NAME
pdnsd.conf - The configuration file for pdnsd
DESCRIPTION
This manual page describes the layout of the pdnsd(8) configuration
file and the available configuration options. The default location of
the file is /etc/pdnsd.conf. This may be changed with the -c command
line option. An example pdnsd.conf comes with the pdnsd distribution
in the documentation directory or in /etc/pdnsd.conf.sample.
FILE FORMAT
The configuration file is divided into sections. Each section is
prefixed with the section name and opening curlies ({) and closed with
closing curlies (}). In each section, configuration options can be
given in the form
option_name=option_value;
Option value may be a string literal, a number, a time specification or
a constant. In previous versions of pdnsd strings had to be enclosed
in quotes ("), but since version 1.1.10 this is no longer necessary,
unless a string contains a special character such as whitespace, a
token that normally starts a comment, or one of ",;{}".
A time specification consists a sequence of digits followed by a one-
letter suffix. The following suffixes are recognized: s (seconds), m
(minutes), h (hours), d (days) and w (weeks). If the suffix is
missing, seconds are assumed. If several time specifications are
concatenated, their values are added together; e.g. 2h30m is
interpreted as 2*60*60 + 30*60 = 9000 seconds.
Some options take more than one value; in this case, the values are
separated with commas.
If you may supply one of a set of possible values to an option, this is
noted in the documentation as (option1|option2|option3|...)
The constants true|false and yes|no are accepted as synonyms for the
constants on|off.
Comments may be enclosed in /* and */, nested comments are possible. If
the # sign or two slashes (//) appear in the configuration file,
everything from these signs to the end of the current line is regarded
as a comment and ignored.
There are examples for nearly all options in the sample config file.
global Section
The global section specifies parameters that affect the overall
behaviour of the server. If you specify multiple global sections, the
settings of those later in the file will overwrite the earlier given
values.
These are the possible options:
perm_cache=(number|off);
Switch the disk cache off or supply a maximum cache size in kB.
If the disk cache is switched off, 8 bytes will still be written
to disk. The memory cache is always 10kB larger than the file
cache. This value is 2048 (2 MB) by default.
cache_dir=string;
Set the directory you want to keep the cache in. The default is
"/var/cache/pdnsd" (unless pdnsd was compiled with a different
default).
server_port=number;
Set the server port. This is especially useful when you want to
start the server and are not root. Note that you may also not
specify uptest=ping in the server section as non-root.
The default port is 53, the RFC-standard one. Note that you
should only use non-standard ports when you only need clients on
your machine to communicate with the server; others will
probably fail if the try to contact the server on the basis of
an NS record, since the A record that supplies the address for
(among others) name servers does not have a port number
specification.
server_ip=string;
or
interface=string;
Set the IP address pdnsd listens on for requests. This can be
useful when the host has several interfaces and you want pdnsd
not to listen on all interfaces. For example, it is possible to
bind pdnsd to listen on 127.0.0.2 to allow pdnsd to be a
forwarder for BIND. The default setting for this option is
server_ip=any, which means that pdnsd will listen on all of your
local interfaces. Presently you can only specify one address
here; if you want pdnsd to listen on multiple interfaces but not
all you will have to specify server_ip=any and use firewall
rules to restrict access.
The IP address used to need quotation marks around it, but since
version 1.1.10 this is no longer necessary.
If pdnsd has been compiled with both IPv4 and IPv6 support, and
you want to specify an IPv6 address here, then unless pdnsd was
compiled to start up in IPv6 mode by default, you will need to
use the -6 command-line option or set run_ipv4=off first (see
below) in order to ensure that the IPv6 address is parsed
correctly.
If pdnsd is running in IPv6 mode and you specify an IPv4 address
here, it will automatically be mapped to an IPv6 address.
New in version 1.2: You may also give the name of an interface
such as "lo" or "eth0" here, instead of an IP address (this has
been tested on Linux, and may or may not work on other
platforms). pdnsd will not bind to the interface name, but will
look up the address of the interface at start-up and listen on
that address. If the address of the interface changes while
pdnsd is running, pdnsd will not notice that. You will need to
restart pdnsd in that case.
linkdown_kluge=(on|off);
This option enables a kluge that some people might need: when
all servers are marked down, with this option set the cache is
not even used when a query is received, and a DNS error is
returned in any case. The only exception from this is that local
records (as specified in rr and source sections are still served
normally. In general, you probably want to get cached entries
even when the network is down, so this defaults to off.
max_ttl=timespec;
This option sets the maximum time a record is held in cache. All
dns resource records have a time to live field that says for
what period of time the record may be cached before it needs to
be requeried. If this is more than the value given with max_ttl,
this time to live value is set to max_ttl. This is done to
prevent records from being cached an inappropriate long period
of time, because that is almost never a good thing to do.
Default is 604800s (one week).
min_ttl=timespec;
This option sets the minimum time a record is held in cache. All
dns resource records have a time to live field that says for
what period of time the record may be cached before it needs to
be requeried. If this is less than the value given with min_ttl,
this time to live value is set to min_ttl. Default is 120
seconds.
neg_ttl=timespec;
This option sets the time that negatively cached records will
remain valid in the cache if no time to live can be determined.
This is always the case when whole domains are being cached
negatively, and additionally when record types are cached
negatively for a domain for which no SOA record is known to
pdnsd. If a SOA is present, the ttl of the SOA is taken.
neg_rrs_pol=(on|off|auth);
This sets the RR set policy for negative caching; this tells
pdnsd under which circumstances it should cache a record type
negatively for a certain domain. off will turn the negative
caching of record types off, on will always add a negative cache
entry when a name server did not return a record type we asked
it for, and auth will only add such entries if the answer came
from an authoritative name server for that domain. The preset is
auth. This is normally the right thing, as some caching servers
behave strangely.
neg_domain_pol=(on|off|auth);
This is analogue to neg_rrs_pol for whole domain negative
caching. It should be safe to set this on, because I have not
seen a caching server that will falsely claim that a domain does
not exist.
