From f50ae72ec3417cae55dd4e085991c01af9fdc5f1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Martin Nagy Date: Wed, 11 Feb 2009 20:37:59 +0100 Subject: Initial commit --- FAQ | 873 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 873 insertions(+) create mode 100644 FAQ (limited to 'FAQ') diff --git a/FAQ b/FAQ new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2c333be --- /dev/null +++ b/FAQ @@ -0,0 +1,873 @@ +Frequently Asked Questions about BIND 9 + +Copyright © 2004-2008 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") + +Copyright © 2000-2003 Internet Software Consortium. + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +1. Compilation and Installation Questions + +Q: I'm trying to compile BIND 9, and "make" is failing due to files not + being found. Why? + +A: Using a parallel or distributed "make" to build BIND 9 is not + supported, and doesn't work. If you are using one of these, use normal + make or gmake instead. + +Q: Isn't "make install" supposed to generate a default named.conf? + +A: Short Answer: No. + + Long Answer: There really isn't a default configuration which fits any + site perfectly. There are lots of decisions that need to be made and + there is no consensus on what the defaults should be. For example + FreeBSD uses /etc/namedb as the location where the configuration files + for named are stored. Others use /var/named. + + What addresses to listen on? For a laptop on the move a lot you may + only want to listen on the loop back interfaces. + + Who do you offer recursive service to? Is there are firewall to + consider? If so is it stateless or stateful. Are you directly on the + Internet? Are you on a private network? Are you on a NAT'd network? The + answers to all these questions change how you configure even a caching + name server. + +2. Configuration and Setup Questions + +Q: Why does named log the warning message "no TTL specified - using SOA + MINTTL instead"? + +A: Your zone file is illegal according to RFC1035. It must either have a + line like: + + $TTL 86400 + + at the beginning, or the first record in it must have a TTL field, like + the "84600" in this example: + + example.com. 86400 IN SOA ns hostmaster ( 1 3600 1800 1814400 3600 ) + +Q: Why do I get errors like "dns_zone_load: zone foo/IN: loading master + file bar: ran out of space"? + +A: This is often caused by TXT records with missing close quotes. Check + that all TXT records containing quoted strings have both open and close + quotes. + +Q: How do I restrict people from looking up the server version? + +A: Put a "version" option containing something other than the real version + in the "options" section of named.conf. Note doing this will not + prevent attacks and may impede people trying to diagnose problems with + your server. Also it is possible to "fingerprint" nameservers to + determine their version. + +Q: How do I restrict only remote users from looking up the server version? + +A: The following view statement will intercept lookups as the internal + view that holds the version information will be matched last. The + caveats of the previous answer still apply, of course. + + view "chaos" chaos { + match-clients { ; }; + allow-query { none; }; + zone "." { + type hint; + file "/dev/null"; // or any empty file + }; + }; + +Q: What do "no source of entropy found" or "could not open entropy source + foo" mean? + +A: The server requires a source of entropy to perform certain operations, + mostly DNSSEC related. These messages indicate that you have no source + of entropy. On systems with /dev/random or an equivalent, it is used by + default. A source of entropy can also be defined using the + random-device option in named.conf. + +Q: I'm trying to use TSIG to authenticate dynamic updates or zone + transfers. I'm sure I have the keys set up correctly, but the server is + rejecting the TSIG. Why? + +A: This may be a clock skew problem. Check that the the clocks on the + client and server are properly synchronised (e.g., using ntp). + +Q: I see a log message like the following. Why? + + couldn't open pid file '/var/run/named.pid': Permission denied + +A: You are most likely running named as a non-root user, and that user + does not have permission to write in /var/run. The common ways of + fixing this are to create a /var/run/named directory owned by the named + user and set pid-file to "/var/run/named/named.pid", or set