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Use the new role :iscman: to replace all occurences or ``binary``
with :iscman:`binary`, creating a hyperlink to the manual page.
Generated using:
find bin -name *.rst | xargs fgrep --files-with-matches '.. iscman' | xargs -I{} -n1 basename {} .rst > /tmp/progs
for PROG in $(cat /tmp/progs); do find -name '*.rst' | xargs sed -i -e "s/\`\`$PROG\`\`/:iscman:\`$PROG\`/g"; done
Additional hand-edits were done mainly around filter-aaaa and
filter-a which are program names and and option names at the
same time. Couple more edits was neede to fix .rst syntax broken by
automatic replacement.
(cherry picked from commit 53a5776025)
311 lines
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311 lines
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ReStructuredText
.. Copyright (C) Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
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..
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.. SPDX-License-Identifier: MPL-2.0
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..
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.. This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
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.. License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
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.. file, you can obtain one at https://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.
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..
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.. See the COPYRIGHT file distributed with this work for additional
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.. information regarding copyright ownership.
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.. _Introduction:
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Introduction
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============
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The Internet Domain Name System (DNS) consists of the syntax to specify
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the names of entities in the Internet in a hierarchical manner, the
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rules used for delegating authority over names, and the system
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implementation that actually maps names to Internet addresses. DNS data
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is maintained in a group of distributed hierarchical databases.
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.. _doc_scope:
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Scope of Document
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-----------------
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The Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND) implements a domain name server
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for a number of operating systems. This document provides basic
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information about the installation and care of the Internet Systems
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Consortium (ISC) BIND version 9 software package for system
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administrators.
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This manual covers BIND version |release|.
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.. _organization:
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Organization of This Document
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-----------------------------
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In this document, *Chapter 1* introduces the basic DNS and BIND
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concepts. *Chapter 2* describes resource requirements for running BIND
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in various environments. Information in *Chapter 3* is *task-oriented*
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in its presentation and is organized functionally, to aid in the process
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of installing the BIND 9 software. The task-oriented section is followed
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by *Chapter 4*, which is organized as a reference manual to aid in the ongoing
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maintenance of the software. *Chapter 5* contains more advanced concepts that
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the system administrator may need for implementing certain options. *Chapter 6*
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addresses security considerations, and *Chapter 7* contains troubleshooting help.
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The main body of the document is followed by several *appendices* which contain
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useful reference information, such as a *bibliography* and historic
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information related to BIND and the Domain Name System.
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.. _conventions:
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Conventions Used in This Document
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---------------------------------
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In this document, we generally use ``Fixed Width`` text to indicate the
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following types of information:
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- pathnames
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- filenames
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- URLs
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- hostnames
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- mailing list names
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- new terms or concepts
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- literal user input
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- program output
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- keywords
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- variables
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Text in "quotes," **bold**, or *italics* is also used for emphasis or clarity.
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.. _dns_overview:
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The Domain Name System (DNS)
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----------------------------
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This document explains the installation and upkeep
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of the BIND (Berkeley Internet Name Domain) software package. We
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begin by reviewing the fundamentals of the Domain Name System (DNS) as
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they relate to BIND.
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.. _dns_fundamentals:
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DNS Fundamentals
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The Domain Name System (DNS) is a hierarchical, distributed database. It
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stores information for mapping Internet host names to IP addresses and
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vice versa, mail routing information, and other data used by Internet
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applications.
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Clients look up information in the DNS by calling a *resolver* library,
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which sends queries to one or more *name servers* and interprets the
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responses. The BIND 9 software distribution contains a name server,
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:iscman:`named`, and a set of associated tools.
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.. _domain_names:
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Domains and Domain Names
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The data stored in the DNS is identified by *domain names* that are
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organized as a tree according to organizational or administrative
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boundaries. Each node of the tree, called a *domain*, is given a label.
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The domain name of the node is the concatenation of all the labels on
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the path from the node to the *root* node. This is represented in
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written form as a string of labels listed from right to left and
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separated by dots. A label need only be unique within its parent domain.