The default is auth.
run_as=string;
This option allows you to let pdnsd change its user and group id
after operations that needed privileges have been done. This
helps minimize security risks and is therefore recommended. The
supplied string gives a user name whose user id and primary
group id are taken.
A little more details: after reading the config file, becoming a
daemon (if specified) and starting the server status thread, the
main thread changes its gid and uid, as do all newly created
threads thereafter. By taking another uid and gid, those threads
run with the privileges of the specified user. Under Linux and
FreeBSD, the server status thread runs with the original
privileges only when the strict_setuid option is set to off (see
below, on by default), because these may be needed for exec
uptests. The manager thread also retains its original privileges
in this case. You should take care that the user you specify
has write permissions on your cache file and status pipe (if you
need a status pipe). You should look out for error messages like
"permission denied" and "operation not permitted" to discover
permission problems.
strict_setuid=(on|off);
When used together with the run_as option, this option lets you
specify that all threads of the program will run with the
privileges of the run_as user. This provides higher security
than the normal run_as option, but is not always possible. See
the run_as option for further discussion.
This option is on by default.
Note that this option has no effect on Non-Linux systems.
paranoid=(on|off);
Normally, pdnsd queries all servers in recursive mode (i.e.
instructs servers to query other servers themselves if possible,
and to give back answers for domains that may not be in its
authority), and accepts additional records with information for
servers that are not in the authority of the queried server.
This opens the possibility of so-called cache poisoning: a
malicious attacker might set up a dns server that, when queried,
returns forged additional records. This way, he might replace
trusted servers with his own ones by making your dns server
return bad IP addresses. This option protects you from cache
poisoning by rejecting additional records that do not describe
domains in the queried servers authority space and not doing
recursive queries any more. An exception to this rule are the
servers you specify in your config file, which are trusted.
The penalty is a possible performance decrease, in particular,
more queries might be necessary for the same operation.
You should also notice that there may be other similar security
problems, which are essentially problems of the DNS, i.e. any
"traditional" server has them (the DNS security extensions solve
these problems, but are not widely supported). One of this
vulnerabilities is that an attacker may bombard you with forged
answers in hopes that one may match a query you have done. If
you have done such a query, one in 65536 forged packets will be
succesful (i.e. an average packet count of 32768 is needed for
that attack). pdnsd can use TCP for queries, which has a
slightly higher overhead, but is much less vulnerable to such
attacks on sane operating systems. Also, pdnsd chooses random
query ids, so that an attacker cannot take a shortcut. If the
attacker is able to listen to your network traffic, this attack
is relatively easy, though.
This vulnerability is not pdnsd’s fault, and is possible using
any conventional name server (pdnsd is perhaps a little more
secured against this type of attacks if you make it use TCP).
The paranoid option is off by default.
scheme_file=string;
In addition to normal uptests, you may specify that some servers
shall only be queried when a certain pcmcia-cs scheme is active
(only under linux). For that, pdnsd needs to know where the file
resides that holds the pcmcia scheme information. Normally, this
is either /var/lib/pcmcia/scheme or /var/state/pcmcia/scheme.
status_ctl=(on|off);
This has the same effect as the -s command line option: the
status control is enabled when on is specified.
Added by Paul Rombouts: Note that pdnsd-ctl allows run-time
configuration of pdnsd, even the IP addesses of the name servers
can be changed. If you’re not using pdnsd-ctl and you want
maximum security, you should not enable this option. It is
disabled by default.
daemon=(on|off);
This has the same effect as the -d command line option: the
daemon mode is enabled when on is specified.
Default is off.
tcp_server=(on|off);
tcp_server=on has the same effect as the -t or --tcp command-
line option: it enables TCP serving. Similarly, tcp_server=off
is like the --notcp command-line option.
Default is on.
pid_file=string;
This has the same effect as the -p command line option: you can
specify a file that pdnsd will write its pid into when it starts
in daemon mode.
verbosity=number;
This has the same effect as the -v command line option: you can
set the verbosity of pdnsd’s messages with it. The argument is a
number between 0 (few messages) to 3 (most messages).
query_method=(tcp_only|udp_only|tcp_udp|udp_tcp);
This has the same effect as the -m command line option. Read
the documentation for the command line option on this. tcp_only
corresponds to the to, udp_only to the uo, tcp_udp to the tu and
udp_tcp to the ut argument of the command line option.
If you use query_method=tcp_udp, it is recommended that you also
set the global timeout option to at least twice the longest
server timeout.
run_ipv4=(on|off);
This has the same effect as the -4 or -6 command line option: if
on is specified, IPv4 support is enabled, and IPv6 support is
disabled (if available). If off is specified, IPv4 will be
disabled and IPv6 will be enabled. For this option to be
meaningful, pdnsd needs to be compiled with support for the
protocol you choose. If pdnsd was compiled with both IPv4 and
IPv6 support, and you want to include IPv6 addresses in the
configuration file, you will probably need to specify
run_ipv4=off first to ensure that the IPv6 addresses are parsed
correctly.
debug=(on|off);
This has the same effect as the -g command line option: the
debugging messages are enabled when on is specified.
ctl_perms=number;
This option allows you to set the file permissions that the
pdnsd status control socket will have. These are the same as
file permissions. The owner of the file will be the run_as user,
or, if none is specified, the user who started pdnsd. If you
want to specify the permissions in octal (as usual), don’t
forget the leading zero (0600 instead of 600!). To use the
status control, write access is needed. The default is 0600
(only the owner may read or write).
Please note that the socket is kept in the cache directory, and
that the cache directory permissions might also need to be
adjusted. Please ensure that the cache directory is not
writeable for untrusted users.
proc_limit=number;
With this option, you can set a limit on the pdnsd threads that
will be active simultaneously. If this number is exceeded,
queries are queued and may be delayed some time. See also the
procq_limit option.