pid-file to + "named.pid", which will put the file in the directory specified by the + directory option (which, in this case, must be writable by the named + user). + +Q: I can query the nameserver from the nameserver but not from other + machines. Why? + +A: This is usually the result of the firewall configuration stopping the + queries and / or the replies. + +Q: How can I make a server a slave for both an internal and an external + view at the same time? When I tried, both views on the slave were + transferred from the same view on the master. + +A: You will need to give the master and slave multiple IP addresses and + use those to make sure you reach the correct view on the other machine. + + Master: 10.0.1.1 (internal), 10.0.1.2 (external, IP alias) + internal: + match-clients { !10.0.1.2; !10.0.1.4; 10.0.1/24; }; + notify-source 10.0.1.1; + transfer-source 10.0.1.1; + query-source address 10.0.1.1; + external: + match-clients { any; }; + recursion no; // don't offer recursion to the world + notify-source 10.0.1.2; + transfer-source 10.0.1.2; + query-source address 10.0.1.2; + + Slave: 10.0.1.3 (internal), 10.0.1.4 (external, IP alias) + internal: + match-clients { !10.0.1.2; !10.0.1.4; 10.0.1/24; }; + notify-source 10.0.1.3; + transfer-source 10.0.1.3; + query-source address 10.0.1.3; + external: + match-clients { any; }; + recursion no; // don't offer recursion to the world + notify-source 10.0.1.4; + transfer-source 10.0.1.4; + query-source address 10.0.1.4; + + You put the external address on the alias so that all the other dns + clients on these boxes see the internal view by default. + +A: BIND 9.3 and later: Use TSIG to select the appropriate view. + + Master 10.0.1.1: + key "external" { + algorithm hmac-md5; + secret "xxxxxxxx"; + }; + view "internal" { + match-clients { !key external; 10.0.1/24; }; + ... + }; + view "external" { + match-clients { key external; any; }; + server 10.0.1.2 { keys external; }; + recursion no; + ... + }; + + Slave 10.0.1.2: + key "external" { + algorithm hmac-md5; + secret "xxxxxxxx"; + }; + view "internal" { + match-clients { !key external; 10.0.1/24; }; + ... + }; + view "external" { + match-clients { key external; any; }; + server 10.0.1.1 { keys external; }; + recursion no; + ... + }; + +Q: I get error messages like "multiple RRs of singleton type" and "CNAME + and other data" when transferring a zone. What does this mean? + +A: These indicate a malformed master zone. You can identify the exact + records involved by transferring the zone using dig then running + named-checkzone on it. + + dig axfr example.com @master-server > tmp + named-checkzone example.com tmp + + A CNAME record cannot exist with the same name as another record except + for the DNSSEC records which prove its existence (NSEC). + + RFC 1034, Section 3.6.2: "If a CNAME RR is present at a node, no other + data should be present; this ensures that the data for a canonical name + and its aliases cannot be different. This rule also insures that a + cached CNAME can be used without checking with an authoritative server + for other RR types." + +Q: I get error messages like "named.conf:99: unexpected end of input" + where 99 is the last line of named.conf. + +A: There are unbalanced quotes in named.conf. + +A: Some text editors (notepad and wordpad) fail to put a line title + indication (e.g. CR/LF) on the last line of a text file. This can be + fixed by "adding" a blank line to the end of the file. Named expects to + see EOF immediately after EOL and treats text files where this is not + met as truncated. + +Q: How do I share a dynamic zone between multiple views? + +A: You choose one view to be master and the second a slave and transfer + the zone between views. + + Master 10.0.1.1: + key "external" { + algorithm hmac-md5; + secret "xxxxxxxx"; + }; + + key "mykey" { + algorithm hmac-md5; + secret "yyyyyyyy"; + }; + + view "internal" { + match-clients { !key external; 10.0.1/24; }; + server 10.0.1.1 { + /* Deliver notify messages to external view. */ + keys { external; }; + }; + zone "example.com" { + type master; + file "internal/example.db"; + allow-update { key mykey; }; + notify-also { 10.0.1.1; }; + }; + }; + + view "external" { + match-clients { key external; any; }; + zone "example.com" { + type slave; + file "external/example.db"; + masters { 10.0.1.1; }; + transfer-source { 10.0.1.1; }; + // allow-update-forwarding { any; }; + // allow-notify { ... }; + }; + }; + +Q: I get a error message like "zone wireless.ietf56.ietf.org/IN: loading + master file primaries/wireless.ietf56.ietf.org: no owner". + +A: This error is produced when a line in the master file contains leading + white space (tab/space) but the is no current record owner name to + inherit the name from. Usually this is the result of putting white + space before a comment, forgetting the "@" for the SOA record, or + indenting the master file. + +Q: Why are my logs in GMT (UTC). + +A: You are running chrooted (-t) and have not supplied local timezone + information in the chroot area. + + FreeBSD: /etc/localtime + Solaris: /etc/TIMEZONE and /usr/share/lib/zoneinfo + OSF: /etc/zoneinfo/localtime + + See also tzset(3) and zic(8). + +Q: I get "rndc: connect failed: connection refused" when I try to run + rndc. + +A: This is usually a configuration error. + + First ensure that named is running and no errors are being reported at + startup (/var/log/messages or equivalent). Running "named -g " from a title can help at this point. + + Secondly ensure that named is configured to use rndc either by + "rndc-confgen -a", rndc-confgen or manually. The Administrators + Reference manual has details on how to do this. + + Old versions of rndc-confgen used localhost rather than 127.0.0.1 in / + etc/rndc.conf for the default server. Update /etc/rndc.conf if + necessary so that the default server listed in /etc/rndc.conf matches + the addresses used in named.conf. "localhost" has two address + (127.0.0.1 and ::1). + + If you use "rndc-confgen -a" and named is running with -t or -u ensure + that /etc/rndc.conf has the correct ownership and that a copy is in the + chroot area. You can do this by re-running "rndc-confgen -a" with + appropriate -t and -u arguments. + +Q: I get "transfer of 'example.net/IN' from 192.168.4.12#53: failed while + receiving responses: permission denied" error messages. + +A: These indicate a filesystem permission error preventing named creating + / renaming the temporary file. These will usually also have other + associated error messages like + + "dumping master file: sl/tmp-XXXX5il3sQ: open: permission denied" + + Named needs write permission on the directory containing the file. + Named writes the new cache file to a temporary file then renames it to + the name specified in named.conf to ensure that the contents are always + complete. This is to prevent named loading a partial zone in the event + of power failure or similar interrupting the write of the master file. + + Note file names are relative to the directory specified in options and + any chroot directory ([/][]). + + If named is invoked as "named -t /chroot/DNS" with the following + named.conf then "/chroot/DNS/var/named/sl" needs to be writable by the + user named is running as. + + options { + directory "/var/named"; + }; + + zone "example.net" { + type slave; + file "sl/example.net"; + masters { 192.168.4.12; }; + }; + +Q: I want to forward all DNS queries from my caching nameserver to another + server. But there are some domains which have to be served locally, via + rbldnsd. + + How do I achieve this ? + +A: options { + forward only; + forwarders { ; }; + }; + + zone "sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org" { + type forward; forward only; + forwarders { port 530; }; + }; + + zone "list.dsbl.org" { + type forward; forward only; + forwarders { port 530; }; + }; + + +Q: Can you help me understand how BIND 9 uses memory to store DNS zones? + + Some times it seems to take several times the amount of memory it needs + to store the zone. + +A: When reloading a zone named my have multiple copies of the zone in + memory at one time. The zone it is serving and the one it is loading. + If reloads are ultra fast it can have more still. + + e.g. Ones that are transferring out, the one that it is serving and the + one that is loading. + + BIND 8 destroyed the zone before loading and also killed off outgoing + transfers of the zone. + + The new strategy allows slaves to get copies of the new zone regardless + of how often the master is loaded compared to the transfer time. The + slave might skip some intermediate versions but the transfers will + complete and it will keep reasonably in sync with the master. + + The new strategy also allows the master to recover from syntax and + other errors in the master file as it still