscl
.nodebug
This keyword turns on or off the display of the full response packet, and any intermediate response packets, when searching. The default for this keyword is
nodebug
; the abbreviation for this keyword is[no]deb
.nod2
This keyword turns debugging mode on or off. This displays more about what nslookup is doing. The default is
nod2
.domain=name
This keyword sets the search list to
name
.nosearch
If the lookup request contains at least one period, but does not end with a trailing period, this keyword appends the domain names in the domain search list to the request until an answer is received. The default is
search
.port=value
This keyword changes the default TCP/UDP name server port to
value
from its default, port 53. The abbreviation for this keyword ispo
.querytype=value
|type=value
This keyword changes the type of the information query to
value
. The defaults are A and then AAAA; the abbreviations for these keywords areq
andty
.Please note that it is only possible to specify one query type. Only the default behavior looks up both when an alternative is not specified.
norecurse
This keyword tells the name server to query other servers if it does not have the information. The default is
recurse
; the abbreviation for this keyword is[no]rec
.ndots=number
This keyword sets the number of dots (label separators) in a domain that disables searching. Absolute names always stop searching.
retry=number
This keyword sets the number of retries to
number
.timeout=number
This keyword changes the initial timeout interval to wait for a reply to
number
, in seconds.novc
This keyword indicates that a virtual circuit should always be used when sending requests to the server.
novc
is the default.nofail
This keyword tries the next nameserver if a nameserver responds with SERVFAIL or a referral (nofail), or terminates the query (fail) on such a response. The default is
nofail
.
Return Values¶
nslookup
returns with an exit status of 1 if any query failed, and 0
otherwise.
IDN Support¶
If nslookup
has been built with IDN (internationalized domain name)
support, it can accept and display non-ASCII domain names. nslookup
appropriately converts character encoding of a domain name before sending
a request to a DNS server or displaying a reply from the server.
To turn off IDN support, define the IDN_DISABLE
environment variable. IDN support is disabled if the variable is set
when nslookup
runs, or when the standard output is not a tty.
Files¶
/etc/resolv.conf
See Also¶
dig(1), host(1), named(8).
nsupdate - dynamic DNS update utility¶
Synopsis¶
nsupdate [-d] [-D] [-i] [-L level] [ [-g] | [-o] | [-l] | [-y [hmac:]keyname:secret] | [-k keyfile] ] [-t timeout] [-u udptimeout] [-r udpretries] [-v] [-T] [-P] [-V] [ [-4] | [-6] ] [filename]
Description¶
nsupdate
is used to submit Dynamic DNS Update requests, as defined in
RFC 2136, to a name server. This allows resource records to be added or
removed from a zone without manually editing the zone file. A single
update request can contain requests to add or remove more than one
resource record.
Zones that are under dynamic control via nsupdate
or a DHCP server
should not be edited by hand. Manual edits could conflict with dynamic
updates and cause data to be lost.
The resource records that are dynamically added or removed with
nsupdate
must be in the same zone. Requests are sent to the
zone’s primary server, which is identified by the MNAME field of the
zone’s SOA record.
Transaction signatures can be used to authenticate the Dynamic DNS updates. These use the TSIG resource record type described in RFC 2845, the SIG(0) record described in RFC 2535 and RFC 2931, or GSS-TSIG as described in RFC 3645.
TSIG relies on a shared secret that should only be known to nsupdate
and the name server. For instance, suitable key
and server
statements are added to /etc/named.conf
so that the name server
can associate the appropriate secret key and algorithm with the IP
address of the client application that is using TSIG
authentication. ddns-confgen
can generate suitable
configuration fragments. nsupdate
uses the -y
or -k
options
to provide the TSIG shared secret; these options are mutually exclusive.
SIG(0) uses public key cryptography. To use a SIG(0) key, the public key must be stored in a KEY record in a zone served by the name server.
GSS-TSIG uses Kerberos credentials. Standard GSS-TSIG mode is switched
on with the -g
flag. A non-standards-compliant variant of GSS-TSIG
used by Windows 2000 can be switched on with the -o
flag.
Options¶
-4
This option sets use of IPv4 only.
-6
This option sets use of IPv6 only.
-d
This option sets debug mode, which provides tracing information about the update requests that are made and the replies received from the name server.
-D
This option sets extra debug mode.
-i
This option forces interactive mode, even when standard input is not a terminal.
-k keyfile
This option indicates the file containing the TSIG authentication key. Keyfiles may be in two formats: a single file containing a
named.conf
-formatkey
statement, which may be generated automatically byddns-confgen
; or a pair of files whose names are of the formatK{name}.+157.+{random}.key
andK{name}.+157.+{random}.private
, which can be generated bydnssec-keygen
. The-k
option can also be used to specify a SIG(0) key used to authenticate Dynamic DNS update requests. In this case, the key specified is not an HMAC-MD5 key.-l
This option sets local-host only mode, which sets the server address to localhost (disabling the
server
so that the server address cannot be overridden). Connections to the local server use a TSIG key found in/var/run/named/session.key
, which is automatically generated bynamed
if any localprimary
zone has setupdate-policy
tolocal
. The location of this key file can be overridden with the-k
option.-L level
This option sets the logging debug level. If zero, logging is disabled.
