Posted-By: auto-faq 3.1.1.2 Archive-name: internet/tcp-ip/domains-faq/part1 Revision: 1.6 1995/05/12 18:49:48 This FAQ is edited and maintained by Chris Peckham, . The latest version may always be found for anonymous ftp from ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/internet/tcp-ip/domains-faq ftp://ftp.njit.edu/pub/dns/Comp.protocols.tcp-ip.domains.FAQ If you can contribute any answers for items in the TODO section, please do so by sending e-mail to domain-faq@njit.edu ! If you know of any items that are not included and you feel that they should be, send the relevant information to domain-faq@njit.edu. ------------------------------ Date: Fri May 12 14:41:47 EDT 1995 Subject: Table of Contents Table of Contents ================= Part 1 ------ 0. TO DO 1. INTRODUCTION / MISCELLANEOUS 1.1 What is this newsgroup ? 1.2 More information 1.3 What is BIND and where is the latest version of BIND ? 1.4 How can I find the route between systems ? 1.5 Finding the hostname if you have the tcp-ip address 1.6 How to register a domain name 1.7 Change of Domain name 1.8 How memory and CPU does DNS use ? 1.9 Other things to consider when planning your servers 1.10 Proper way to get NS and reverse IP records into DNS 1.11 How to get my address assign from NIC? 1.12 Is there a block of private IP addresses I can use? 1.13 Cache failed lookups 1.14 What does an NS record really do ? 1.15 DNS ports 1.16 Obtaining the latest cache file 2. UTILITIES 2.1 Utilities to administer DNS zone files 2.2 DIG - Domain Internet Groper 2.3 DNS packet analyzer 2.4 host 2.5 Programming with DNS 2.6 A source of information relating to DNS 3. DEFINITIONS 3.1 TCP/IP Host Naming Conventions 3.2 Slaves and servers with forwarders 3.3 When is a server authoritative? 3.4 Underscore in host-/domain names 3.5 Lame delegation 3.6 What does opt-class field do? 3.7 Top level domains 3.8 Classes of networks 3.9 What is CIDR ? 3.10 What is the rule for glue ? Part 2 ------ 4. CONFIGURATION 4.1 Changing a Secondary server to a Primary 4.2 How do I subnet a Class B Address ? 4.3 Subnetted domain name service 4.4 Recommended format/style of DNS files 4.5 DNS on a system not connected to the Internet 4.6 Multiple Domain configuration 4.7 wildcard MX records 4.8 How to identify a wildcard MX record 4.9 Why are fully qualified domain names recommended ? 4.10 Distributing load using named 4.11 Order of returned records 4.12 resolv.conf 4.13 Delegating authority 4.14 DNS instead of NIS on a Sun OS 4.1.x system 5. PROBLEMS 5.1 No address for root server 5.2 Error - No Root Nameservers for Class XX 5.3 Bind 4.9.x and MX querying? 5.4 Some root nameservers don't know localhost 5.5 MX records and CNAMES and separate A records for MX targets 5.6 NS is a CNAME 5.7 Nameserver forgets own A record 5.8 General problems (core dumps !) 5.9 malloc and DECstations 6. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ------------------------------ Date: Wed May 3 12:55:13 EDT 1995 Subject: Q0 - TO DO list * How to do an initial installation * How to change service providers (what happens) * Explain the difference between BIND (an implementation) and DNS (spec) * Expand the slave/forward section of Q 3.2 * Add a definition of a "private domain" in discussion (or cut it out) * mention mail-to-news gateways for newsgroup, mailing lists, anonymous ftp, etc in what is newsgroup section * The evils of wildcard MX records ------------------------------- Date: Thu Dec 1 11:08:28 EST 1994 Subject: Q1.1 - What is this newsgroup ? comp.protocols.tcp-ip.domains is the usenet newsgroup for discussion on issues relating to the Domain Name System (DNS). This newsgroup is not for issues directly relating to IP routing and addressing. Issues of that nature should be directed towards comp.protocols.tcp-ip. ------------------------------- Date: Fri May 12 13:54:01 EDT 1995 Subject: Q1.2 - More information You can find more information concerning DNS in the following places: * The BOG (BIND Operations Guide) - in the BIND distribution * The FAQ included with bind4.9.3 doc/misc/FAQ * DNS and BIND by Albitz and Liu (an O'Reilly & Associates Nutshell handbook) * A number of RFCs (920, 974, 1032, 1034, 1101, 1123, 1178, 1183, 1348, 1535, 1536, 1537, 1591, 1706, 1712, 1713) * The DNS Resource Directory (DNSRD) http://www.dns.net/dnsrd * If you are having troubles relating to sendmail and DNS, you may wish to refer to the USEnet newsgroup comp.mail.sendmail and/or the FAQ for that newsgroup ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/mail/sendmail-faq * Information concerning some frequently asked questions relating to the Internet (i.e., what is the InterNIC, what is an RFC, what is the IETF, etc) may be found for anonymous ftp from ftp://ds.internic.net/fyi/fyi4.txt A version may also be obtained with the URL gopher://ds.internic.net/00/fyi/fyi4.txt ------------------------------- Date: Fri Apr 28 13:42:09 EDT 1995 Subject: Q1.3 - What is BIND and where is the latest version of BIND ? Q: What is BIND ? A: From the BOG Introduction - The Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND) implements an Internet name server for the BSD operating system. The BIND consists of a server (or ``daemon'') and a resolver library. A name server is a network service that enables clients to name resources or objects and share this information with other objects in the network. This in effect is a distributed data base system for objects in a computer network. BIND is fully integrated into BSD (4.3 and later releases) network programs for use in storing and retrieving host names and address. The system administrator can configure the system to use BIND as a replacement to the older host table lookup of information in the network hosts file /etc/hosts. The default configuration for BSD uses BIND. Q: Where is the latest non-beta version of BIND ? A: The latest non-beta version of BIND is version 4.9.2. This can