has an in-core copy of the + old contents. + +Q: I want to use IPv6 locally but I don't have a external IPv6 connection. + External lookups are slow. + +A: You can use server clauses to stop named making external lookups over + IPv6. + + server fd81:ec6c:bd62::/48 { bogus no; }; // site ULA prefix + server ::/0 { bogus yes; }; + +3. Operations Questions + +Q: How to change the nameservers for a zone? + +A: Step 1: Ensure all nameservers, new and old, are serving the same zone + content. + + Step 2: Work out the maximum TTL of the NS RRset in the parent and + child zones. This is the time it will take caches to be clear of a + particular version of the NS RRset. If you are just removing + nameservers you can skip to Step 6. + + Step 3: Add new nameservers to the NS RRset for the zone and wait until + all the servers for the zone are answering with this new NS RRset. + + Step 4: Inform the parent zone of the new NS RRset then wait for all + the parent servers to be answering with the new NS RRset. + + Step 5: Wait for cache to be clear of the old NS RRset. See Step 2 for + how long. If you are just adding nameservers you are done. + + Step 6: Remove any old nameservers from the zones NS RRset and wait for + all the servers for the zone to be serving the new NS RRset. + + Step 7: Inform the parent zone of the new NS RRset then wait for all + the parent servers to be answering with the new NS RRset. + + Step 8: Wait for cache to be clear of the old NS RRset. See Step 2 for + how long. + + Step 9: Turn off the old nameservers or remove the zone entry from the + configuration of the old nameservers. + + Step 10: Increment the serial number and wait for the change to be + visible in all nameservers for the zone. This ensures that zone + transfers are still working after the old servers are decommissioned. + + Note: the above procedure is designed to be transparent to dns clients. + Decommissioning the old servers too early will result in some clients + not being able to look up answers in the zone. + + Note: while it is possible to run the addition and removal stages + together it is not recommended. + +4. General Questions + +Q: I keep getting log messages like the following. Why? + + Dec 4 23:47:59 client 10.0.0.1#1355: updating zone 'example.com/IN': + update failed: 'RRset exists (value dependent)' prerequisite not + satisfied (NXRRSET) + +A: DNS updates allow the update request to test to see if certain + conditions are met prior to proceeding with the update. The message + above is saying that conditions were not met and the update is not + proceeding. See doc/rfc/rfc2136.txt for more details on prerequisites. + +Q: I keep getting log messages like the following. Why? + + Jun 21 12:00:00.000 client 10.0.0.1#1234: update denied + +A: Someone is trying to update your DNS data using the RFC2136 Dynamic + Update protocol. Windows 2000 machines have a habit of sending dynamic + update requests to DNS servers without being specifically configured to + do so. If the update requests are coming from a Windows 2000 machine, + see + for information about how to turn them off. + +Q: When I do a "dig . ns", many of the A records for the root servers are + missing. Why? + +A: This is normal and harmless. It is a somewhat confusing side effect of + the way BIND 9 does RFC2181 trust ranking and of the efforts BIND 9 + makes to avoid promoting glue into answers. + + When BIND 9 first starts up and primes its cache, it receives the root + server addresses as additional data in an authoritative response from a + root server, and these records are eligible for inclusion as additional + data in responses. Subsequently it receives a subset of the root server + addresses as additional data in a non-authoritative (referral) response + from a root server. This causes the addresses to now be considered + non-authoritative (glue) data, which is not eligible for inclusion in + responses. + + The server does have a complete set of root server addresses cached at + all times, it just may not include all of them as additional data, + depending on whether they were last received as answers or as glue. You + can always look up the addresses with explicit queries like "dig + a.root-servers.net A". + +Q: Why don't my zones reload when I do an "rndc reload" or SIGHUP? + +A: A zone can be updated either by editing zone files and reloading the + server or by dynamic update, but