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For example, a domain name for a host at the company *Example, Inc.*
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could be ``ourhost.example.com``, where ``com`` is the top-level domain
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to which ``ourhost.example.com`` belongs, ``example`` is a subdomain of
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``com``, and ``ourhost`` is the name of the host.
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For administrative purposes, the name space is partitioned into areas
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called *zones*, each starting at a node and extending down to the "leaf"
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nodes or to nodes where other zones start. The data for each zone is
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stored in a *name server*, which answers queries about the zone using
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the *DNS protocol*.
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The data associated with each domain name is stored in the form of
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*resource records* (RRs). Some of the supported resource record types
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are described in :ref:`types_of_resource_records_and_when_to_use_them`.
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For more detailed information about the design of the DNS and the DNS
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protocol, please refer to the standards documents listed in :ref:`rfcs`.
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Zones
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~~~~~
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To properly operate a name server, it is important to understand the
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difference between a *zone* and a *domain*.
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As stated previously, a zone is a point of delegation in the DNS tree. A
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zone consists of those contiguous parts of the domain tree for which a
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name server has complete information and over which it has authority. It
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contains all domain names from a certain point downward in the domain
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tree except those which are delegated to other zones. A delegation point
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is marked by one or more *NS records* in the parent zone, which should
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be matched by equivalent NS records at the root of the delegated zone.
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For instance, consider the ``example.com`` domain, which includes names
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such as ``host.aaa.example.com`` and ``host.bbb.example.com``, even
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though the ``example.com`` zone includes only delegations for the
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``aaa.example.com`` and ``bbb.example.com`` zones. A zone can map
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exactly to a single domain, but could also include only part of a
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domain, the rest of which could be delegated to other name servers.
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Every name in the DNS tree is a *domain*, even if it is *terminal*, that
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is, has no *subdomains*. Every subdomain is a domain and every domain
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except the root is also a subdomain. The terminology is not intuitive
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and we suggest reading :rfc:`1033`, :rfc:`1034`, and :rfc:`1035` to gain a complete
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understanding of this difficult and subtle topic.
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Though BIND 9 is called a "domain name server," it deals primarily in
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terms of zones. The ``primary`` and ``secondary`` declarations in the :iscman:`named.conf`
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file specify zones, not domains. When BIND asks some other site if it is
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willing to be a secondary server for a *domain*, it is actually asking
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for secondary service for some collection of *zones*.
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.. _auth_servers:
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Authoritative Name Servers
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Each zone is served by at least one *authoritative name server*, which
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contains the complete data for the zone. To make the DNS tolerant of
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server and network failures, most zones have two or more authoritative
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servers, on different networks.
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Responses from authoritative servers have the "authoritative answer"
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(AA) bit set in the response packets. This makes them easy to identify
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when debugging DNS configurations using tools like :iscman:`dig` (:ref:`diagnostic_tools`).
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.. _primary_master:
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The Primary Server
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The authoritative server, where the main copy of the zone data is
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maintained, is called the *primary* (formerly *master*) server, or simply the
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*primary*. Typically it loads the zone contents from some local file
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edited by humans or perhaps generated mechanically from some other local
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file which is edited by humans. This file is called the *zone file* or
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*master file*.
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In some cases, however, the master file may not be edited by humans at
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all, but may instead be the result of *dynamic update* operations.
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.. _secondary_server:
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Secondary Servers
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The other authoritative servers, the *secondary* servers (formerly known as
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*slave* servers) load the zone contents from another server using a
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replication process known as a *zone transfer*. Typically the data is
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transferred directly from the primary, but it is also possible to
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transfer it from another secondary. In other words, a secondary server may
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itself act as a primary to a subordinate secondary server.