be found for anonymous ftp from ftp://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/misc/vixie/4.9.2-940221.tar.gz Q: Where is the latest version of 4.9.3 located ? A: You can reference this URL: http://www.isc.org/isc/ At this time, the latest version of 4.9.3 may be found for anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.vix.com/pri/vixie/bind-4.9.3-BETA17.tar.gz Size: 1532332 bytes BSD checksum: 36044 1497 POSIX checksum: 3451112785 1532332 MD5 checksum: 604340af2eb7225819264c2ccf592bbd You won't be able to "ls" or "dir" the file. You must "cd" (inside of FTP) to the remote directory (/pri/vixie) unless you plan to create a local /pri/vixie or unless you plan to give "get" a second argument. You can't ping this ftp server, ever. To retrieve this file, do this: $ ftp ftp.vix.com user: anonymous password: (your e-mail address) ftp> cd /pri/vixie ftp> binary ftp> get bind-4.9.3-BETA17.tar.gz ftp> quit You will need GNU zip, Larry Wall's patch program (if there are any patch files), and a C compiler to get BIND running from the above mentioned source. GNU zip is available for anonymous ftp from ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/gzip-1.2.4.tar patch is available for anonymous ftp from ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/patch-2.1.tar.gz ------------------------------ Date: Mon Jan 2 13:27:27 EST 1995 Subject: Q1.4 - How can I find the route between systems Q: How can I find the path taken by packets between two systems/domains ? A: Get the source of the 'traceroute' command, compile it and install it on your system. One version of this program with additional functionality may be found for anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.nikhef.nl/pub/network/traceroute.tar.Z This package is mirrored at ftp://ftp.njit.edu/pub/dns/nikhef/traceroute.tar.Z Another version may be found for anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.psc.edu/pub/net_tools/traceroute.tar ------------------------------ Date: Thu Dec 1 09:55:24 EST 1994 Subject: Q1.5 - Finding the hostname if you have the tcp-ip address Q: Can someone tell me how can I find the name of the domain if I know the tcp-ip address of the domain? Is there some kind of service for this? A: For an address a.b.c.d you can always do: % nslookup > set q=ptr > d.c.b.a.in-addr.arpa. Most newer version of nslookup (since 4.8.3) will recognize an address, so you can just say: % nslookup a.b.c.d DiG will work like this also: $ dig -x a.b.c.d Host from the contrib/host from the bind distribution may also be used. ------------------------------- Date: Fri Apr 28 13:16:32 EDT 1995 Subject: Q1.6 - How to register a domain name Q: I would like to register a domain. How do I do this ? Can a name be reserved, or must we already have an IP address and be hooked up to the Internet before obtaining a domain name? A: You can talk to your Internet Service Provider (ISP). They can submit the registration for you. If you are not going to be directly connected, they should be able to offer MX records for your domain for mail delivery (so that mail sent to the new domain will be sent to your "standard" account). In the case where the registration is done by the organization itself, it still makes the whole process much easier if the ISP is approached for secondary servers _before_ the InterNIC is approached for registration. For information about making the registration yourself, look to the InterNIC ! ftp://internic.net/templates/ gopher://rs.internic.net/ http://www.internic.net/infoguide.html http://www.ripe.net You will need at least two domain name servers when you register your domain. Many ISP's are willing to provide primary and/or secondary name service for their customers. Many times, registration of a domain name can be initiated by sending e-mail to the zone contact. You can obtain the contact in the SOA record for the country, or in a whois server: $ nslookup -type=SOA fr. origin = ns1.nic.fr mail addr = nic.nic.fr ... The mail address to contact in this case is 'nic@nic.fr' (you must substitute an '@' for the first dot in the mail addr field). An alternate method to obtain the e-mail address of the national NIC is the 'whois' server at InterNIC. You may be requested to make your request to another email address or using a certain information template/application. ------------------------------- Date: Sun Nov 27 23:32:41 EST 1994 Subject: Q1.7 - Change of Domain name Q: We are preparing for a change of our domain name: abc.foobar.com -> foobar.net What are the tricks and caveats we should be aware of ? A: The forward zones are easy and there are a number of ways to do it. One way is the following: Have a single db file for the 2 domains, and have a single machine be the primary server for both abc.foobar.com and foobar.net. To resolve the host foo in both domains, use a single zone file which merely uses this for the host: foo IN A 1.2.3.4 Use a "@" wherever the domain would be used ie for the SOA: @ IN SOA (... Then use this pair of lines in your named.boot: primary abc.foobar.com db.foobar primary foobar.net db.foobar The reverse zones should either contain PTRs to both names, or to whichever name you believe to be canonical currently. ------------------------------- Date: Fri Apr 28 13:52:20 EDT 1995 Subject: Q1.8 - How memory and CPU does DNS use ? Q: How much memory and CPU does DNS use ? A: It can use quite a bit ! The main thing that BIND needs is memory. It uses very little CPU or network bandwidth. The main considerations to keep in mind when planning are: 1) How many zones do you have and how large are they ? 