-p port
This option sets the port to use for connections to a name server. The default is 53.
-P
This option prints the list of private BIND-specific resource record types whose format is understood by
nsupdate
. See also the-T
option.-r udpretries
This option sets the number of UDP retries. The default is 3. If zero, only one update request is made.
-t timeout
This option sets the maximum time an update request can take before it is aborted. The default is 300 seconds. If zero, the timeout is disabled.
-T
This option prints the list of IANA standard resource record types whose format is understood by
nsupdate
.nsupdate
exits after the lists are printed. The-T
option can be combined with the-P
option.Other types can be entered using
TYPEXXXXX
whereXXXXX
is the decimal value of the type with no leading zeros. The rdata, if present, is parsed using the UNKNOWN rdata format, (<backslash> <hash> <space> <length> <space> <hexstring>).-u udptimeout
This option sets the UDP retry interval. The default is 3 seconds. If zero, the interval is computed from the timeout interval and number of UDP retries.
-v
This option specifies that TCP should be used even for small update requests. By default,
nsupdate
uses UDP to send update requests to the name server unless they are too large to fit in a UDP request, in which case TCP is used. TCP may be preferable when a batch of update requests is made.-V
This option prints the version number and exits.
-y [hmac:]keyname:secret
This option sets the literal TSIG authentication key.
keyname
is the name of the key, andsecret
is the base64 encoded shared secret.hmac
is the name of the key algorithm; valid choices arehmac-md5
,hmac-sha1
,hmac-sha224
,hmac-sha256
,hmac-sha384
, orhmac-sha512
. Ifhmac
is not specified, the default ishmac-md5
, or if MD5 was disabled,hmac-sha256
.NOTE: Use of the
-y
option is discouraged because the shared secret is supplied as a command-line argument in clear text. This may be visible in the output from ps1 or in a history file maintained by the user’s shell.
Input Format¶
nsupdate
reads input from filename
or standard input. Each
command is supplied on exactly one line of input. Some commands are for
administrative purposes; others are either update instructions or
prerequisite checks on the contents of the zone. These checks set
conditions that some name or set of resource records (RRset) either
exists or is absent from the zone. These conditions must be met if the
entire update request is to succeed. Updates are rejected if the
tests for the prerequisite conditions fail.
Every update request consists of zero or more prerequisites and zero or
more updates. This allows a suitably authenticated update request to
proceed if some specified resource records are either present or missing from
the zone. A blank input line (or the send
command) causes the
accumulated commands to be sent as one Dynamic DNS update request to the
name server.
The command formats and their meanings are as follows:
server servername port
This command sends all dynamic update requests to the name server
servername
. When no server statement is provided,nsupdate
sends updates to the primary server of the correct zone. The MNAME field of that zone’s SOA record identify the primary server for that zone.port
is the port number onservername
where the dynamic update requests are sent. If no port number is specified, the default DNS port number of 53 is used.local address port
This command sends all dynamic update requests using the local
address
. When no local statement is provided,nsupdate
sends updates using an address and port chosen by the system.port
can also be used to force requests to come from a specific port. If no port number is specified, the system assigns one.zone zonename
This command specifies that all updates are to be made to the zone
zonename
. If nozone
statement is provided,nsupdate
attempts to determine the correct zone to update based on the rest of the input.class classname
This command specifies the default class. If no
class
is specified, the default class isIN
.ttl seconds
This command specifies the default time-to-live, in seconds, for records to be added. The value
none
clears the default TTL.key hmac:keyname secret
This command specifies that all updates are to be TSIG-signed using the
keyname
-secret
pair. Ifhmac
is specified, it sets the signing algorithm in use. The default ishmac-md5
; if MD5 was disabled, the default ishmac-sha256
. Thekey
command overrides any key specified on the command line via-y
or-k
.gsstsig
This command uses GSS-TSIG to sign the updates. This is equivalent to specifying
-g
on the command line.oldgsstsig
This command uses the Windows 2000 version of GSS-TSIG to sign the updates. This is equivalent to specifying
-o
on the command line.realm [realm_name]
When using GSS-TSIG, this command specifies the use of
realm_name
rather than the default realm inkrb5.conf
. If no realm is specified, the saved realm is cleared.check-names [yes_or_no]
This command turns on or off check-names processing on records to be added. Check-names has no effect on prerequisites or records to be deleted. By default check-names processing is on. If check-names processing fails, the record is not added to the UPDATE message.