The default for this option is 40.
procq_limit=number;
When the query thread limit proc_limit is exceeded, connection
attempts to pdnsd will be queued. With this option, you can set
the maximum queue length. If this length is also exceeded, the
incoming queries will be dropped. That means that tcp
connections will be closed and udp queries will just be dropped,
which will probably cause the querying resolver to wait for an
answer until it times out.
See also the proc_limit option. A maximum of
proc_limit+procq_limit query threads will exist at any one time
(plus 3 to 6 threads that will always be present depending on
your configuration).
The default for this option is 60.
tcp_qtimeout=timespec;
This option sets a timeout for tcp queries. If no full query has
been received on a tcp connection after that time has passed,
the connection will be closed. The default is set using the
--with-tcp-qtimeout option to configure.
par_queries=number;
This option used to set the maximum number of remote servers
that would be queried simultaneously, for every query that pdnsd
receives.
Since version 1.1.11, the meaning of this option has changed
slightly. It is now the increment with which the number of
parallel queries is increased when the previous set of servers
has timed out. For example, if we have a list server1, server2,
server3, etc. of available servers and par_queries=2, then pdnsd
will first send queries to server1 and server2, and listen for
responses from these servers.
If these servers do not send a reply within their timeout
period, pdnsd will send additional queries to server3 and
server4, and listen for responses from server1, server2, server3
and server4, and so on until a useful reply is received or the
list is exhausted.
In the worst case there will be pending queries to all the
servers in the list of available servers. We may be using more
system resources this way (but only if the first servers in the
list are slow or unresponsive), but the advantage is that we
have a greater chance of catching a reply. After all, if we
wait longer anyway, why not for more servers.
See also the explanation of the global timeout option below.
1 or 2 are good values for this option. The default is set at
compile time using the --with-par-queries option to configure.
timeout=timespec;
This is the global timeout parameter for dns queries. This
specifies the minimum period of time pdnsd will wait after
sending the first query to a remote server before giving up
without having received a reply. The timeout options in the
configuration file are now only minimum timeout intervals.
Setting the global timeout option makes it possible to specify
quite short timeout intervals in the server sections (see
below). This will have the effect that pdnsd will start querying
additional servers fairly quickly if the first servers are slow
to respond (but will still continue to listen for responses from
the first ones). This may allow pdnsd to get an answer more
quickly in certain situations.
If you use query_method=tcp_udp it is recommended that you make
the global timeout at least twice as large as the largest server
timeout, otherwise pdnsd may not have time to try a UDP query if
a TCP connection times out.
Default value is 0.
randomize_recs=(on|off);
If this option is turned on, pdnsd will randomly reorder the
cached records of one type when creating an answer. This
supports round-robin DNS schemes and increases fail safety for
hosts with multiple IP addresses, so this is usually a good
idea.
On by default.
query_port_start=(number|none);
If a number is given, this defines the start of the port range
used for queries of pdnsd. The value given must be >= 1024. The
purpose of this option is to aid certain firewall configurations
that are based on the source port. Please keep in mind that
another application may bind a port in that range, so a stateful
firewall using target port and/or process uid may be more
effective. In case a query start port is given pdnsd uses this
port as the first port of a specified port range (see
query_port_end) used for queries. pdnsd will try to randomly
select a free port from this range as local port for the query.
To ensure that there are enough ports for pdnsd to use, the
range between query_port_start and query_port_end should be
adjusted to at least (par_queries * proc_limit). A larger range
is highly recommended for security reasons, and also because
other applications may allocate ports in that range. If
possible, this range should be kept out of the space that other
applications usually use.
The default for this option is 1024. Together with the default
value of query_port_end, this makes it the hardest for an
attacker to guess the source port used by the pdnsd resolver.
If you specify none here, pdnsd will let the kernel choose the
source port, but this may leave pdnsd more vulnerable to an
attack.
query_port_end=number;
Used if query_port_start is not none. Defines the last port of
the range started by query_port_start used for querys by pdnsd.
The default is 65535, which is also the maximum legal value for
this option. For details see the description of
query_port_start.
delegation_only=string;
Added by Paul Rombouts: This option specifies a "delegation-
only" zone. This means that if pdnsd receives a query for a
name that is in a subdomain of a "delegation-only" zone but the
remote name server returns an answer with an authority section
lacking any NS RRs for subdomains of that zone, pdnsd will
answer NXDOMAIN (unknown domain). This feature can be used for
undoing the undesired effects of DNS "wildcards". Several
"delegation-only" zones may be specified together. If you
specify root servers in a server section it is important that
you set root_server=on in such a section.
Example:
delegation_only="com","net";
This feature is off by default. It is recommended that you only
use this feature if you actually need it, because there is a
risk that some legitimate names will be blocked, especially if
the remote name servers queried by pdnsd return answers with
empty authority sections.
ipv4_6_prefix=string;
This option has the same effect as the -i command-line option.
When pdnsd runs in IPv6 mode, this option specifies the prefix
pdnsd uses to convert IPv4 addresses in the configuration file
(or addresses specified with pdnsd-ctl) to IPv6-mapped
addresses. The string must be a valid IPv6 address. Only the
first 96 bits are used. Note that this only effects the parsing
of IPv4 addresses listed after this option.
The default is "::ffff.0.0.0.0".
use_nss=(on|off);
If this option is turned on, pdnsd will call initgroups() to set
up the group access list, whenever pdnsd changes its user and
group id (see run_as option). There is a possible snag, though,
if initgroups() uses NSS (Name Service Switch) and NSS in turn
uses DNS. In such a case you may experience lengthy timeouts and
stalls. By setting use_nss=off, you can disable the
initgroups() call (only possible in versions 1.2.5 and later).
This option was contributed by Jan-Marek Glogowski.