2) How many clients do you expect to serve and how active are they ? As an example, here is a snapshot of memory usage from CSIRO Division of Mathematics and Statistics, Australia Named takes several days to stabalize its memory usage. Our main server stabalises at ~10Mb. It takes about 3 days to reach this size from 6 M at startup. This is under Sun OS 4.1.3U1. As another example, here is the configuration of ns.uu.net (from late 1994): ns.uu.net only does nameservice. It is running a version of BIND 4.9.3 on a Sun Classic with 96 MB of RAM, 220 MB of swap (remember that Sun OS will reserve swap for each fork, even if it is not needed) running Sun OS 4.1.3_U1. Joseph Malcolm, of Alternet, states that named generally hovers at 5-10% of the CPU, except after a reload, when it eats it all. He also states that if you are interested in the network connectivity around the system (ns.uu.net is located off of Falls-Church4), a PostScript map is available for anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.uu.net/uunet-info/alternet.map.ps ------------------------------- Date: Mon Jan 2 14:24:51 EST 1995 Subject: Q1.9 - Other things to consider when planning your servers When making the plans to set up your servers, you may want to also consider the following issues: A) Server O/S limitations/capacities (which tend to be widely divergent from vendor to vendor) B) Client resolver behavior (even more widely divergent) C) Expected query response time D) Redundancy E) Desired speed of change propagation F) Network bandwidth availability G) Number of zones/subdomain-levels desired H) Richness of data stored (redundant MX records? HINFO records?) I) Ease of administration desired J) Network topology (impacts reverse-zone volume) Assuming a best-possible case for the factors above, particularly (A), (B), (C), (F), (G) & (H), it would be possible to run a 1000-node domain using a single lowly 25 or 40 MHz 386 PC with a fairly modest amount of RAM by today's standards, e.g. 4 or 8 Meg. However, this configuration would be slow, unreliable, and would provide no functionality beyond your basic address-to-name and name-to-address mappings. Beyond that baseline case, depending on what factors listed above, you may want look at other strategies, such splitting up the DNS traffic among several machines strategically located, possibly larger ones, and/or subdividing your domain itself. There are many options, tradeoffs, and DNS architectural paradigms from which to choose. ------------------------------ Date: Mon Jan 2 13:03:53 EST 1995 Subject: Q1.10 - Proper way to get NS and reverse IP records into DNS Q: Reverse domain registration is separate from forward domain registration. How do I get it updated ? A: Blocks of network addresses have been delegated by the InterNIC. Check if your network a.b.c.0 is in such a block by using nslookup: nslookup -type=soa c.b.a.in-addr.arpa. nslookup -type=soa b.a.in-addr.arpa. nslookup -type=soa a.in-addr.arpa. One of the above should give you the information you are looking for (the others will return with an error something like `*** No start of authority (SOA) records available for ...') This will give you the email address of the person to whom you should address your change request. If none of these works, your network probably has not been delegated by the InterNIC and you need to contact them directly. CIDR has meant that the registration is delegated, but registration of in-addr.arpa has always been separate from forward zones - and for good reason - in that the forward and reverse zones may have different policies, contents etc, may be served by a different set of nameservers, and exist at different times (usually only at point of creation). There isn't a one-to-one mapping between the two, so merging the registration would probably cause more problems than people forgetting/not-knowing that they had to register in-addr.arpa zones separately. For example, there are organizations that have hundreds of networks and two or more domains, with a sprinkling of machines from each network in each of the domains. ------------------------------- Date: Mon Jan 2 13:08:38 EST 1995 Subject: Q1.11 - How to get my address assign from NIC ? Q: Can anyone tell me how can I get the address from NIC? How many subnets will NIC give to me? A: You should probably ask your Internet provider to give you an address. These days, addresses are being distributed through the providers, so that they can assign adjacent blocks of addresses to sites that go through the same provider, to permit more efficient routing on the backbones. Unless you have thousands of hosts, you probably won't be able to get a class B these days. Instead, you can get a series of class C networks. Large requests will be queried, so be ready to provide a network plan if you ask for more than 16 class C networks. If you can't do this through your Internet provider, you can look for a subnet registration form on rs.internic.net. See the answer in this FAQ to the question "How to register a domain name" for a URL to these forms. ------------------------------- Date: Mon Jan 2 13:12:01 EST 1995 Subject: Q1.12 -Is there a block of private IP addresses I can use? Q: Is there a block of private IP addresses I can use? A: This answer may be found in the FAQ for the newsgroup comp.dcom.sys.cisco available for anonymous ftp from ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/comp.dcom.sys.cisco There is a block of private IP addresses that you can use. However whether you wish to do so is an issue of some debate. There are two RFCs which discuss this issue, and present opposing views: 1597 Address Allocation for Private Internets. Y. Rekhter, B. Moskowitz, D. Karrenberg & G. de Groot. March 1994. (Format: TXT=17430 bytes) 1627 Network 10 Considered Harmful (Some Practices Shouldn't be Codified). E. Lear, E. Fair, D. Crocker & T. Kessler. June 1994. (Format: TXT=18823 bytes) Neither one of these RFCs is anything more than a set of informational guidelines; they are *not* words to live by (remember that RFC stands for Request For Comments). If you're seriously considering using private IP addresses, please read them both. In any event, RFC 1597 documents the allocation