prereq nxdomain domain-name
This command requires that no resource record of any type exist with the name
domain-name
.prereq yxdomain domain-name
This command requires that
domain-name
exist (as at least one resource record, of any type).prereq nxrrset domain-name class type
This command requires that no resource record exist of the specified
type
,class
, anddomain-name
. Ifclass
is omitted, IN (Internet) is assumed.prereq yxrrset domain-name class type
This command requires that a resource record of the specified
type
,class
anddomain-name
exist. Ifclass
is omitted, IN (internet) is assumed.prereq yxrrset domain-name class type data
With this command, the
data
from each set of prerequisites of this form sharing a commontype
,class
, anddomain-name
are combined to form a set of RRs. This set of RRs must exactly match the set of RRs existing in the zone at the giventype
,class
, anddomain-name
. Thedata
are written in the standard text representation of the resource record’s RDATA.update delete domain-name ttl class type data
This command deletes any resource records named
domain-name
. Iftype
anddata
are provided, only matching resource records are removed. The Internet class is assumed ifclass
is not supplied. Thettl
is ignored, and is only allowed for compatibility.update add domain-name ttl class type data
This command adds a new resource record with the specified
ttl
,class
, anddata
.show
This command displays the current message, containing all of the prerequisites and updates specified since the last send.
send
This command sends the current message. This is equivalent to entering a blank line.
answer
This command displays the answer.
debug
This command turns on debugging.
version
This command prints the version number.
help
This command prints a list of commands.
Lines beginning with a semicolon (;) are comments and are ignored.
Examples¶
The examples below show how nsupdate
can be used to insert and
delete resource records from the example.com
zone. Notice that the
input in each example contains a trailing blank line, so that a group of
commands is sent as one dynamic update request to the primary name
server for example.com
.
# nsupdate
> update delete oldhost.example.com A
> update add newhost.example.com 86400 A 172.16.1.1
> send
Any A records for oldhost.example.com
are deleted, and an A record
for newhost.example.com
with IP address 172.16.1.1 is added. The
newly added record has a TTL of 1 day (86400 seconds).
# nsupdate
> prereq nxdomain nickname.example.com
> update add nickname.example.com 86400 CNAME somehost.example.com
> send
The prerequisite condition tells the name server to verify that there are
no resource records of any type for nickname.example.com
. If there
are, the update request fails. If this name does not exist, a CNAME for
it is added. This ensures that when the CNAME is added, it cannot
conflict with the long-standing rule in RFC 1034 that a name must not
exist as any other record type if it exists as a CNAME. (The rule has
been updated for DNSSEC in RFC 2535 to allow CNAMEs to have RRSIG,
DNSKEY, and NSEC records.)
Files¶
/etc/resolv.conf
Used to identify the default name server
/var/run/named/session.key
Sets the default TSIG key for use in local-only mode
K{name}.+157.+{random}.key
Base-64 encoding of the HMAC-MD5 key created by
dnssec-keygen
.K{name}.+157.+{random}.private
Base-64 encoding of the HMAC-MD5 key created by
dnssec-keygen
.
See Also¶
RFC 2136, RFC 3007, RFC 2104, RFC 2845, RFC 1034, RFC 2535, RFC 2931, named(8), ddns-confgen(8), dnssec-keygen(8).
Bugs¶
The TSIG key is redundantly stored in two separate files. This is a
consequence of nsupdate
using the DST library for its cryptographic
operations, and may change in future releases.
pkcs11-destroy - destroy PKCS#11 objects
Synopsis¶
pkcs11-destroy [-m module] [-s slot] [-i ID] [-l label] [-p PIN] [-w seconds]
Description¶
pkcs11-destroy
destroys keys stored in a PKCS#11 device, identified
by their ID
or label
.
Matching keys are displayed before being destroyed. By default, there is a five-second delay to allow the user to interrupt the process before the destruction takes place.
Options¶
-m module
This option specifies the PKCS#11 provider module. This must be the full path to a shared library object implementing the PKCS#11 API for the device.
-s slot
This option opens the session with the given PKCS#11 slot. The default is slot 0.
-i ID
This option destroys keys with the given object ID.
-l label
This option destroys keys with the given label.
-p PIN
This option specifies the
PIN
for the device. If noPIN
is provided on the command line,pkcs11-destroy
prompts for it.-w seconds
This option specifies how long, in seconds, to pause before carrying out key destruction. The default is 5 seconds. If set to
0
, destruction is immediate.
See Also¶
pkcs11-keygen(8), pkcs11-list(8), pkcs11-tokens(8)
pkcs11-keygen - generate keys on a PKCS#11 device¶
Synopsis¶
pkcs11-keygen [-a algorithm] [-b keysize] [-e] [-i id] [-m module] [-P] [-p PIN] [-q] [-S] [-s slot] label
Description¶
pkcs11-keygen
causes a PKCS#11 device to generate a new key pair
with the given label
(which must be unique) and with keysize
bits of prime.
Options¶
-a algorithm
This option specifies the key algorithm class: supported classes are RSA, DSA, DH, ECC, and ECX. In addition to these strings, the
algorithm
can be specified as a DNSSEC signing algorithm to be used with this key; for example, NSEC3RSASHA1 maps to RSA, ECDSAP256SHA256 maps to ECC, and ED25519 to ECX. The default class isRSA
.-b keysize
This option creates the key pair with
keysize
bits of prime. For ECC keys, the only valid values are 256 and 384, and the default is 256. For ECX keys, the only valid values are 256 and 456, and the default is 256.-e
For RSA keys only, this option specifies use of a large exponent.