not both. If you have enabled dynamic + update for a zone using the "allow-update" option, you are not supposed + to edit the zone file by hand, and the server will not attempt to + reload it. + +Q: Why is named listening on UDP port other than 53? + +A: Named uses a system selected port to make queries of other nameservers. + This behaviour can be overridden by using query-source to lock down the + port and/or address. See also notify-source and transfer-source. + +Q: I get warning messages like "zone example.com/IN: refresh: failure + trying master 1.2.3.4#53: timed out". + +A: Check that you can make UDP queries from the slave to the master + + dig +norec example.com soa @1.2.3.4 + + You could be generating queries faster than the slave can cope with. + Lower the serial query rate. + + serial-query-rate 5; // default 20 + +Q: I don't get RRSIG's returned when I use "dig +dnssec". + +A: You need to ensure DNSSEC is enabled (dnssec-enable yes;). + +Q: Can a NS record refer to a CNAME. + +A: No. The rules for glue (copies of the *address* records in the parent + zones) and additional section processing do not allow it to work. + + You would have to add both the CNAME and address records (A/AAAA) as + glue to the parent zone and have CNAMEs be followed when doing + additional section processing to make it work. No nameserver + implementation supports either of these requirements. + +Q: What does "RFC 1918 response from Internet for 0.0.0.10.IN-ADDR.ARPA" + mean? + +A: If the IN-ADDR.ARPA name covered refers to a internal address space you + are using then you have failed to follow RFC 1918 usage rules and are + leaking queries to the Internet. You should establish your own zones + for these addresses to prevent you querying the Internet's name servers + for these addresses. Please see for details of the + problems you are causing and the counter measures that have had to be + deployed. + + If you are not using these private addresses then a client has queried + for them. You can just ignore the messages, get the offending client to + stop sending you these messages as they are most probably leaking them + or setup your own zones empty zones to serve answers to these queries. + + zone "10.IN-ADDR.ARPA" { + type master; + file "empty"; + }; + + zone "16.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA" { + type master; + file "empty"; + }; + + ... + + zone "31.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA" { + type master; + file "empty"; + }; + + zone "168.192.IN-ADDR.ARPA" { + type master; + file "empty"; + }; + + empty: + @ 10800 IN SOA . . ( + 1 3600 1200 604800 10800 ) + @ 10800 IN NS . + + Note + + Future versions of named are likely to do this automatically. + +Q: Will named be affected by the 2007 changes to daylight savings rules in + the US. + +A: No, so long as the machines internal clock (as reported by "date -u") + remains at UTC. The only visible change if you fail to upgrade your OS, + if you are in a affected area, will be that log messages will be a hour + out during the period where the old rules do not match the new rules. + + For most OS's this change just means that you need to update the + conversion rules from UTC to local time. Normally this involves + updating a file in /etc (which sets the default timezone for the + machine) and possibly a directory which has all the conversion rules + for the world (e.g. /usr/share/zoneinfo). When updating the OS do not + forget to update any chroot areas as well. See your OS's documentation + for more details. + + The local timezone conversion rules can also be done on a individual + basis by setting the TZ environment variable appropriately. See your + OS's documentation for more details. + +Q: Is there a bugzilla (or other tool) database that mere mortals can have + (read-only) access to for bind? + +A: No. The BIND 9 bug database is kept closed for a number of reasons. + These include, but are not limited to, that the database contains + proprietory information from people reporting bugs. The database has in + the past and may in future contain unfixed bugs which are capable of + bringing down most of the Internet's DNS infrastructure. + + The release pages for each version contain up to date lists of bugs + that have been fixed post release. That is as close as we can get to + providing a bug database. + +Q: Why do queries for NSEC3 records fail to return the