of the following addresses for use by ``private internets'': 10.0.0.0 - 10.255.255.255 172.16.0.0 - 172.31.255.255 192.168.0.0 - 192.168.255.255 Most importantly, it is vital that nothing using these addresses should ever connect to the global Internet, or have plans to do so. Please read the above RFCs before considering implementing such a policy. ------------------------------- Date: Mon Jan 2 13:55:50 EST 1995 Subject: Q1.13 - Cache failed lookups Q: Does BIND cache negative answers (failed DNS lookups) ? A: Yes, BIND 4.9.3 will cache negative answers. ------------------------------- Date: Fri Feb 10 15:35:07 EST 1995 Subject: Q1.14 - What does an NS record really do ? Q: What does a NS record really do ? A: The NS records in your zone data file pointing to the zone's name servers (as opposed to the servers of delegated subdomains) don't do much. They're essentially unused, though they are returned in the authority section of reply packets from your name servers. ------------------------------- Date: Fri Feb 10 15:40:10 EST 1995 Subject: Q1.15 - DNS ports Q: Does anyone out there have any information/experience on exactly which TCP/UDP ports DNS uses to send and receive queries ? A: Use the following chart: Prot Src Dst Use udp 53 53 Queries between servers (eg, recursive queries) Replies to above tcp 53 53 Queries with long replies between servers, zone transfers Replies to above udp >1023 53 Client queries (sendmail, nslookup, etc ...) udp 53 >1023 Replies to above tcp >1023 53 Client queries with long replies tcp 53 >1023 Replies to above Note: >1023 is for non-priv ports on Un*x clients. On other client types, the limit may be more or less. Another point to keep in mind when designing filters for DNS is that a DNS server uses port 53 both as the source and destination for it's queries. So, a client queries an initial server from an unreserved port number to UDP port 53. If the server needs to query another server to get the required info, it sends a UDP query to that server with both source and destination ports set to 53. The response is then sent with the same src=53 dest=53 to the first server which then responds to the original client from port 53 to the original source port number. The point of all this is that putting in filters to only allow UDP between a high port and port 53 will not work correctly, you must also allow the port 53 to port 53 UDP to get through. Also, ALL versions of BIND use TCP for queries in some cases. The original query is tried using UDP. If the response is longer than the allocated buffer, the resolver will retry the query using a TCP connection. If you block access to TCP port 53 as suggested above, you may find that some things don't work. Newer version of BIND allow you to configure a list of IP addresses from which to allow zone transfers. This mechanism can be used to prevent people from outside downloading your entire namespace. ------------------------------- Date: Fri Apr 28 14:19:10 EDT 1995 Subject: Q1.16 - Obtaining the latest cache file Q: What is the cache file and where can I obtain the latest version ? A: From the "Name Server Operations Guide" 6.3. Cache Initialization 6.3.1. root.cache The name server needs to know the servers that are the authoritative name servers for the root domain of the network. To do this we have to prime the name server's cache with the addresses of these higher authorities. The location of this file is specified in the boot file. ... A copy of the comments in the file available from the InterNIC follow: ; This file holds the information on root name servers needed to ; initialize cache of Internet domain name servers ; (e.g. reference this file in the "cache . " ; configuration file of BIND domain name servers). ; ; This file is made available by InterNIC registration services ; under anonymous FTP as ; file /domain/named.root ; on server FTP.RS.INTERNIC.NET ; -OR- under Gopher at RS.INTERNIC.NET ; under menu InterNIC Registration Services (NSI) ; submenu InterNIC Registration Archives ; file named.root ; ; last update: Oct 5, 1994 ; related version of root zone: 1994100500 ; If you have a version of dig running, you may obtain the information with the command dig @ns.internic.net . ns ------------------------------- Date: Mon Jan 2 13:13:49 EST 1995 Subject: Q2.1 - Utilities to administer DNS zone files Q: I am wondering if there are utilities available to ease the administration of the zone files in the DNS. A: There are a few. Two common ones are h2n and makezones. Both are perl scripts. h2n is used to convert host tables into zone data files. It is available for anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.uu.net/published/oreilly/nutshell/dnsbind/dns.tar.Z. makezones works from a single file that looks like a forward zone file, with some additional syntax for special cases. It is included in the current BIND distribution. The newest version is always available for anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.cus.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programs/DNS/makezones This package is mirrored at ftp://ftp.njit.edu/pub/dns/cus.cam.ac/makezones More information may be found using the DNS Resource Directory http://www.dns.net/dnsrd ------------------------------- Date: Thu Dec 1 11:09:11 EST 1994 Subject: Q2.2 - DIG - Domain Internet Groper Q: Where can I find the latest version of DIG ? A: The latest and greatest, official, accept-no-substitutes version of DiG is the one that comes with BIND. Get the latest kit. ------------------------------- Date: Mon May 15 12:57:42 EDT 1995 Subject: Q2.3 -DNS packet analyser Q: I'm looking for a Ethernet packet analyser of public domain or standard (like tcpdump, snoop, packetman) that is able to determine DNS data field protocol A: There is a free ethernet analyser called Ethload available for PC's running DOS. The latest filename is ETHLD104.ZIP. It understands