-i id
This option creates key objects with
id
. The ID is either an unsigned short 2-byte or an unsigned long 4-byte number.-m module
This option specifies the PKCS#11 provider module. This must be the full path to a shared library object implementing the PKCS#11 API for the device.
-P
This option sets the new private key to be non-sensitive and extractable, and allows the private key data to be read from the PKCS#11 device. The default is for private keys to be sensitive and non-extractable.
-p PIN
This option specifies the
PIN
for the device. If noPIN
is provided on the command line,pkcs11-keygen
prompts for it.-q
This option sets quiet mode, which suppresses unnecessary output.
-S
For Diffie-Hellman (DH) keys only, this option specifies use of a special prime of 768-, 1024-, or 1536-bit size and base (AKA generator) 2. If not specified, bit size defaults to 1024.
-s slot
This option opens the session with the given PKCS#11 slot. The default is slot 0.
See Also¶
pkcs11-destroy(8), pkcs11-list(8), pkcs11-tokens(8), dnssec-keyfromlabel(8)
pkcs11-list - list PKCS#11 objects¶
pkcs11-list [-P] [-m module] [-s slot] [-i ID ] [-l label] [-p PIN]
Description¶
pkcs11-list
lists the PKCS#11 objects with ID
or label
or, by
default, all objects. The object class, label, and ID are displayed for
all keys. For private or secret keys, the extractability attribute is
also displayed, as either true
, false
, or never
.
Options¶
-P
This option lists only the public objects. (Note that on some PKCS#11 devices, all objects are private.)
-m module
This option specifies the PKCS#11 provider module. This must be the full path to a shared library object implementing the PKCS#11 API for the device.
-s slot
This option opens the session with the given PKCS#11 slot. The default is slot 0.
-i ID
This option lists only key objects with the given object ID.
-l label
This option lists only key objects with the given label.
-p PIN
This option specifies the
PIN
for the device. If noPIN
is provided on the command line,pkcs11-list
prompts for it.
See Also¶
pkcs11-destroy(8), pkcs11-keygen(8), pkcs11-tokens(8)
pkcs11-tokens - list PKCS#11 available tokens¶
Synopsis¶
pkcs11-tokens [-m module] [-v]
Description¶
pkcs11-tokens
lists the PKCS#11 available tokens with defaults from
the slot/token scan performed at application initialization.
Options¶
-m module
This option specifies the PKCS#11 provider module. This must be the full path to a shared library object implementing the PKCS#11 API for the device.
-v
This option makes the PKCS#11 libisc initialization verbose.
See Also¶
pkcs11-destroy(8), pkcs11-keygen(8), pkcs11-list(8)
rndc-confgen - rndc key generation tool¶
Synopsis¶
rndc-confgen [-a] [-A algorithm] [-b keysize] [-c keyfile] [-h] [-k keyname] [-p port] [-s address] [-t chrootdir] [-u user]
Description¶
rndc-confgen
generates configuration files for rndc
. It can be
used as a convenient alternative to writing 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.
Options¶
-a
This option sets automatic
rndc
configuration, which creates a filerndc.key
in/etc
(or a differentsysconfdir
specified when BIND was built) that is read by bothrndc
andnamed
on startup. Therndc.key
file defines a default command channel and authentication key allowingrndc
to communicate withnamed
on the local host with no further configuration.If a more elaborate configuration than that generated by
rndc-confgen -a
is required, for example if rndc is to be used remotely, runrndc-confgen
without the-a
option and set uprndc.conf
andnamed.conf
as directed.-A algorithm
This option specifies the algorithm to use for the TSIG key. Available choices are: hmac-md5, hmac-sha1, hmac-sha224, hmac-sha256, hmac-sha384, and hmac-sha512. The default is hmac-sha256.
-b keysize
This option specifies the size of the authentication key in bits. The size must be between 1 and 512 bits; the default is the hash size.
-c keyfile
This option is used with the
-a
option to specify an alternate location forrndc.key
.-h
This option prints a short summary of the options and arguments to
rndc-confgen
.-k keyname
This option specifies the key name of the
rndc
authentication key. This must be a valid domain name. The default isrndc-key
.-p port
This option specifies the command channel port where
named
listens for connections fromrndc
. The default is 953.-s address
This option specifies the IP address where
named
listens for command-channel connections fromrndc
. The default is the loopback address 127.0.0.1.-t chrootdir
This option is used with the
-a
option to specify a directory wherenamed
runs chrooted. An additional copy of therndc.key
is written relative to this directory, so that it is found by the chrootednamed
.-u user
This option is used with the
-a
option to set the owner of the generatedrndc.key
file. If-t
is also specified, only the file in the chroot area has its owner changed.