NSEC3 record? + +A: NSEC3 records are strictly meta data and can only be returned in the + authority section. This is done so that signing the zone using NSEC3 + records does not bring names into existance that do not exist in the + unsigned version of the zone. + +5. Operating-System Specific Questions + +5.1. HPUX + +Q: I get the following error trying to configure BIND: + + checking if unistd.h or sys/types.h defines fd_set... no + configure: error: need either working unistd.h or sys/select.h + +A: You have attempted to configure BIND with the bundled C compiler. This + compiler does not meet the minimum compiler requirements to for + building BIND. You need to install a ANSI C compiler and / or teach + configure how to find the ANSI C compiler. The later can be done by + adjusting the PATH environment variable and / or specifying the + compiler via CC. + + ./configure CC= ... + +5.2. Linux + +Q: Why do I get the following errors: + + general: errno2result.c:109: unexpected error: + general: unable to convert errno to isc_result: 14: Bad address + client: UDP client handler shutting down due to fatal receive error: unexpected error + +A: This is the result of a Linux kernel bug. + + See: + +Q: Why does named lock up when it attempts to connect over IPSEC tunnels? + +A: This is due to a kernel bug where the fact that a socket is marked + non-blocking is ignored. It is reported that setting xfrm_larval_drop + to 1 helps but this may have negative side effects. See: and . + + xfrm_larval_drop can be set to 1 by the following procedure: + + echo "1" > proc/sys/net/core/xfrm_larval_drop + +Q: Why do I see 5 (or more) copies of named on Linux? + +A: Linux threads each show up as a process under ps. The approximate + number of threads running is n+4, where n is the number of CPUs. Note + that the amount of memory used is not cumulative; if each process is + using 10M of memory, only a total of 10M is used. + + Newer versions of Linux's ps command hide the individual threads and + require -L to display them. + +Q: Why does BIND 9 log "permission denied" errors accessing its + configuration files or zones on my Linux system even though it is + running as root? + +A: On Linux, BIND 9 drops most of its root privileges on startup. This + including the privilege to open files owned by other users. Therefore, + if the server is running as root, the configuration files and zone + files should also be owned by root. + +Q: I get the error message "named: capset failed: Operation not permitted" + when starting named. + +A: The capability module, part of "Linux Security Modules/LSM", has not + been loaded into the kernel. See insmod(8), modprobe(8). + + The relevant modules can be loaded by running: + + modprobe commoncap + modprobe capability + +Q: I'm running BIND on Red Hat Enterprise Linux or Fedora Core - + + Why can't named update slave zone database files? + + Why can't named create DDNS journal files or update the master zones + from journals? + + Why can't named create custom log files? + +A: Red Hat Security Enhanced Linux (SELinux) policy security protections : + + Red Hat have adopted the National Security Agency's SELinux security + policy (see ) and recommendations for BIND + security , which are more secure than running named in a chroot and + make use of the bind-chroot environment unnecessary . + + By default, named is not allowed by the SELinux policy to write, create + or delete any files EXCEPT in these directories: + + $ROOTDIR/var/named/slaves + $ROOTDIR/var/named/data + $ROOTDIR/var/tmp + + + where $ROOTDIR may be set in /etc/sysconfig/named if bind-chroot is + installed. + + The SELinux policy particularly does NOT allow named to modify the + $ROOTDIR/var/named directory, the default location for master zone + database files. + + SELinux policy overrules file access permissions - so even if all the + files under /var/named have ownership named:named and mode rw-rw-r--, + named will still not be able to write or create files except in the + directories above, with SELinux in Enforcing mode. + + So, to allow named to update slave or DDNS zone files, it is best to + locate them in $ROOTDIR/var/named/slaves, with named.conf zone + statements such as: + + zone "slave.zone." IN { + type slave; + file "slaves/slave.zone.db"; + ... + }; + zone "ddns.zone." IN { + type master; + allow-updates {...