lots of protocols including TCP/UDP. It'll look inside there and display DNS/BOOTP/ICMP packets etc. (Ed. note: something nice for someone to add to tcpdump ;^) ). Depending on the ethernet controller it's given it'll perform slightly differently. It handles NDIS/Novell/Packet drivers. It works best with Novell's promiscuous mode drivers. A A SimTel mirror site should have the program available for anonymous ftp. As an example, ftp://oak.oakland.edu/SimTel/msdos/lan/ethld104.zip ------------------------------- Date: Sun Dec 4 21:15:38 EST 1994 Subject: Q2.4 - host A section from the host man page: host looks for information about Internet hosts and domain names. It gets this information from a set of intercon- nected servers that are spread across the world. The infor- mation is stored in the form of "resource records" belonging to hierarchically organized "zones". By default, the program simply converts between host names and Internet addresses. However, with the -t, -a and -v options, it can be used to find all of the information about domain names that is maintained by the domain nameserver system. The information printed consists of various fields of the associated resource records that were retrieved. The arguments can be either host names (domain names) or numeric Internet addresses. 'host' is compatible with both BIND 4.9 and BIND 4.8 'host' may be found in contrib/host in the BIND distribution. The latest version always available for anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.nikhef.nl/pub/network/host.tar.Z It may also be found for anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.uu.net/networking/ip/dns/host.tar.Z ------------------------------- Date: Fri Feb 10 15:25:11 EST 1995 Subject: Q2.5 - Programming with DNS Q: How can I use DNS information in my program? A: It depends on precisely what you want to do: a) Consider whether you need to write a program at all. It may well be easier to write a shell program (e.g. using awk or perl) to parse the output of dig, host or nslookup. b) If all you need is names and addresses, there will probably be system routines 'gethostbyname' and 'gethostbyaddr' to provide this information. c) If you need more details, then there are system routines (res_query and res_search) to assist with making and sending DNS queries. However, these do not include a routine to parse the resulting answer (although routines to assist in this task are provided). There is a separate library available that will take a DNS response and unpick it into its constituent parts, returning a C structure that can be used by the program. The source for this library is available for anonymous ftp from ftp://hpux.csc.liv.ac.uk/hpux/Networking/Admin/resparse-* ------------------------------- Date: Wed May 3 12:46:50 EDT 1995 Subject: Q2.6 - A source of information relating to DNS Q: Where can I find utilities and tools to help me manage my zone files ? A: There are several tools available. Please refer to the "tools" section of the DNS resources directory: http://www.dns.net/dnsrd/tools.html ------------------------------- Date: Fri May 12 14:33:40 EDT 1995 Subject: Q3.1 - TCP/IP Host Naming Conventions Q: Is a guide available relating to naming systems ? A: One guide/resource is RFC 1178, "Choosing a Name for Your Computer", which is available via anonymous FTP from ftp://ftp.internic.netrfc/rfc1178.txt RFCs (Request For Comments) are specifications and guidelines for how many aspects of TCP/IP and the Internet (should) work. Most RFCs are fairly technical documents, and some have semantics that are hotly contested in the newsgroups. But a few, like RFC 1178, are actually good to read for someone who's just starting along a TCP/IP path. ------------------------------- Date: Thu Dec 1 10:32:43 EST 1994 Subject: Q3.2 - What are slaves and forwarders ? Q: What are slaves and forwarders ? A: "forwarders" is a list of NS records that are _prepended_ to a list of NS records to query if the data is not available locally. This allows a rich cache of records to be built up at a centralized location. This is good for sites that have sporadic or very slow connections to the Internet. (demand dial-up, for example) It's also just a good idea for very large distributed sites to increase the chance that you don't have to go off to the Internet to get an IP address. (sometimes for addresses across the street!) "slave" modifies this to say to replace the list of NS records with the forwarders entry, instead of prepending to it. This is for firewalled environments, where the nameserver can't directly get out to the Internet at all. "slave" is meaningless (and invalid, in late-model BINDs) without "forwarders". "forwarders" is an entry in named.boot, and therefore applies only to the nameserver (not to resolvers). ------------------------------- Date: Mon Jan 2 13:15:13 EST 1995 Subject: Q3.3 - When is a server authoritative? Q: What criteria does a server use to determine if it is authoritative for a domain? A: In the case of BIND: 1) The server contains current data in files for the zone in question (Data must be current for secondaries, as defined in the SOA) 2) The server is told that it is authoritative for the zone, by a 'primary' or 'secondary' keyword in /etc/named.boot. 3) The server does an error-free load of the zone. Q: I have set up a DNS where there is an SOA record for the domain, but the server still does not consider itself authoritative. (I used nslookup and set server=the correct machine.) It seems to me that something is not matching up somewhere. I suspect that this is because the service provider has not given us control over the IP numbers in our own domain, and so while the machine listed has an A record for an address, there is no corresponding PTR record. A: That's possible too, but is unrelated to the first question. You need to be delegated a zone before outside people will start talking to