On by default.
server Section
Each server section specifies a set of name servers that pdnsd should
try to get resource records or authoritative name server information
from. The servers are queried in the order of their appearance (or
parallel to a limited extend). If one fails, the next one is taken and
so on.
You probably want to specify the dns server in your LAN, the caching
dns servers of your internet provider or even a list of root servers in
one or more server sections.
The supported options in this section are:
label=string;
Specify a label for the server section. This can be used to
refer to this section when using pdnsd-ctl, the pdnsd control
utility.
You can give several server sections the same label, but if you
want to change the addresses of a server section (see ip option
below) during run-time with
"pdnsd-ctl server label up dns1,dns2,...", the label must be
unique.
ip=string;
Give the IP (the address, not the host name) of the server.
Multiple IP addresses can be given per server section. This can
be done by entering multiple lines of the form ip=string; or a
single line like this:
ip=string,string,string;
IP addresses do not have to be specified in the configuration
file. A server section without IP addresses will remain
inactive until it is assigned one or more addresses with
pdnsd-ctl, the pdnsd control utility.
If pdnsd has been compiled with both IPv4 and IPv6 support, any
IPv6 addresses you specify here will be skipped with a warning
message, unless pdnsd is running in IPv6 mode. Thus, unless
pdnsd was compiled to startup in IPv6 mode by default, you need
to use the command-line option -6 or set run_ipv4=off first (see
global section) in order to ensure that IPv6 addresses are
parsed correctly.
If pdnsd is running in IPv6 mode and you specify an IPv4 address
here, it will automatically be mapped to an IPv6 address.
file=string;
New in version 1.2: This option allows you to give the name of a
resolv.conf-style file. Of the lines beginning with the
nameserver keyword, the second field will be parsed as an IP
address, as if it were specified with the ip= option. The
remaining lines will be ignored. If the contents of the file
changes while pdnsd is running, you can make pdnsd aware of the
changes through the use of pdnsd-ctl, the pdnsd control utility.
This is usually most conveniently done by placing the command
"pdnsd-ctl config" in a script that is automatically run
whenever the DNS configuration changes.
For example, suppose you have a ppp client that writes the DNS
configuration for your ISP to the file /etc/ppp/resolv.conf and
runs the script /etc/ppp/ip-up when a new connection is
established. One way of ensuring that pdnsd is automatically
reconfigured is to add a server section in the config file with
file=/etc/ppp/resolv.conf and to add the command
"pdnsd-ctl config" to /etc/ppp/ip-up.
port=number;
Give the port the remote name server listens on. Default is 53
(the official dns port)
uptest=(ping|none|if|dev|diald|exec|query);
Determine the method to check whether the server is available.
Currently defined methods are:
· ping: Send an ICMP_ECHO request to the server. If it doesn’t
respond within the timeout, it is regarded to be unavailable
until the next probe.
· none: The availability status is not changed, only the time
stamp is updated.
· if: Check whether the interface (specified in the interface=
option) is existent, up and running. This currently works for
all "ordinary" network interfaces, interfaces that disappear
when down (e.g. ppp?), and additionally for Linux isdn
interfaces (as of kernel 2.2). Note that you need a
/dev/isdninfo device file (major#45, minor#255), or the isdn
uptest will always fail.
· dev and diald: Perform an if uptest, and, if that was
succesful, additionally check whether a program is running that
has locked a given (modem-) device. The needed parameters are an
interface (specified as for the if uptest, e.g. "ppp0") and a
device relative to /dev (e.g. "modem" for /dev/modem specified
using the device= option. pdnsd will then look for a pid file
for the given interface in /var/lock (e.g. /var/run/ppp0.pid)
and for a lockfile for the given device (e.g.
/var/lock/LCK..modem), and then test whether the locking process
is the process that created the pid file and this process is
still alive. If this is the case, the normal if uptest is
executed for the given interface.
The dev option is for pppd dial-on-demand, diald is the same for
diald users.
· exec: Executes a given command in the /bin/sh shell (as
/bin/sh -c <command>) and evaluates the result (the return code
of the last command) in the shell’s way of handling return
codes, i.e. 0 indicates success, all other indicate failure. The
shell’s process name will be uptest_sh. The command is given
with the uptest_cmd option (see below). For secuity issues,
also see that entry.
· query: New in version 1.2: This works like the ping test,
except it sends an empty DNS query to the remote server. If the
server sends a well-formed response back within the timeout
period (except SERVFAIL), it will be regarded as available.
This test is useful if a remote server does not respond to
ICMP_ECHO requests at all, which unfortunately is quite common
these days. In many cases this test will be a more reliable
indicator of availability than the ones mentioned before.
The default value is none.
NOTE: If you use on-demand dialing, use none, if, dev, diald or
exec, since ping or query will send packets in the specified
interval and the interface will thus frequently dial!
ping_timeout=number;
Sets the timeout for the ping test in tenths of seconds (this
unit is used for legacy reasons; actually the current
implementation is only accurate to a second).
The default is 600 (one minute).
ping_ip=string;
The IP address for the ping test. The default is the IP of the
name server.
uptest_cmd=string,string;
or
uptest_cmd=string;
Sets the command for the uptest=exec function to the first
string. If the second string is given, it specifies a user with
whose user id and primary group id the command is executed.
This is especially useful if you are executing the server as
root, but do not want the uptest to be performed with root
privileges. In fact, you should never execute the uptest as
root if you can help it.
If the server is running setuid or setgid, the privileges thus
gained are attempted to be dropped even before changing identity
to the specified user to prevent setuid/gid security holes
(otherwise, any user might execute commands as root if you
setuid the executable).
Note that this is not always possible, and that pdnsd should
never be installed as setuid or setgid. The command is executed
using /bin/sh, so you should be able to use shell builtin
commands.
interval=(timespec|onquery|ontimeout);
Sets the interval for the server up-test. The default is 900
seconds; however, a test is forced when a query times out and
the timestamp is reset then.