Examples¶
To allow rndc
to be used with no manual configuration, run:
rndc-confgen -a
To print a sample rndc.conf
file and the corresponding controls
and
key
statements to be manually inserted into named.conf
, run:
rndc-confgen
See Also¶
rndc(8), rndc.conf(5), named(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
rndc.conf - rndc configuration file¶
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.
The options
statement contains five clauses. The default-server
clause is followed by the name or address of a name server. This host
is 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
statement. If no keyid
is provided on the
rndc command line, and no key
clause is found in a matching
server
statement, this default key is used to authenticate the
server’s commands and responses. 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 is used
to connect. The default-source-address
and
default-source-address-v6
clauses 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 are used instead of the server name. Each address
can take an optional port. If an source-address
or
source-address-v6
is supplied, it is used to specify the
IPv4 and IPv6 source address, respectively.
The key
statement begins with an identifying string, the name of the
key. The statement has two clauses. algorithm
identifies the
authentication algorithm for rndc
to use; currently only HMAC-MD5
(for compatibility), HMAC-SHA1, HMAC-SHA224, HMAC-SHA256 (default),
HMAC-SHA384, and HMAC-SHA512 are supported. This is followed by a secret
clause which contains the base-64 encoding of the algorithm’s
authentication 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-sha256;
secret "6FMfj43Osz4lyb24OIe2iGEz9lf1llJO+lz";
};
key testkey {
algorithm hmac-sha256;
secret "R3HI8P6BKw9ZwXwN3VZKuQ==";
};
In the above example, rndc
by default uses the server at
localhost (127.0.0.1) and the key called “samplekey”. Commands to the
localhost server 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-SHA256 algorithm
and its secret clause contains the base-64 encoding of the HMAC-SHA256
secret enclosed in double quotes.
If rndc -s testserver
is used, then rndc
connects to the 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,
is 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
Name Server Configuration¶
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¶
rndc(8), rndc-confgen(8), mmencode(1), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
rndc - name server control utility¶
Synopsis¶
rndc [-b source-address] [-c config-file] [-k key-file] [-s server] [-p port] [-q] [-r] [-V] [-y key_id] [[-4] | [-6]] {command}
Description¶
rndc
controls the operation of a name server; it supersedes the
ndc
utility. 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
, the only supported authentication
algorithms are HMAC-MD5 (for compatibility), HMAC-SHA1, HMAC-SHA224,
HMAC-SHA256 (default), HMAC-SHA384, and HMAC-SHA512. They use a shared
secret on each end of the connection, which 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¶
-4
This option indicates use of IPv4 only.
-6
This option indicates use of IPv6 only.
-b source-address
This option indicates
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
This option indicates
config-file
as the configuration file instead of the default,/etc/rndc.conf
.-k key-file
This option indicates
key-file
as the key file instead of the default,/etc/rndc.key
. The key in/etc/rndc.key
is 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 configuration file forrndc
. If no server is supplied on the command line, the host named by the default-server clause in the options statement of therndc
configuration file is used.-p port
This option instructs BIND 9 to send commands to TCP port
port
instead of its default control channel port, 953.-q
This option sets quiet mode, where message text returned by the server is not printed unless there is an error.
-r
This option instructs
rndc
to print the result code returned bynamed
after executing the requested command (e.g., ISC_R_SUCCESS, ISC_R_FAILURE, etc.).-V
This option enables verbose logging.
-y key_id
This option indicates use of the key
key_id
from the configuration file. For control message validation to succeed,key_id
must be known bynamed
with the same algorithm and secret string. If nokey_id
is specified,rndc
first looks for a key clause in the server statement of the server being used, or if no server statement is present for that host, then in the default-key clause of the options statement. Note that the configuration file contains shared secrets which are used to send authenticated control commands to name servers, and should therefore not have general read or write access.
Commands¶
A list of commands supported by rndc
can be seen by running rndc
without arguments.
Currently supported commands are:
addzone
zone [class [view]] configurationThis command adds a zone while the server is running. This command requires the
allow-new-zones
option to be set toyes
. The configuration string specified on the command line is the zone configuration text that would ordinarily be placed innamed.conf
.The configuration is saved in a file called
viewname.nzf
(or, ifnamed
is compiled with liblmdb, an LMDB database file calledviewname.nzd
).viewname
is the name of the view, unless the view name contains characters that are incompatible with use as a file name, in which case a cryptographic hash of the view name is used instead. Whennamed
is restarted, the file is loaded into the view configuration so that zones that were added can persist after a restart.This sample
addzone
command adds the zoneexample.com
to the default view:$ \ rndc addzone example.com '{ type master; file "example.com.db"; };'
(Note the brackets around and semi-colon after the zone configuration text.)
See also
rndc delzone
andrndc modzone
.delzone
[-clean] zone [class [view]]This command deletes a zone while the server is running.
