bind9/contrib/dlz/modules/bdbhpt
2015-02-12 10:20:36 -08:00
..
testing [master] fixed testing problems with bdbhtp DLZ module 2015-02-12 10:20:36 -08:00
dlz_bdbhpt_dynamic.c [master] fixed testing problems with bdbhtp DLZ module 2015-02-12 10:20:36 -08:00
Makefile [master] DLZ modules: filesystem, ldap, wildcard 2013-03-11 17:03:46 -07:00
README.md [master] fixed testing problems with bdbhtp DLZ module 2015-02-12 10:20:36 -08:00

dlz-bdbhpt-dynamic

A Bind 9 Dynamically Loadable BerkeleyDB High Performance Text Driver

Summary

This is an attempt to port the original Bind 9 DLZ bdbhpt_driver.c as found in the Bind 9 source tree into the new DLZ dlopen driver API. The goals of this project are as follows:

  • Provide DLZ facilities to OEM-supported Bind distributions
  • Support both v1 (Bind 9.8) and v2 (Bind 9.9) of the dlopen() DLZ API

Requirements

You will need the following:

  • Bind 9.8 or higher with the DLZ dlopen driver enabled
  • BerkeleyDB libraries and header files
  • A C compiler

This distribution have been successfully installed and tested on Ubuntu 12.04.

Installation

With the above requirements satisfied perform the following steps:

  1. Ensure the symlink for dlz_minimal.h points at the correct header file matching your Bind version
  2. Run: make
  3. Run: sudo make install # this will install dlz_bdbhpt_dynamic.so into /usr/lib/bind9/
  4. Add a DLZ statement similar to the example below into your Bind configuration
  5. Ensure your BerkeleyDB home-directory exists and can be written to by the bind user
  6. Use the included testing/bdbhpt-populate.pl script to provide some data for initial testing

Usage

Example usage is as follows:

dlz "bdbhpt_dynamic" {
        database "dlopen /usr/lib/bind9/dlz_bdbhpt_dynamic.so T /var/cache/bind/dlz dnsdata.db";
};

The arguments for the "database" line above are as follows:

  1. dlopen - Use the dlopen DLZ driver to dynamically load our compiled driver
  2. The full path to your built dlz_bdbhpt_dynamic.so
  3. Single character specifying the mode to open your BerkeleyDB environment:
    • T - Transactional Mode - Highest safety, lowest speed.
    • C - Concurrent Mode - Lower safety (no rollback), higher speed.
    • P - Private Mode - No interprocess communication & no locking. Lowest safety, highest speed.
  4. Directory containing your BerkeleyDB - this is where the BerkeleyDB environment will be created.
  5. Filename within this directory containing your BerkeleyDB tables.

A copy of the above Bind configuration is included within example/dlz.conf.

Author

The person responsible for this is:

Mark Goldfinch g@g.org.nz

The code is maintained at:

https://github.com/goldie80/dlz-bdbhpt-dynamic

There is very little in the way of original code in this work, however, original license conditions from both bdbhpt_driver.c and dlz_example.c are maintained in the dlz_bdbhpt_dynamic.c.