your server. However, a server can still be authoritative for a zone even though it hasn't been delegated authority (it's just that only the people who use that as their server will see the data). A server may consider itself non-authoritative even though it's a primary if there is a syntax error in the zone (see point 3 above). Q: I always believe that it was the NS record that defined authoritative servers. A: Nope, delegation is a separate issue from authoritativeness. You can still be authoritative, but not delegated. (you can also be delegated, but not authoritative -- that's a "lame delegation") Q: We have had problems in the past from servers that were authoritative (primary or secondary) but no NS, so other thought they were not. Some resolvers get very confused when they get non- authoritative data from the primary server. A: Yes, that's a lame delegation. That's not caused by what you said, but rather by a server which is _not_ authoritative for a zone, yet someone else (the parent) is saying that a server is authoritative (via the NS records). The set of NS records in the parent zone must be a subset of the authoritative servers to avoid lame delegations. ------------------------------- Date: Fri Apr 28 13:26:37 EDT 1995 Subject: Q3.4 - underscore in host-/domainnames Q: I had a quick look on whether underscores are allowed in host- or domainnames. RFC 1033 allows them. RFC 1035 doesn't. RFC 1123 doesn't. dnswalk complains about them. Which RFC is the final authority these days? A: Actually RFC 1035 deals with names of machines or names of mail domains. i.e "_" is not permitted in a hostname or on the RHS of the "@" in local@domain. Underscore is permitted where ever the domain is NOT one of these types of addresses. In general the DNS mostly contains hostnames and mail domainnames. This will change as new resource record types for authenticating DNS queries start to appear. The latest version of 'host' checks for illegal characters in A/MX record names and the NS/MX target names. After saying all of that, remember that RFC 1123 is a Required Internet Standard (per RFC 1720), and RFC 1033 isn't. Even 1035 isn't a required standard. Therefore, RFC 1123 wins, no contest. ------------------------------- Date: Fri Dec 2 15:03:56 EST 1994 Subject: Q3.5 - Lame delegation Q: What is lame delegation ? A: Two things are required for a lame delegation: 1) A nameserver X is delegated as authoritative for a zone. 2) Nameserver X is not performing nameservice for that zone. Try to think of a lame delegation as a long-term condition, brought about by a misconfiguration somewhere. Bryan Beecher's 1992 LISA paper on lame delegations is good to read on this. The problem really lies in misconfigured nameservers, not "lameness" brought about by transient outages. The latter is common on the Internet and hard to avoid, while the former is correctable. In order to be performing nameservice for a zone, it must have (presumed correct) data for that zone, and it must be answering authoritatively to resolver queries for that zone. (The AA bit is set in the flags section) The "classic" lame delegation case is when nameserver X is delegated as authoritative for domain Y, yet when you ask Y about X, it returns non-authoritative data. Here's an example that shows what happens most often (using dig, dnswalk, and doc to find). Let's say the domain bogus.com gets registered at the NIC and they have listed 2 primary name servers, both from their *upstream* provider: bogus.com IN NS ns.bogus.com bogus.com IN NS upstream.com bogus.com IN NS upstream1.com So the root servers have this info. But when the admins at bogus.com actually set up their zone files they put something like: bogus.com IN NS upstream.com bogus.com IN NS upstream1.com So your name server may have the nameserver info cached (which it may have gotten from the root). The root says "go ask ns.bogus.com" since they are authoritative This is usually from stuff being registered at the NIC (either nic.ddn.mil or rs.internic.net), and then updated later, but the folks who make the updates later never let the folks at the NIC know about it. Q: How can I see if the server is "lame" ? A: Go to the authoritative servers one level up, and ask them who they think is authoritative, and then go ask each one of those delegees if they think that they themselves are authoritative. If any responds "no", then you know who the lame delegation is, and who is delegating lamely to them. You can then send off a message to the administrators of the level above. The 'lamers' script from Byran Beecher really takes care of all this for you. It parses the lame delegation notices from BIND's syslog and summarizes them for you. It may be found in the contrib section of the latest BIND distribution. The latest version is available for anonymous ftp from ftp://terminator.cc.umich.edu/dns/lame-delegations/ If you want to actively check for lame delegations, you can use 'doc' and 'dnswalk'. You can check things manually with 'dig'. ------------------------------- Date: Thu Dec 1 11:10:39 EST 1994 Subject: Q3.6 - What does opt-class field do? Q: Just something I was wondering about: What does the opt-class field in an name database do (the one that always says IN)? What would happen if I put something else there instead? A: This field is the address class. From the BOG - ...is the address class; currently, only one class is supported: IN for internet addresses and other internet information. Limited support is included for the HS class, which is for MIT/Athena ``Hesiod'' information. ------------------------------- Date: Fri Feb 10 14:49:54 EST 1995 Subject: Q3.7 - Top level domains A section from RFC 1591: 2. The Top Level Structure of the Domain Names In the Domain Name System (DNS) naming of computers there is a hierarchy of names. The root of system is unnamed. There are a set of what are called "top-level domain