If the
-clean
argument is specified, the zone’s master file (and journal file, if any) are deleted along with the zone. Without the-clean
option, zone files must be deleted manually. (If the zone is of typesecondary
orstub
, the files needing to be removed are reported in the output of therndc delzone
command.)If the zone was originally added via
rndc addzone
, then it is removed permanently. However, if it was originally configured innamed.conf
, then that original configuration remains in place; when the server is restarted or reconfigured, the zone is recreated. To remove it permanently, it must also be removed fromnamed.conf
.See also
rndc addzone
andrndc modzone
.dnssec
( -status | -rollover -key id [-alg algorithm] [-when time] | -checkds [-key id [-alg algorithm]] [-when time] ( published | withdrawn )) zone [class [view]]This command allows you to interact with the “dnssec-policy” of a given zone.
rndc dnssec -status
show the DNSSEC signing state for the specified zone.rndc dnssec -rollover
allows you to schedule key rollover for a specific key (overriding the original key lifetime).rndc dnssec -checkds
will letnamed
know that the DS for the given key has been seen published into or withdrawn from the parent. This is required in order to complete a KSK rollover. If the-key id
argument is specified, look for the key with the given identifier, otherwise if there is only one key acting as a KSK in the zone, assume the DS of that key (if there are multiple keys with the same tag, use-alg algorithm
to select the correct algorithm). The time that the DS has been published or withdrawn is set to now, unless otherwise specified with the argument-when time
.dnstap
( -reopen | -roll [number] )This command closes and re-opens DNSTAP output files.
rndc dnstap -reopen
allows the output file to be renamed externally, so thatnamed
can truncate and re-open it.rndc dnstap -roll
causes the output file to be rolled automatically, similar to log files. The most recent output file has “.0” appended to its name; the previous most recent output file is moved to “.1”, and so on. Ifnumber
is specified, then the number of backup log files is limited to that number.dumpdb
[-all | -cache | -zones | -adb | -bad | -expired | -fail] [view …]This command dumps 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. (See the
dump-file
option in the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.)flush
This command flushes the server’s cache.
flushname
name [view]This command flushes the given name from the view’s DNS cache and, if applicable, from the view’s nameserver address database, bad server cache, and SERVFAIL cache.
flushtree
name [view]This command flushes the given name, and all of its subdomains, from the view’s DNS cache, address database, bad server cache, and SERVFAIL cache.
freeze
[zone [class [view]]]This command suspends updates to a dynamic zone. If no zone is specified, then all zones are suspended. This allows manual edits to be made to a zone normally updated by dynamic update, and causes changes in the journal file to be synced into the master file. All dynamic update attempts are refused while the zone is frozen.
See also
rndc thaw
.halt
[-p]This command stops the server immediately. Recent changes made through dynamic update or IXFR are not saved to the master files, but are 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 whennamed
has completed halting.See also
rndc stop
.loadkeys
[zone [class [view]]]This command fetches all DNSSEC keys for the given zone from the key directory. If they are within their publication period, they are merged into the zone’s DNSKEY RRset. Unlike
rndc sign
, however, the zone is not immediately re-signed by the new keys, but is allowed to incrementally re-sign over time.This command requires that the zone be configured with a
dnssec-policy
, or that theauto-dnssec
zone option be set tomaintain
, and also requires the zone to be configured to allow dynamic DNS. (See “Dynamic Update Policies” in the Administrator Reference Manual for more details.)managed-keys
(status | refresh | sync | destroy) [class [view]]This command inspects and controls the “managed-keys” database which handles RFC 5011 DNSSEC trust anchor maintenance. If a view is specified, these commands are applied to that view; otherwise, they are applied to all views.
When run with the
status
keyword, this prints the current status of the managed-keys database.When run with the
refresh
keyword, this forces an immediate refresh query to be sent for all the managed keys, updating the managed-keys database if any new keys are found, without waiting the normal refresh interval.When run with the
sync
keyword, this forces an immediate dump of the managed-keys database to disk (in the filemanaged-keys.bind
or (viewname.mkeys
). This synchronizes the database with its journal file, so that the database’s current contents can be inspected visually.When run with the
destroy
keyword, the managed-keys database is shut down and deleted, and all key maintenance is terminated. This command should be used only with extreme caution.Existing keys that are already trusted are not deleted from memory; DNSSEC validation can continue after this command is used. However, key maintenance operations cease until
named
is restarted or reconfigured, and all existing key maintenance states are deleted.Running
rndc reconfig
or restartingnamed
immediately after this command causes key maintenance to be reinitialized from scratch, just as if the server were being started for the first time. This is primarily intended for testing, but it may also be used, for example, to jumpstart the acquisition of new keys in the event of a trust anchor rollover, or as a brute-force repair for key maintenance problems.
modzone
zone [class [view]] configurationThis command modifies the configuration of a zone while the server is running. This command requires the
allow-new-zones
option to be set toyes
. As withaddzone
, the configuration string specified on the command line is the zone configuration text that would ordinarily be placed innamed.conf
.If the zone was originally added via
rndc addzone
, the configuration changes are recorded permanently and are still in effect after the server is restarted or reconfigured. However, if it was originally configured innamed.conf
, then that original configuration remains in place; when the server is restarted or reconfigured, the zone reverts to its original configuration. To make the changes permanent, it must also be modified innamed.conf
.See also
rndc addzone
andrndc delzone
.notify
zone [class [view]]This command resends NOTIFY messages for the zone.
notrace
This command sets the server’s debugging level to 0.
