all-knowing-dns - Tiny DNS server for IPv6 Reverse DNS
all-knowing-dns [--configfile <path>] [--querylog]
AllKnowingDNS provides reverse DNS for IPv6 networks which use SLAAC (autoconf),
e.g. for a /64 network.
The problem with IPv6 reverse DNS and traditional nameservers is that the
nameserver requires you to provide a zone file. Assuming you want to provide
RDNS for a /64 network, you have 2**64 = 18446744073709551616 different usable
IP addresses (a little less if you are using SLAAC). Providing a zone file for
that, even in a very terse notation, would consume a huge amount of disk space
and could not possibly be held in the memory of the computers we have
nowadays.
AllKnowingDNS instead generates PTR and AAAA records on the fly. You only
configure which network you want to serve and what your entries should look
like.
-
--configfile=path
- Use path instead of /etc/all-knowing-dns.conf as
configuration file.
- --querylog
- Enable logging every query to stdout (for debugging).
The configuration file is wonderfully simple:
# Configuration file for AllKnowingDNS v1.7
listen 79.140.39.197
listen 2001:4d88:100e:1::3
# RaumZeitLabor
network 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0::/64
resolves to ipv6-%DIGITS%.nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de
with upstream 2001:4d88:100e:1::2
# Chaostreff
network 2001:4d88:100e:cd1::/64
resolves to ipv6-%DIGITS%.treff.noname-ev.de
This example contains all configuration directives. Let's go over them one by
one:
-
listen address
- Listens on the given address (IPv4 and IPv6 is
supported) on port 53.
-
network network
- Specifies that queries for PTR records within the given
network should be answered (any query for an unconfigured network will be
answered with NXDOMAIN). You need to specify at least the resolves
to directive afterwards.
-
resolves to address
- Specifies the address to which PTR records should resolve.
The address needs to contain %DIGITS% exactly once. When answering AAAA
queries, %DIGITS% will be parsed and converted back to an IPv6 address.
Example:
network 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0::/64
resolves to ipv6-%DIGITS%.nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de
Example query:
The PTR query 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0:216:eaff:fecb:826 will resolve to
ipv6-0216eafffecb0826.nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de
-
with upstream address
- Before answering a PTR query for this network,
AllKnowingDNS will ask the DNS server at address first, appending
.upstream to the query.
Example:
network 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0::/64
resolves to ipv6-%DIGITS%.nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de
with upstream 2001:4d88:100e:1::2
Example query:
The PTR query 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0:219:dbff:fe43:2ec5 will make
AllKnowingDNS ask for
5.c.e.2.3.4.e.f.f.f.b.d.9.1.2.0.0.c.c.c.e.0.0.1. \
8.8.d.4.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa.upstream. at 2001:4d88:100e:1::2
and relay the answer, if any.
This section shows you how to delegate a zone in BIND9 or any DNS server with a
compatible zone file syntax. To use AllKnowingDNS, you need to delegate the
appropriate .ip6.arpa zone for your network and one regular domain.
$ORIGIN .
$TTL 604800 ; 1 week
e.0.0.1.8.8.d.4.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa IN SOA infra.in.zekjur.net. \
hostmaster.zekjur.net. (
20 ; serial
604800 ; refresh (1 week)
86400 ; retry (1 day)
2419200 ; expire (4 weeks)
604800 ; minimum (1 week)
)
NS libri.sur5r.net.
NS infra.in.zekjur.net.
; net for RaumZeitLabor
0.c.c.c.e.0.0.1.8.8.d.4.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa. IN NS ipv6-rdns.zekjur.net.
$TTL 6h
raumzeitlabor.de IN SOA ns1.jpru.de. hostmaster.jpru.de. (
2012030701
3h
30m
7d
1d )
IN NS ns1.jpru.de.
IN NS ns2.jpru.de.
IN A 195.49.138.121
IN MX 10 rzl.uugrn.org.
IN MX 20 up.uugrn.org.
IN MX 50 mail.uugrn.org.
IN MX 100 rzl.uugrn.org.
nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de. IN NS ipv6-rdns.zekjur.net.
Version 1.7
Michael Stapelberg, "<michael at stapelberg.de>"
Copyright 2012 Michael Stapelberg.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the BSD license.