names" (TLDs). These are the generic TLDs (EDU, COM, NET, ORG, GOV, MIL, and INT), and the two letter country codes from ISO-3166. It is extremely unlikely that any other TLDs will be created. [ Ed note: the ISO-3166 country codes may be found for anonymous ftp from: ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/country-codes ftp://ftp.ripe.net/iso3166-codes ] Under each TLD may be created a hierarchy of names. Generally, under the generic TLDs the structure is very flat. That is, many organizations are registered directly under the TLD, and any further structure is up to the individual organizations. In the country TLDs, there is a wide variation in the structure, in some countries the structure is very flat, in others there is substantial structural organization. In some country domains the second levels are generic categories (such as, AC, CO, GO, and RE), in others they are based on political geography, and in still others, organization names are listed directly under the country code. The organization for the US country domain is described in RFC 1480. Each of the generic TLDs was created for a general category of organizations. The country code domains (for example, FR, NL, KR, US) are each organized by an administrator for that country. These administrators may further delegate the management of portions of the naming tree. These administrators are performing a public service on behalf of the Internet community. Descriptions of the generic domains and the US country domain follow. Of these generic domains, five are international in nature, and two are restricted to use by entities in the United States. World Wide Generic Domains: COM - This domain is intended for commercial entities, that is companies. This domain has grown very large and there is concern about the administrative load and system performance if the current growth pattern is continued. Consideration is being taken to subdivide the COM domain and only allow future commercial registrations in the subdomains. EDU - This domain was originally intended for all educational institutions. Many Universities, colleges, schools, educational service organizations, and educational consortia have registered here. More recently a decision has been taken to limit further registrations to 4 year colleges and universities. Schools and 2-year colleges will be registered in the country domains (see US Domain, especially K12 and CC, below). NET - This domain is intended to hold only the computers of network providers, that is the NIC and NOC computers, the administrative computers, and the network node computers. The customers of the network provider would have domain names of their own (not in the NET TLD). ORG - This domain is intended as the miscellaneous TLD for organizations that didn't fit anywhere else. Some non- government organizations may fit here. INT - This domain is for organizations established by international treaties, or international databases. United States Only Generic Domains: GOV - This domain was originally intended for any kind of government office or agency. More recently a decision was taken to register only agencies of the US Federal government in this domain. State and local agencies are registered in the country domains (see US Domain, below). MIL - This domain is used by the US military. Example country code Domain: US - As an example of a country domain, the US domain provides for the registration of all kinds of entities in the United States on the basis of political geography, that is, a hierarchy of ...US. For example, "IBM.Armonk.NY.US". In addition, branches of the US domain are provided within each state for schools (K12), community colleges (CC), technical schools (TEC), state government agencies (STATE), councils of governments (COG),libraries (LIB), museums (MUS), and several other generic types of entities (see RFC 1480 for details). A section from RFC 1480: 2. NAMING STRUCTURE The US Domain hierarchy is based on political geography. The basic name space under US is the state name space, then the "locality" name space, (like a city, or county) then organization or computer name and so on. For example: BERKELEY.CA.US PORTLAND.WA.US There is of course no problem with running out of names. The things that are named are individual computers. If you register now in one city and then move, the database can be updated with a new name in your new city, and a pointer can be set up from your old name to your new name. This type of pointer is called a CNAME record. The use of unregistered names is not effective and causes problems for other users. Inventing your own name and using it without registering is not a good idea. In addition to strictly geographically names, some special names are used, such as FED, STATE, AGENCY, DISTRICT, K12, LIB, CC, CITY, and COUNTY. Several new name spaces have been created, DNI, GEN, and TEC, and a minor change under the "locality" name space was made to the existing CITY and COUNTY subdomains by abbreviating them to CI and CO. A detailed description follows. Below US, Parallel to States: ----------------------------- "FED" - This branch may be used for agencies of the federal government. For example: ..FED.US "DNI" - DISTRIBUTED NATIONAL INSTITUTES - The "DNI" branch was created directly under the top-level US. This branch is to be used for distributed national institutes; organizations that span state, regional, and other organizational boundaries; that are national in scope, and have distributed facilities. For example: .DNI.US. Name Space Within States: ------------------------ "locality" - cities, counties, parishes, and townships. Subdomains under the "locality" would be like CI...US, CO...US, or businesses. For example: Petville.Marvista.CA.US. "CI" - This branch is used for city government agencies and is a subdomain under the "locality" name (like Los Angeles). For example: Fire-Dept.CI.Los-Angeles.CA.US. "CO" - This