}; + file "slaves/ddns.zone.db"; + }; + + + To allow named to create its cache dump and statistics files, for + example, you could use named.conf options statements such as: + + options { + ... + dump-file "/var/named/data/cache_dump.db"; + statistics-file "/var/named/data/named_stats.txt"; + ... + }; + + + You can also tell SELinux to allow named to update any zone database + files, by setting the SELinux tunable boolean parameter + 'named_write_master_zones=1', using the system-config-securitylevel + GUI, using the 'setsebool' command, or in /etc/selinux/targeted/ + booleans. + + You can disable SELinux protection for named entirely by setting the + 'named_disable_trans=1' SELinux tunable boolean parameter. + + The SELinux named policy defines these SELinux contexts for named: + + named_zone_t : for zone database files - $ROOTDIR/var/named/* + named_conf_t : for named configuration files - $ROOTDIR/etc/{named,rndc}.* + named_cache_t: for files modifiable by named - $ROOTDIR/var/{tmp,named/{slaves,data}} + + + If you want to retain use of the SELinux policy for named, and put + named files in different locations, you can do so by changing the + context of the custom file locations . + + To create a custom configuration file location, e.g. '/root/ + named.conf', to use with the 'named -c' option, do: + + # chcon system_u:object_r:named_conf_t /root/named.conf + + + To create a custom modifiable named data location, e.g. '/var/log/ + named' for a log file, do: + + # chcon system_u:object_r:named_cache_t /var/log/named + + + To create a custom zone file location, e.g. /root/zones/, do: + + # chcon system_u:object_r:named_zone_t /root/zones/{.,*} + + + See these man-pages for more information : selinux(8), named_selinux + (8), chcon(1), setsebool(8) + +Q: Listening on individual IPv6 interfaces does not work. + +A: This is usually due to "/proc/net/if_inet6" not being available in the + chroot file system. Mount another instance of "proc" in the chroot file + system. + + This can be be made permanent by adding a second instance to /etc/ + fstab. + + proc /proc proc defaults 0 0 + proc /var/named/proc proc defaults 0 0 + +5.3. Windows + +Q: Zone transfers from my BIND 9 master to my Windows 2000 slave fail. + Why? + +A: This may be caused by a bug in the Windows 2000 DNS server where DNS + messages larger than 16K are not handled properly. This can be worked + around by setting the option "transfer-format one-answer;". Also check + whether your zone contains domain names with embedded spaces or other + special characters, like "John\032Doe\213s\032Computer", since such + names have been known to cause Windows 2000 slaves to incorrectly + reject the zone. + +Q: I get "Error 1067" when starting named under Windows. + +A: This is the service manager saying that named exited. You need to + examine the Application log in the EventViewer to find out why. + + Common causes are that you failed to create "named.conf" (usually "C:\ + windows\dns\etc\named.conf") or failed to specify the directory in + named.conf. + + options { + Directory "C:\windows\dns\etc"; + }; + +5.4. FreeBSD + +Q: I have FreeBSD 4.x and "rndc-confgen -a" just sits there. + +A: /dev/random is not configured. Use rndcontrol(8) to tell the kernel to + use certain interrupts as a source of random events. You can make this + permanent by setting rand_irqs in /etc/rc.conf. + + /etc/rc.conf + rand_irqs="3 14 15" + + See also . + +5.5. Solaris + +Q: How do I integrate BIND 9 and Solaris SMF + +A: Sun has a blog entry describing how to do this. + + + +5.6. Apple Mac OS X + +Q: How do I run BIND 9 on Apple Mac OS X? + +A: If you run Tiger(Mac OS 10.4) or later then this is all you need to do: + + % sudo rndc-confgen > /etc/rndc.conf + + Copy the key statement from /etc/rndc.conf into /etc/rndc.key, e.g.: + + key "rndc-key" { + algorithm hmac-md5; + secret "uvceheVuqf17ZwIcTydddw=="; + }; + + Then start the relevant service: + + % sudo service org.isc.named start + + This is persistent upon a reboot, so you will have to do it only once. + +A: Alternatively you can just generate /etc/rndc.key by running: + + % sudo rndc-confgen -a + + Then start the relevant service: + + % sudo service org.isc.named start + + Named will look for /etc/rndc.key when it starts if it doesn't have a + controls section or the existing controls are missing keys sub-clauses. + This is persistent upon a reboot, so you will have to do it only once. + -- cgit