See also
rndc trace
.nta
[( -class class | -dump | -force | -remove | -lifetime duration)] domain [view]This command sets a DNSSEC negative trust anchor (NTA) for
domain
, with a lifetime ofduration
. The default lifetime is configured innamed.conf
via thenta-lifetime
option, and defaults to one hour. The lifetime cannot exceed one week.A negative trust anchor selectively disables DNSSEC validation for zones that are known to be failing because of misconfiguration rather than an attack. When data to be validated is at or below an active NTA (and above any other configured trust anchors),
named
aborts the DNSSEC validation process and treats the data as insecure rather than bogus. This continues until the NTA’s lifetime has elapsed.NTAs persist across restarts of the
named
server. The NTAs for a view are saved in a file calledname.nta
, wherename
is the name of the view; if it contains characters that are incompatible with use as a file name, a cryptographic hash is generated from the name of the view.An existing NTA can be removed by using the
-remove
option.An NTA’s lifetime can be specified with the
-lifetime
option. TTL-style suffixes can be used to specify the lifetime in seconds, minutes, or hours. If the specified NTA already exists, its lifetime is updated to the new value. Settinglifetime
to zero is equivalent to-remove
.If
-dump
is used, any other arguments are ignored and a list of existing NTAs is printed. Note that this may include NTAs that are expired but have not yet been cleaned up.Normally,
named
periodically tests to see whether data below an NTA can now be validated (see thenta-recheck
option in the Administrator Reference Manual for details). If data can be validated, then the NTA is regarded as no longer necessary and is allowed to expire early. The-force
parameter overrides this behavior and forces an NTA to persist for its entire lifetime, regardless of whether data could be validated if the NTA were not present.The view class can be specified with
-class
. The default is classIN
, which is the only class for which DNSSEC is currently supported.All of these options can be shortened, i.e., to
-l
,-r
,-d
,-f
, and-c
.Unrecognized options are treated as errors. To refer to a domain or view name that begins with a hyphen, use a double-hyphen (–) on the command line to indicate the end of options.
querylog
[(on | off)]This command enables or disables query logging. For backward compatibility, this command can also be used without an argument to toggle query logging on and off.
Query logging can also be enabled by explicitly directing the
queries
category
to achannel
in thelogging
section ofnamed.conf
, or by specifyingquerylog yes;
in theoptions
section ofnamed.conf
.reconfig
This command reloads the configuration file and loads new zones, but does 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 zone files.recursing
This command dumps the list of queries
named
is currently recursing on, and the list of domains to which iterative queries are currently being sent. The second list includes the number of fetches currently active for the given domain, and how many have been passed or dropped because of thefetches-per-zone
option.refresh
zone [class [view]]This command schedules zone maintenance for the given zone.
reload
This command reloads the configuration file and zones.
reload
zone [class [view]]This command reloads the given zone.
retransfer
zone [class [view]]This command retransfers the given secondary zone from the primary server.
If the zone is configured to use
inline-signing
, the signed version of the zone is discarded; after the retransfer of the unsigned version is complete, the signed version is regenerated with new signatures.scan
This command scans the list of available network interfaces for changes, without performing a full
reconfig
or waiting for theinterface-interval
timer.secroots
[-] [view …]This command dumps the security roots (i.e., trust anchors configured via
trust-anchors
, or themanaged-keys
ortrusted-keys
statements [both deprecated], ordnssec-validation auto
) and negative trust anchors for the specified views. If no view is specified, all views are dumped. Security roots indicate whether they are configured as trusted keys, managed keys, or initializing managed keys (managed keys that have not yet been updated by a successful key refresh query).If the first argument is
-
, then the output is returned via therndc
response channel and printed to the standard output. Otherwise, it is written to the secroots dump file, which defaults tonamed.secroots
, but can be overridden via thesecroots-file
option innamed.conf
.See also
rndc managed-keys
.serve-stale
(on | off | reset | status) [class [view]]This command enables, disables, resets, or reports the current status of the serving of stale answers as configured in
named.conf
.If serving of stale answers is disabled by
rndc-serve-stale off
, then it remains disabled even ifnamed
is reloaded or reconfigured.rndc serve-stale reset
restores the setting as configured innamed.conf
.rndc serve-stale status
reports whether serving of stale answers is currently enabled, disabled by the configuration, or disabled byrndc
. It also reports the values ofstale-answer-ttl
andmax-stale-ttl
.showzone
zone [class [view]]This command prints the configuration of a running zone.