If you specify onquery instead of a timeout, the interface will
be tested before every query. This is to prevent automatically
dialing interfaces (diald/pppd or ippp) to dial on dns queries.
It is intended to be used in connection with an interface-
testing uptest ;-)
Note that using uptest=exec, you might run into performance
problems on slow machines when you use that option. DON’T use
onquery with uptest=ping or uptest=query, as it may cause delays
if the server does not answer (btw, it doesn’t make sense
anyway). Note also that using onquery is no guarantee that the
interface will not be used. When another (reachable) dns server
tells pdnsd to query a third dns server for data, pdnsd will do
that and has no means of checking whether this will dial up the
interface or not. This however should be a rare situation.
New in version 1.2.3: A third possibility is to specify
interval=ontimeout. In this case the server is not tested at
startup/reconfiguration, nor at regular intervals, but only
after a DNS query to a server times out. Certain types of
network problems such as a refused connection will also cause
the server to be considered unavailable. However, once a server
is declared dead it is never considered again unless it is
revived using a pdnsd-ctl config or server command. The idea
behind this option is to minimize uptests by assuming all
servers are available until there is reason to believe
otherwise.
interface=string;
The network interface (or network device, e.g. "eth0") for the
uptest=if option. Must be specified if uptest=if is given.
device=string;
The (modem-) device that is used for the dev uptest. If you use
this for a dial-on-demand ppp uptest (together with uptest=dev),
you need to enter the device you are using for your pppd here,
e.g. modem for /dev/modem.
Must be specified if uptest=dev is given.
timeout=timespec;
Set the timeout for the dns query. The default is 120 seconds.
You probably want to set this lower.
Timeouts specified in the configuration file are only treated as
the minimum period of time to wait for a reply. A queries to a
remote server are not canceled until a useful reply has been
received, or all the other queries have timed out or failed.
If you have also set the global timeout option, you may consider
setting a fairly small value here. See the explanation of the
timeout option in the global section for what that means.
purge_cache=(on|off);
In every fetched dns record, there is a cache timeout given,
which specifies how long the fetched data may be cached until it
needs to be reloaded. If purge_cache is set to off, the cached
records are not purged (unless the cache size would be exceeded,
in this case the oldest records are purged). Instead, they are
still served if they cannot succesfully be updated (e.g. because
all servers are down).
caching=(on|off);
Specifies if caching shall be performed for this server at all.
Default is on.
lean_query=(on|off);
Specifies whether to use the "lean" query mode. In this mode,
only the information actually queried from pdnsd is resolved and
cached. This has the advantage that usually less cache space is
used and the query is usually faster. In 90% of the cases, only
address (A) records are needed anyway. If switched off, pdnsd
will always cache all data about a host it can find and will
specifically ask for all available records (well, at least it is
a good approximation for what it really does ;-) This will of
course increase the answer packet sizes.
Some buggy name servers may not deliver CNAME records when not
asked for all records. I do not know if such servers are around,
but if you have trouble resolving certain host names, try
turning this option off.
A last note: If you use multiple pdnsd’s that access each other,
turning this option on is probably a big win.
This on by default.
scheme=string;
You can specify a pcmcia-cs scheme that is used in addition to
the uptests. If you specify a scheme here, the server this
section is for will only be queries if the given scheme is
active. Shell wildcards (* and ?) are allowed in the string
under their special meanings. You need to use the scheme_file
option on the global section to make this option work.
preset=(on|off);
This allows you to specify the initial state of a server before
any uptest is performed. on specifies that the server is
regarded available. The default is on. This is especially useful
when you set uptest=none; and want to control a server only via
pdnsd-ctl.
proxy_only=(on|off);
When this option is set to on, answers given by the servers are
always accepted, and no other servers (as, for example,
specified in the NS records of the query domain) are queried. If
you do not turn this option on, pdnsd will do such queries in
some cases (in particular when processing ANY queries).
This option is useful when you do not want pdnsd to make
connections to outside servers for some reasons (e.g. when a
firewall is blocking such queries).
I recommend that you turn on lean_query when using this option.
Default is off.
root_server=(on|off);
New in version 1.2: Set this option to on if the servers
specified in a section are root servers. A root server will
typically only give the name servers for the top-level domain in
its reply. Setting root_server=on will cause pdnsd to try to use
cached information about top-level domains to reduce to number
of queries to root servers, making the resolving of new names
more efficient. You can get a list of available root servers by
running the command "dig . ns".
This option is also necessary if you use the delegation_only
option.
Default is off.
randomize_servers=(on|off);
New in version 1.2.6: Set this option to on to give each name
server in this section an equal chance of being queried. If this
option is off, the name servers are always queried starting with
the first one specified. Even with this option on, the query
order is not truly random. Only the first server is selected
randomly; the following ones are queried in consecutive order,
wrapping around to the beginning of the list when the end is
reached. Note that this option only effects the order within a
section. The servers in the first (active) section are always
queried before those in the second one, etc.
The default is off, but if you are resolving from root servers
setting this option on is highly recommended. If root_server=on
this option also effects the query order of the name servers for
the top-level domains.
reject=string;
New in version 1.2.6: This option can be used to make pdnsd
reject replies that contain certain IP addresses. You can
specify a single IP address, which will be matched exactly, or a
range of addresses using an address/mask pair. The mask can be
specified as a simple integer, indicating the number of initial
1 bits in the mask, or in the usual IP address notation. IP
addresses may be either IPv4 or IPv6 (provided there is
sufficient support in the C libraries and --disable-new-rrs was
not used). When addresses in the reject list are compared with
those in a reply, only the bits corresponding to those set in
the netmask are significant, the rest are ignored.