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Periodically, the secondary server must send a refresh query to determine
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whether the zone contents have been updated. This is done by sending a
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query for the zone's Start of Authority (SOA) record and checking whether the SERIAL field
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has been updated; if so, a new transfer request is initiated. The timing
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of these refresh queries is controlled by the SOA REFRESH and RETRY
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fields, but can be overridden with the ``max-refresh-time``,
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``min-refresh-time``, ``max-retry-time``, and ``min-retry-time``
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options.
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If the zone data cannot be updated within the time specified by the SOA
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EXPIRE option (up to a hard-coded maximum of 24 weeks), the secondary
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zone expires and no longer responds to queries.
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.. _stealth_server:
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Stealth Servers
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Usually, all of the zone's authoritative servers are listed in NS
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records in the parent zone. These NS records constitute a *delegation*
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of the zone from the parent. The authoritative servers are also listed
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in the zone file itself, at the *top level* or *apex* of the zone.
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Servers that are not in the parent's NS delegation can be listed in the
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zone's top-level NS records, but servers that are not present at the
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zone's top level cannot be listed in the parent's delegation.
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A *stealth server* is a server that is authoritative for a zone but is
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not listed in that zone's NS records. Stealth servers can be used for
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keeping a local copy of a zone, to speed up access to the zone's records
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or to make sure that the zone is available even if all the "official"
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servers for the zone are inaccessible.
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A configuration where the primary server itself is a stealth
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server is often referred to as a "hidden primary" configuration. One use
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for this configuration is when the primary is behind a firewall
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and is therefore unable to communicate directly with the outside world.
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.. _cache_servers:
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Caching Name Servers
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The resolver libraries provided by most operating systems are *stub
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resolvers*, meaning that they are not capable of performing the full DNS
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resolution process by themselves by talking directly to the
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authoritative servers. Instead, they rely on a local name server to
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perform the resolution on their behalf. Such a server is called a
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*recursive* name server; it performs *recursive lookups* for local
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clients.
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To improve performance, recursive servers cache the results of the
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lookups they perform. Since the processes of recursion and caching are
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intimately connected, the terms *recursive server* and *caching server*
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are often used synonymously.
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The length of time for which a record may be retained in the cache of a
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caching name server is controlled by the Time-To-Live (TTL) field
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associated with each resource record.
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.. _forwarder:
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Forwarding
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^^^^^^^^^^
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Even a caching name server does not necessarily perform the complete
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recursive lookup itself. Instead, it can *forward* some or all of the
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queries that it cannot satisfy from its cache to another caching name
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server, commonly referred to as a *forwarder*.
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Forwarders are typically used when an administrator does not wish for
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all the servers at a given site to interact directly with the rest of
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the Internet. For example, a common scenario is when multiple internal
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DNS servers are behind an Internet firewall. Servers behind the firewall
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forward their requests to the server with external access, which queries
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Internet DNS servers on the internal servers' behalf.
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Another scenario (largely now superseded by Response Policy Zones) is to
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send queries first to a custom server for RBL processing before
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forwarding them to the wider Internet.
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There may be one or more forwarders in a given setup. The order in which
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the forwarders are listed in :iscman:`named.conf` does not determine the
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sequence in which they are queried; rather, :iscman:`named` uses the response
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times from previous queries to select the server that is likely to
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respond the most quickly. A server that has not yet been queried is
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given an initial small random response time to ensure that it is tried
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at least once. Dynamic adjustment of the recorded response times ensures
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that all forwarders are queried, even those with slower response times.
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This permits changes in behavior based on server responsiveness.
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.. _multi_role:
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Name Servers in Multiple Roles
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The BIND name server can simultaneously act as a primary for some zones,
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a secondary for other zones, and as a caching (recursive) server for a set
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of local clients.
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However, since the functions of authoritative name service and
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caching/recursive name service are logically separate, it is often
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advantageous to run them on separate server machines. A server that only
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provides authoritative name service (an *authoritative-only* server) can
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run with recursion disabled, improving reliability and security. A
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server that is not authoritative for any zones and only provides
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recursive service to local clients (a *caching-only* server) does not
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need to be reachable from the Internet at large and can be placed inside
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a firewall.
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