See also
rndc zonestatus
.sign
zone [class [view]]This command fetches all DNSSEC keys for the given zone from the key directory (see the
key-directory
option in the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual). If they are within their publication period, they are merged into the zone’s DNSKEY RRset. If the DNSKEY RRset is changed, then the zone is automatically re-signed with the new key set.This command requires that the zone be configured with a
dnssec-policy
, or that theauto-dnssec
zone option be set toallow
ormaintain
, and also requires the zone to be configured to allow dynamic DNS. (See “Dynamic Update Policies” in the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual for more details.)See also
rndc loadkeys
.signing
[(-list | -clear keyid/algorithm | -clear all | -nsec3param ( parameters | none ) | -serial value ) zone [class [view]]This command lists, edits, or removes the DNSSEC signing-state records for the specified zone. The status of ongoing DNSSEC operations, such as signing or generating NSEC3 chains, is stored in the zone in the form of DNS resource records of type
sig-signing-type
.rndc signing -list
converts these records into a human-readable form, indicating which keys are currently signing or have finished signing the zone, and which NSEC3 chains are being created or removed.rndc signing -clear
can remove a single key (specified in the same format thatrndc signing -list
uses to display it), or all keys. In either case, only completed keys are removed; any record indicating that a key has not yet finished signing the zone is retained.rndc signing -nsec3param
sets the NSEC3 parameters for a zone. This is the only supported mechanism for using NSEC3 withinline-signing
zones. Parameters are specified in the same format as an NSEC3PARAM resource record:hash algorithm
,flags
,iterations
, andsalt
, in that order.Currently, the only defined value for
hash algorithm
is1
, representing SHA-1. Theflags
may be set to0
or1
, depending on whether the opt-out bit in the NSEC3 chain should be set.iterations
defines the number of additional times to apply the algorithm when generating an NSEC3 hash. Thesalt
is a string of data expressed in hexadecimal, a hyphen (-‘) if no salt is to be used, or the keyword ``auto`, which causesnamed
to generate a random 64-bit salt.So, for example, to create an NSEC3 chain using the SHA-1 hash algorithm, no opt-out flag, 10 iterations, and a salt value of “FFFF”, use:
rndc signing -nsec3param 1 0 10 FFFF zone
. To set the opt-out flag, 15 iterations, and no salt, use:rndc signing -nsec3param 1 1 15 - zone
.rndc signing -nsec3param none
removes an existing NSEC3 chain and replaces it with NSEC.rndc signing -serial value
sets the serial number of the zone tovalue
. If the value would cause the serial number to go backwards, it is rejected. The primary use of this parameter is to set the serial number on inline signed zones.stats
This command writes server statistics to the statistics file. (See the
statistics-file
option in the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.)status
This command displays the 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 no explicit root zone configured.stop
-pThis command stops 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(8)`'s process ID is returned. This allows an external process to determine when ``named
has completed stopping.See also
rndc halt
.sync
-clean [zone [class [view]]]This command syncs changes in the journal file for a dynamic zone to the master file. If the “-clean” option is specified, the journal file is also removed. If no zone is specified, then all zones are synced.
tcp-timeouts
[initial idle keepalive advertised]When called without arguments, this command displays the current values of the
tcp-initial-timeout
,tcp-idle-timeout
,tcp-keepalive-timeout
, andtcp-advertised-timeout
options. When called with arguments, these values are updated. This allows an administrator to make rapid adjustments when under a denial-of-service (DoS) attack. See the descriptions of these options in the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual for details of their use.thaw
[zone [class [view]]]This command enables updates to a frozen dynamic zone. If no zone is specified, 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, dynamic updates are no longer refused. If the zone has changed and the
ixfr-from-differences
option is in use, the journal file is updated to reflect changes in the zone. Otherwise, if the zone has changed, any existing journal file is removed.See also
rndc freeze
.trace
This command increments the server’s debugging level by one.
trace
levelThis command sets the server’s debugging level to an explicit value.
See also
rndc notrace
.tsig-delete
keyname [view]This command deletes a given TKEY-negotiated key from the server. This does not apply to statically configured TSIG keys.
tsig-list
This command lists the names of all TSIG keys currently configured for use by
named
in each view. The list includes both statically configured keys and dynamic TKEY-negotiated keys.validation
(on | off | status) [view …]``This command enables, disables, or checks the current status of DNSSEC validation. By default, validation is enabled.
The cache is flushed when validation is turned on or off to avoid using data that might differ between states.
zonestatus
zone [class [view]]This command displays the current status of the given zone, including the master file name and any include files from which it was loaded, when it was most recently loaded, the current serial number, the number of nodes, whether the zone supports dynamic updates, whether the zone is DNSSEC signed, whether it uses automatic DNSSEC key management or inline signing, and the scheduled refresh or expiry times for the zone.
See also
rndc showzone
.
rndc
commands that specify zone names, such as reload
,
retransfer
, or zonestatus
, can be ambiguous when applied to zones
of type redirect
. Redirect zones are always called .
, and can be
confused with zones of type hint
or with secondary copies of the root
zone. To specify a redirect zone, use the special zone name
-redirect
, without a trailing period. (With a trailing period, this
would specify a zone called “-redirect”.)
Limitations¶
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¶
rndc.conf(5), rndc-confgen(8), named(8), named.conf(5), ndc(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.