Multiple addresses or address/mask pairs may be specified; this
can be done by entering multiple lines of the form
reject=string; or a single line like this:
reject=string,string,string;
How pdnsd reacts when an address in the reply matches one in the
reject list, depends on the reject_policy option, see below.
reject_policy=(fail|negate);
New in version 1.2.6: This option determines what pdnsd does
when an address in the reply from a name server matches the
reject list (see above). If this option is set to fail, pdnsd
will try another server, or, if there no more servers to try,
return the answer SERVFAIL. If this option is set to negate,
pdnsd will immediately return the answer NXDOMAIN (unknown
domain) without querying additional servers. The fail setting is
useful if you don’t always trust the servers in this section,
but do trust the servers in the following section. The negate
setting can be used to completely censor certain IP addresses.
In this case you should put the same reject list in every server
section, and also set the reject_recursively option (see below)
to true.
The default is fail.
reject_recursively=(on|off);
New in version 1.2.6: Normally pdnsd checks for addresses in the
reject list (see above) only when the reply comes directly from
a name server listed in the configuration file. With this
option set to on, pdnsd will also do this check for name servers
that where obtained from NS records in the authority section of
a previous reply (which was incomplete and non-authoritative).
Default is off.
policy=(included|excluded|simple_only|fqdn_only);
pdnsd supports inclusion/exclusion lists for server sections:
with include= and exclude= (see below) you can specify domain
names for which this server will be used or will not be used.
The first match counts (i.e., the first include or exclude rule
in a server section that matches a domain name is applied, and
the search for other rules is terminated). If no rule matched a
given domain name, the policy= option determines whether this
server is used for the lookup for that domain name; when
included is given, the server will be asked, and when excluded
is given, it will not. If simple_only is given the server will
be used if the name to lookup is a simple (single-label) domain
name, on the other hand if fqdn_only is given the server will be
used only for names consisting of two or more labels (i.e. the
name has at least one dot in-between).
If no server is available for a queried domain, pdnsd will
return an error message to the client that usually will stop the
client’s attempts to resolve a specific domain from this server
(the libc resolver will e.g. return an error to the application
that tried to resolve the domain if no other servers are
available in the resolv.conf). This may be of use sometimes.
Note: the simple_only and fqdn_only constants were added by Paul
Rombouts. They are useful for controlling which name servers
(if any) will be used by pdnsd for resolving simple (single-
label) host names. fqdn_only used to stand for "fully qualified
domain name only", but this is actually a misnomer. The names in
queries received by pdnsd are always considered to be fully
qualified. If you do not exactly understand what the options
simple_only and fqdn_only are good for, you are probably better
off not using them.
The default for this option is included.
include=string;
This option adds an entry to the exclusion/inclusion list. If a
domain matches the name given as string, the server is queried
if this was the first matching rule (see also the entry for
policy).
If the given name starts with a dot, the whole subdomain of the
given name including the one of that name is matched, e.g.
".foo.bar." will match the domain names a.foo.bar.,
a.b.c.foo.bar. and foo.bar.
If it does not start in a dot, only exactly the given name
(ignoring the case, of course) will be matched (hint: if you
want to include all subdomains, but not the domain of the given
name itself, place an exact-match exclude rule before the
include rule, e.g: exclude="foo.bar."; include=".foo.bar.";
Previous versions of pdnsd required that names given with this
and the next option ended in a dot, but since version
1.1.8b1-par8, pdnsd automatically adds a dot at the end if it is
missing.
pdnsd now also accepts a more compact notation for adding
several "include" entries in one line, e.g.:
include=".foo",".bar",".my.dom";
exclude=string;
This option adds an entry to the exclusion/inclusion list. If a
domain matches the name given as string, the server is not
queried if this was the first matching rule (see also the entry
for policy).
If the given name starts with a dot, the whole subdomain of the
given name including the one of that name is matched, e.g.
".foo.bar." will match the domain names a.foo.bar.,
a.b.c.foo.bar. and foo.bar.
If it does not start in a dot, only exactly the given name
(ignoring the case, of course) will be matched (hint: if you
want to exclude all subdomains, but not the domain of the given
name itself, place an exact-match include rule before the
exclude rule, e.g: include="foo.bar."; exclude=".foo.bar.";
pdnsd now also accepts a more compact notation for adding
several "exclude" entries in one line, e.g.:
exclude=".foo",".bar",".my.dom";
rr Section
Every rr section specifies a dns resource record that is stored
locally. It allows you to specify own dns records that are served by
pdnsd in a limited way. Only A, PTR, CNAME, MX, NS and SOA records are
implemented.
This option is intended to allow you to define RRs for 1.0.0.127.in-
addr.arpa. and localhost. (and perhaps even one or two hosts) without
having to start an extra named if your cached name servers do not serve
those records. It is NOT intended and not capable to work as a full-
featured name server.
name=string;
Specifies the name of the resource records, i.e. the domain name
of the resource the record describes. This option must be
specified before any a, ptr, cname, mx, ns or soa records.
Names are interpreted as absolute domain names (i.e. pdnsd
assumes they end in the root domain). For this and all
following arguments that take domain names, you need to specify
domain names in dotted notation (example venera.isi.edu.).
Previous versions of pdnsd required that domain names given in
the configuration file ended in a dot, but since version
1.1.8b1-par8, pdnsd automatically assumes a dot at the end if it
is missing.
New in version 1.2: It is also possible to specify a name
starting with the label *. Such a name is called a wildcard. The
* in a wildcard can match one or more labels in a queried name,
but only whole labels. Any other * characters in a wildcard,
apart from the leading one, will only match a literal *.
For example, *.mydomain will match a.mydomain or www.a.mydomain,
but not mydomain. *.a*.mydomain will match www.a*.mydomain, but
not www.ab.mydomain. *a.mydomain will only match itself.
