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99 lines
3.5 KiB
Text
99 lines
3.5 KiB
Text
PLATFORMS
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Supported platforms
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In general, this version of BIND will build and run on any POSIX-compliant
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system with a C11-compliant C compiler, BSD-style sockets with
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RFC-compliant IPv6 support, POSIX-compliant threads, the libuv
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asynchronous I/O library, and the OpenSSL cryptography library.
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The following C11 features are used in BIND 9:
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* Atomic operations support from the compiler is needed, either in the
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form of builtin operations, C11 atomics, or the Interlocked family of
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functions on Windows.
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* Thread Local Storage support from the compiler is needed, either in
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the form of C11 _Thread_local/thread_local, the __thread GCC
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extension, or the __declspec(thread) MSVC extension on Windows.
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BIND 9.17 requires a fairly recent version of libuv (at least 1.x). For
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some of the older systems listed below, you will have to install an
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updated libuv package from sources such as EPEL, PPA, or other native
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sources for updated packages. The other option is to build and install
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libuv from source.
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Certain optional BIND features have additional library dependencies. These
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include libxml2 and libjson-c for statistics, libmaxminddb for
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geolocation, libfstrm and libprotobuf-c for DNSTAP, and libidn2 for
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internationalized domain name conversion.
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ISC regularly tests BIND on many operating systems and architectures, but
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lacks the resources to test all of them. Consequently, ISC is only able to
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offer support on a "best effort" basis for some.
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Regularly tested platforms
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As of Mar 2020, BIND 9.17 is fully supported and regularly tested on the
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following systems:
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* Debian 9, 10
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* Ubuntu LTS 16.04, 18.04
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* Fedora 31
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* Red Hat Enterprise Linux / CentOS 7, 8
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* FreeBSD 11.3, 12.1
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* OpenBSD 6.6
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* Alpine Linux
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The amd64, i386, armhf and arm64 CPU architectures are all fully
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supported.
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Best effort
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The following are platforms on which BIND is known to build and run. ISC
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makes every effort to fix bugs on these platforms, but may be unable to do
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so quickly due to lack of hardware, less familiarity on the part of
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engineering staff, and other constraints. With the exception of Windows
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Server 2012 R2, none of these are tested regularly by ISC.
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* Windows Server 2012 R2, 2016 / x64
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* Windows 10 / x64
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* macOS 10.12+
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* Solaris 11
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* NetBSD
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* Other Linux distributions still supported by their vendors, such as:
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+ Ubuntu 19.04+
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+ Gentoo
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+ Arch Linux
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* OpenWRT/LEDE 17.01+
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* Other CPU architectures (mips, mipsel, sparc, ...)
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Community maintained
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These systems may not all have the required dependencies for building BIND
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easily available, although it will be possible in many cases to compile
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those directly from source. The community and interested parties may wish
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to help with maintenance, and we welcome patch contributions, although we
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cannot guarantee that we will accept them. All contributions will be
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assessed against the risk of adverse effect on officially supported
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platforms.
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* Platforms past or close to their respective EOL dates, such as:
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+ Ubuntu 14.04, 18.10
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+ CentOS 6
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+ Debian Jessie
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+ FreeBSD 10.x
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Unsupported platforms
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These are platforms on which BIND 9.17 is known not to build or run:
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* Platforms without at least OpenSSL 1.0.2
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* Windows 10 / x86
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* Windows Server 2012 and older
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* Solaris 10 and older
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* Platforms that don't support IPv6 Advanced Socket API (RFC 3542)
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* Platforms that don't support atomic operations (via compiler or
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library)
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* Linux without NPTL (Native POSIX Thread Library)
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* Platforms on which libuv cannot be compiled
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