branch is used for county government agencies and is a subdomain under the "locality" name (like Los Angeles). For example: Fire-Dept.CO.San-Diego.CA.US. "K12" - This branch may be used for public school districts. A special name "PVT" can be used in the place of a school district name for private schools. For example: .K12..US and .PVT.K12..US. "CC" - COMMUNITY COLLEGES - This branch was established for all state wide community colleges. For example: .CC..US. "TEC" - TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL SCHOOLS - The branch "TEC" was established for technical and vocational schools and colleges. For example: .TEC..US. "LIB" - LIBRARIES (STATE, REGIONAL, CITY, COUNTY) - This branch may be used for libraries only. For example: .LIB..US. "STATE" - This branch may be used for state government agencies. For example: .STATE..US. "GEN" - GENERAL INDEPENDENT ENTITY - This branch is for the things that don't fit easily into any other structure listed -- things that might fit in to something like ORG at the top-level. It is best not to use the same keywords (ORG, EDU, COM, etc.) that are used at the top-level to avoid confusion. GEN would be used for such things as, state-wide organizations, clubs, or domain parks. For example: .GEN..US. The application form for the US domain may be found for anonymous ftp from: ftp://internic.net/templates/us-domain-template.txt The application form for the EDU, COM, NET, ORG, and GOV domains may be found for anonymous ftp from: ftp://internic.net/templates/domain-template.txt ------------------------------- Date: Sun Nov 27 23:32:41 EST 1994 Subject: Q3.8 - Classes of networks Q: I am just kind of curious to what exactly the differences in classes of networks are (class A, B, C). A: An Internet Protocol (IP) address is 32 bit in length, divided into two or three parts (the network address, the subnet address (if present), and the host address. The subnet addresses are only present if the network has been divided into subnetworks. The length of the network, subnet, and host field are all variable. There are five different network classes. The leftmost bits indicate the class of the network. # bits in # bits in network host Class field field Internet Protocol address in binary Ranges ============================================================================ A 7 24 0NNNNNNN.HHHHHHHH.HHHHHHHH.HHHHHHHH 1-127.x.x.x B 14 16 10NNNNNN.NNNNNNNN.HHHHHHHH.HHHHHHHH 128-191.x.x.x C 22 8 110NNNNN.NNNNNNNN.NNNNNNNN.HHHHHHHH 192-223.x.x.x D NOTE 1 1110xxxx.xxxxxxxx.xxxxxxxx.xxxxxxxx 224-239.x.x.x E NOTE 2 11110xxx.xxxxxxxx.xxxxxxxx.xxxxxxxx 240-247.x.x.x where N represents part of the network address and H represents part of the host address. When the subnet address is defined, the needed bits are assigned from the host address space. NOTE 1: Reserved for multicast groups - RFC 1112 NOTE 2: Reserved for future use 127.0.0.1 is reserved for local loopback. Under the current arrangements, many class A IP numbers will not be assigned whereas class C usage will be at a premium. ------------------------------- Date: Fri Apr 28 13:31:24 EDT 1995 Subject: Q3.9 - What is CIDR ? Q: What is CIDR ? A: CIDR is "Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR). From RFC1517: ...Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) attempts to deal with these problems by defining a mechanism to slow the growth of routing tables and reduce the need to allocate new IP network numbers. Much more information may be obtained in RFCs 1467, 1517, 1518, 1520; with primary reference 1519 ------------------------------- Date: Fri Apr 28 13:31:24 EDT 1995 Subject: Q3.10 - What is the rule for glue ? Q: What is the rule for glue ? A: A glue record is an A record for a name that appears on the right-hand side of a NS record. So, if you have this: sub.foobar.com. IN NS dns.sub.foobar.com. dns.sub.foobar.com. IN A 1.2.3.4 then the second record is a glue record (for the NS record above it). You need glue records when -- and only when -- you are delegating authority to a nameserver that "lives" in the domain you are delegating *and* you aren't a secondary server for that domain. In other words, in the example above, you need to add an A record for dns.sub.foobar.com since it "lives" in the domain it serves. This boot strapping information is necessary: How are you supposed to find out the IP address of the nameserver for domain FOO if the nameserver for FOO "lives" in FOO? If you have this NS record: sub.foobar.com. IN NS dns.xyz123.com. you do NOT need a glue record, and, in fact, adding one is a very bad idea. If you add one, and then the folks at xyz123.com change the address, then you will be passing out incorrect data. Also, unless you actually have a machine called something.IN-ADDR.ARPA, you will never have any glue records present in any of your "reverse" files. There is also a sort of implicit glue record that can be useful (or confusing :^) ). If the parent server (abc.foobar.com domain in example above) is a secondary server for the child, then the A record will be fetched from the child server when the zone transfer is done. The glue is still there but it's a little different, it's in the ip address in the named.boot line instead of explicitly in the data. In this case you can leave out the explicit glue A record and leave the manually configured "glue" in just the one place in the named.boot file. RFC 1537 says it quite nicely: 2. Glue records Quite often, people put unnecessary glue (A) records in their zone files. Even worse is that I've even seen *wrong* glue records for an external host in a primary zone file! Glue records need only be in a zone file if the server host is within the zone and there is no A record for that host elsewhere in the zone file. Old BIND versions ("native" 4.8.3 and older versions) showed the problem that wrong glue records could enter secondary servers in a zone transfer.