Before you can specify an rr section with name=*.mydomain you
must define some records for mydomain, typically NS and/or SOA
records. Example:
rr {
name = mydomain;
ns = localhost;
soa = localhost, root.localhost, 42, 86400, 900, 86400,
86400;
}
rr {
name = *.mydomain;
a = 192.168.1.10;
}
In this example, www.mydomain and ftp.mydomain will resolve to
the numeric address 192.168.1.10 (unless you add rr sections
explicitly specifying different addresses for www.mydomain or
ftp.mydomain). If you want mydomain also to resolve to a
numeric address, add an A record to the first rr section.
ttl=timespec;
Specifies the ttl (time to live) for all resource records in
this section after this entry. This may be redefined. The
default is 86400 seconds (=1 day).
authrec=(on|off);
If this is turned on, pdnsd will create authoritative local
records for this rr section. This means that pdnsd flags the
domain record so that records of this domain that are not
present in the cache are treated as non-existent, i.e. no other
servers are queried for that record type, and an response
containing none of those records is returned. This is most time
what people want: if you add an A record for a host, and it has
no AAAA record (thus no IPv6 address), you normally don’t want
other name servers to be queried for it.
This is on by default.
Please note that this only has an effect if it precedes the name
option!
reverse=(on|off);
New in version 1.2: If you want a locally defined name to
resolve to a numeric address and vice versa, you can achieve
this by setting reverse=on before defining the A record (see
below). The alternative is to define a separate PTR record, but
you will probably find this option much more convenient.
The default is off.
a=string;
Defines an A (host address) record. The argument is an IPv4
address in dotted notation. pdnsd will serve this address for
the host name given in the name option.
Provided there is sufficient support in the C libraries and
--disable-new-rrs was not used, the argument string may also be
an IPv6 address, in which case an AAAA record will be defined.
This option be may used multiple times within an rr section,
causing multiple addresses to be defined for the name. However,
if you put the different addresses in different rr sections for
the same name, the definition in the last rr section will cancel
the definitions in the previous ones.
ptr=string;
Defines a PTR (domain name pointer) record. The argument is a
host name in dotted notation (see name). The ptr record is for
resolving adresses into names. For example, if you want the
adress 127.0.0.1 to resolve into localhost, and localhost into
127.0.0.1, you need something like the following sections:
rr {
name = localhost;
a = 127.0.0.1;
owner = localhost;
soa = localhost, root.localhost, 42, 86400, 900, 86400,
86400;
}
rr {
name = 1.0.0.127.in-addr.arpa;
ptr = localhost;
owner = localhost;
soa = localhost, root.localhost, 42, 86400, 900, 86400,
86400;
}
The second section is for reverse resolving and uses the ptr
option. Note that you can get the same effect by specifying
only the first rr section with reverse=on.
There is something special about the name in the second section:
when a resolver wants to get a host name from an internet
address, it composes an address that is built of the IP address
in reverse byte order (1.0.0.127 instead of 127.0.0.1) where
each byte of the adress written as number constitutes a sub-
domain under the domain in-addr.arpa.
So, if you want to compose an adress for reverse resolving, take
your ip in dotted notation (e.g. 1.2.3.4), reverse the byte
order (4.3.2.1) and append in-addr.arpa. (4.3.2.1.in-addr.arpa.)
Then, define an rr section giving this address as name and the
domain name corresponding to that ip in the ptr option.
cname=string;
Defines a CNAME (canonical name) record. The argument should be
a fully-qualified host name in dotted notation (see name). A
CNAME is the DNS equivalent of an alias or symbolic link.
A useful application for CNAMEs is giving short, easy to
remember nicknames to hosts with complicated names. For
example, you might want the name "news" to refer to your ISP’s
news server "nntp2.myisp.com". Instead of adding an A record
for "news" with the same address as "nntp2.myisp.com", you could
put in a CNAME pointing to "nntp2.myisp.com", so that if the IP
address of the news server changes, there is no need to update
the record for "news".
To implement this with pdnsd, you could add the following
section to your configuration file:
rr {
name = news;
cname = nntp2.myisp.com;
owner = localhost;
}
mx=string,number;
Defines an MX (mail exchange) record. The string is the host
name of the mail server in dotted notation (see name). The
number specifies the preference level.
When you send mail to someone, your mail typically goes from
your E-mail client to an SMTP server. The SMTP server then
checks for the MX record of the domain in the E-mail address.
For example, with joe@example.com, it would look for the MX
record for example.com and find that the name of mail server for
that domain is, say, mail.example.com. The SMTP server then
gets the A record for mail.example.com, and connects to the mail
server.
If there are multiple MX records, the SMTP server will pick one
based on the preference level (starting with the lowest
preference number, working its way up).
Don’t define MX records with pdnsd unless you know what you’re
doing.
owner=string;
or
ns=string;
Defines an NS (name server) record. Specifies the name of the
host which should be authoritative for the records you defined
in the rr section. This is typically the host pdnsd runs on.
Note: In previous versions of pdnsd this option had to be
specified before any a, ptr, cname, mx or soa entries. In
version 1.2, the restrictions on this option are same as the
options just mentioned, and it must listed after the name=
option. This can be a pain if you want to use an old config
file which specifies owner= before name= (sorry about that).
Apart from greater consistency, the advantage is that you can
now specify as many NS records as you like (including zero).
soa=string,string,number,timespec,timespec,timespec,timespec;
This defines a soa (start of authority) record. The first string
is the domain name of the server and should be equal to the name
you specified as owner.
The second string specifies the email address of the maintainer
of the name server. It is also specified as a domain name, so
you will have to replace the @ sign in the name with a dot (.)
to get the name you have to specify here. The next parameter
(the first number) is the serial number of the record. You
should increment this number if you change the record.
The 4th parameter is the refresh timeout. It specifies after
what amount of time a caching server should attempt to refresh
the cached record.
The 5th parameter specifies a time after which a caching server
should attempt to refresh the record after a refresh failure.
The 6th parameter defines the timeout after which a cached
record expires if it has not been refreshed.
