summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/source4/setup/named.txt
blob: 97de69d8ebb49ce56dbbd2356d8f00612bd31eed (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
# Additional informations for DNS setup using BIND

# If you are running a capable version of BIND and you wish to support secure
# GSS-TSIG updates, you must make the following configuration changes:

# - Insert the following lines into the options {} section of your named.conf
# file:
tkey-gssapi-credential "DNS/${DNSNAME}";
tkey-domain "${REALM}";

# - Modify BIND init scripts to pass the location of the generated keytab file.
# Fedora 8 & later provide a variable named KEYTAB_FILE in /etc/sysconfig/named
# for this purpose:
KEYTAB_FILE="${DNS_KEYTAB_ABS}"
# Note that the Fedora scripts translate KEYTAB_FILE behind the scenes into a
# variable named KRB5_KTNAME, which is ultimately passed to the BIND daemon.  If
# your distribution does not provide a variable like KEYTAB_FILE to pass a
# keytab file to the BIND daemon, a workaround is to place the following line in
# BIND's sysconfig file or in the init script for BIND:
export KRB5_KTNAME="${DNS_KEYTAB_ABS}"

# - Set appropriate ownership and permissions on the ${DNS_KEYTAB} file.  Note
# that most distributions have BIND configured to run under a non-root user
# account.  For example, Fedora 9 runs BIND as the user "named" once the daemon
# relinquishes its rights.  Therefore, the file ${DNS_KEYTAB} must be readable
# by the user that BIND run as.  If BIND is running as a non-root user, the
# "${DNS_KEYTAB}" file must have its permissions altered to allow the daemon to
# read it.  Under Fedora 9, execute the following commands:
chgrp named ${DNS_KEYTAB_ABS}
chmod g+r ${DNS_KEYTAB_ABS}

# - Ensure the BIND zone file(s) that will be dynamically updated are in a
# directory where the BIND daemon can write.  When BIND performs dynamic
# updates, it not only needs to update the zone file itself but it must also
# create a journal (.jnl) file to track the dynamic updates as they occur.
# Under Fedora 9, the /var/named directory can not be written to by the "named"
# user.  However, the directory /var/named/dynamic directory does provide write
# access.  Therefore the zone files were placed under the /var/named/dynamic
# directory.  The file directives in both example zone statements at the
# beginning of this file were changed by prepending the directory "dynamic/".

# - If SELinux is enabled, ensure that all files have the appropriate SELinux
# file contexts.  The ${DNS_KEYTAB} file must be accessible by the BIND daemon
# and should have a SELinux type of named_conf_t.  This can be set with the
# following command:
chcon -t named_conf_t ${DNS_KEYTAB_ABS}