The 7th parameter is the ttl that is specified in every rr and
should be the same as given with the ttl option (if you do not
specify a ttl, use the default 86400)
neg Section
Every neg section specifies a dns resource record or a dns domain that
should be cached negatively locally. Queries for negatively cached
records are always answered immediatley with an error or an empty
answer without querying other hosts as long as the record is valid. The
records defined with neg sections remain valid until they are
explicitely invalidated or deleted by the user using pdnsd-ctl.
This is useful if a certain application asks periodically for
nonexisting hosts or RR types and you do not want a query to go out
every time the cached record has timed out. Example: Netscape
Communicator will ask for the servers news and mail on startup if
unconfigured. If you do not have a dns search list for your network,
you can inhibit outgoing queries for these by specifying
neg {
name = news;
types = domain;
}
neg {
name = mail;
types = domain;
}
in your config file. If you have a search list, you have to repeat that
for any entry in your search list in addition to the entries given
above!
In versions 1.1.11 and later, if you negate whole domains this way, all
subdomains will be negated as well. Thus if you specify
neg {name=example.com; types=domain;} in the config file, this will
also negate www.example.com, xxx.adserver.example.com, etc.
name=string;
Specifies the name of the domain for which negative cache
entries are created. This option must be specified before the
types option. Names are interpreted as absolute domain names
(i.e. pdnsd assumes they end in the root domain). You need to
specify domain names in dotted notation (example
venera.isi.edu.).
Previous versions of pdnsd required that domain names given in
the configuration file ended in a dot, but since version
1.1.8b1-par8, pdnsd automatically assumes a dot at the end if it
is missing.
ttl=timespec;
Specifies the ttl (time to live) for all resource records in
this section after this entry. This may be redefined. The
default is 86400 seconds (=1 day).
types=(domain|rr_type[,rr_type[,rr_type[,...]]]);
Specifies what is to be cached negatively: domain will cache the
whole domain negatively; alternatively, you can specify a comma-
separated list of RR types which are to be cached negatively.
You may specify multiple types options, but domain and the RR
types are mutually exclusive.
The RR types are specified using their official names from the
RFC’s in capitals, e.g. A, CNAME, NS, PTR, MX, AAAA, ...
The command pdnsd-ctl list-rrtypes will give you a complete list
of those types. pdnsd-ctl is built along with pdnsd and will be
installed in the same directory as the pdnsd binary during make
install.
source Section
Every source section allows you to let pdnsd read the records from a
file in an /etc/hosts-like format. pdnsd will generate records to
resolve the entries address from its host name and vice versa for every
entry in the file. This is normally easier than defining an rr for
every of your addresses, since localhost and your other FQDNs are
normally given in /etc/hosts.
The accepted format is as follows: The #-sign initiates a comment, the
rest of the line from the first occurence of this character on is
ignored. Empty lines are tolerated.
The first entry on a line (predeceded by an arbitrary number of tabs
and spaces) is the IP in dotted notation, the second entry on one line
(separated by the first by an arbitrary number of tabs and spaces) is
the FQDN (fully qualified domain name) for that ip. The rest of the
line is ignored by default (in the original /etc/hosts, it may contain
information not needed by pdnsd).
owner=string;
Specifies the name of the host pdnsd runs on and that are
specified in dns answers (specifically, nameserver records).
Must be specified before any file entries.
Names are interpreted as absolute domain names (i.e. pdnsd
assumes they end in the root domain). You need to specify
domain names in dotted notation (example venera.isi.edu.).
Previous versions of pdnsd required that domain names given in
the configuration file ended in a dot, but since version
1.1.8b1-par8, pdnsd automatically assumes a dot at the end if it
is missing.
ttl=timespec;
Specifies the ttl (time to live) for all resource records in
this section after this entry. This may be redefined. The
default is 86400 seconds (=1 day).
file=string;
The string specifies a file name. For every file entry in a
source section, pdnsd will try to load the given file as
described above. Failure is indicated only when the file cannot
be opened, malformed entries will be ignored.
serve_aliases=(on|off);
If this is turned on pdnsd will serve the aliases given in a
hosts-style file. These are the third entry in a line of a
hosts-style file, which usually give a "short name" for the
host. This may be used to support broken clients without a
proper domain-search option. If no aliases are given in a line
of the file, pdnsd behaves as without this option for this line.
This feature was suggested by Bert Frederiks.
It is off by default.
authrec=(on|off);
If this is turned on, pdnsd will create authoritative local
records with the data from the hosts file. Please see the
description of the option of the same name in the rr section for
a closer description of what this means. Please note that this
only has an effect for files sourced with file options
subsequent to this option.
This is on by default.
include Section
A configuration file may include other configuration files. However,
only the top-level configuration file may contain global and server
sections, thus include files are effectively limited to sections that
add local definitions to the cache.
Include sections currently only have one type of option, which may be
given multiple times within a single section.
file=string;
The string specifies a file name. For every file option in an
include section, pdnsd will parse the given file as described
above. The file may contain include sections itself, but as a
precaution pdnsd checks that a certain maximum depth is not
exceeded to guard against the possibility of infinite recursion.
VERSION
This man page is correct for version 1.2.7-par of pdnsd.
SEE ALSO
pdnsd(8), pdnsd-ctl(8)
More documentation is available in the doc/ subdirectory of the source,
or in /usr/share/doc/pdnsd/ if you are using a binary package.
AUTHORS
pdnsd was originally written by Thomas Moestl <tmoestl@gmx.net> and was
extensively revised by Paul Rombouts <p.a.rombouts@home.nl> (for
versions 1.1.8b1-par and later).
Several others have contributed to pdnsd; see files in the source or
/usr/share/doc/pdnsd/ directory.
This man page was automatically generated from the html documentation
for pdnsd, using a customized Perl script written by Paul Rombouts.
Last revised: 04 September 2008 by Paul Rombouts