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Command: nsd.conf | Section: 5 | Source: OpenBSD | File: nsd.conf.5
nsd.conf(5) nsd 4.9.1 nsd.conf(5)
NAME
nsd.conf - NSD configuration file
SYNOPSIS
nsd.conf
DESCRIPTION
This file is used to configure nsd(8). It specifies options for the nsd
server, zone files, primaries and secondaries.
The file format has attributes and values. Some attributes have attrib-
utes inside them. The notation is:
attribute: value
Comments start with # and last to the end of line. Empty lines are ig-
nored, as is whitespace at the beginning of a line. Quotes must be used
for values with spaces in them, eg. "file name.zone".
EXAMPLE
An example of a short nsd.conf file is below.
# Example.com nsd.conf file
# This is a comment.
server:
server-count: 1 # use this number of cpu cores
username: _nsd
zonelistfile: /var/nsd/db/zone.list
logfile: /var/log/nsd.log
xfrdfile: /var/nsd/run/xfrd.state
zone:
name: example.com
zonefile: /var/nsd/etc/example.com.zone
zone:
# this server is the primary and 192.0.2.1 is the secondary.
name: primaryzone.com
zonefile: /var/nsd/etc/primaryzone.com.zone
notify: 192.0.2.1 NOKEY
provide-xfr: 192.0.2.1 NOKEY
zone:
# this server is the secondary and 192.0.2.2 is the primary.
name: secondaryzone.com
zonefile: /var/nsd/etc/secondaryzone.com.zone
allow-notify: 192.0.2.2 NOKEY
request-xfr: 192.0.2.2 NOKEY
Then, use kill -HUP to reload changes from primary zone files. And use
kill -TERM to stop the server.
FILE FORMAT
There must be whitespace between keywords. Attribute keywords end with
a colon ':'. An attribute is followed by its containing attributes, or
a value.
At the top level, only server:, verify:, key:, pattern:, zone:, tls-
auth:, and remote-control: are allowed. These are followed by their at-
tributes or a new top-level keyword. The zone: attribute is followed by
zone options. The server: attribute is followed by global options for
the NSD server. The verify: attribute is used to control zone verifica-
tion. A key: attribute is used to define keys for authentication. The
pattern: attribute is followed by the zone options for zones that use
the pattern. A tls-auth: attribute is used to define credentials for
authenticating an outgoing TLS connection used for XFR-over-TLS.
Files can be included using the include: directive. It can appear any-
where, and takes a single filename as an argument. Processing continues
as if the text from the included file were copied into the config file
at that point. If a chroot is used, an absolute filename is needed
(with the chroot prepended), so that the include can be parsed before
and after application of the chroot (and the knowledge of what that ch-
root is). You can use '*' to include a wildcard match of files, eg.
"foo/nsd.d/*.conf". Also '?', '{}', '[]', and '~' work, see glob(7).
If no files match the pattern, this is not an error.
Server Options
The global options (if not overridden from the NSD command-line) are
taken from the server: clause. There may only be one server: clause.
ip-address: <ip4 or ip6>[@port] [servers] [bindtodevice] [setfib]
NSD will bind to the listed ip-address. Can be given multiple
times to bind multiple ip-addresses. Optionally, a port number
can be given. If none are given NSD listens to the wildcard in-
terface. Same as command-line option -a.
To limit which NSD server(s) listen on the given interface,
specify one or more servers separated by whitespace after
<ip>[@port]. Ranges can be used as a shorthand to specify multi-
ple consecutive servers. By default every server will listen.
If an interface name is used instead of ip4 or ip6, the list of
IP addresses associated with that interface is picked up and
used at server start.
For servers with multiple IP addresses that can be used to send
traffic to the internet, list them one by one, or the source ad-
dress of replies could be wrong. This is because if the udp
socket associates a source address of 0.0.0.0 then the kernel
picks an ip-address with which to send to the internet, and it
picks the wrong one. Typically needed for anycast instances.
Use ip-transparent to be able to list addresses that turn on
later (typical for certain load-balancing).
interface: <ip4 or ip6>[@port] [servers] [bindtodevice] [setfib]
Same as ip-address (for ease of compatibility with un-
bound.conf).
ip-transparent: <yes or no>
Allows NSD to bind to non local addresses. This is useful to
have NSD listen to IP addresses that are not (yet) added to the
network interface, so that it can answer immediately when the
address is added. Default is no.
ip-freebind: <yes or no>
Set the IP_FREEBIND option to bind to nonlocal addresses and in-
terfaces that are down. Similar to ip-transparent. Default is
no.
reuseport: <yes or no>
Use the SO_REUSEPORT socket option, and create file descriptors
for every server in the server-count. This improves performance
of the network stack. Only really useful if you also configure
a server-count higher than 1 (such as, equal to the number of
cpus). The default is no. It works on Linux, but does not work
on FreeBSD, and likely does not work on other systems.
send-buffer-size: <number>
Set the send buffer size for query-servicing sockets. Set to 0
to use the default settings.
receive-buffer-size: <number>
Set the receive buffer size for query-servicing sockets. Set to
0 to use the default settings.
debug-mode: <yes or no>
Turns on debugging mode for nsd, does not fork a daemon process.
Default is no. Same as command-line option -d. If set to yes it
does not fork and stays in the foreground, which can be helpful
for command-line debugging, but is also used by certain server
supervisor processes to ascertain that the server is running.
do-ip4: <yes or no>
If yes, NSD listens to IPv4 connections. Default yes.
do-ip6: <yes or no>
If yes, NSD listens to IPv6 connections. Default yes.
database: <filename>
This option is ignored by NSD versions 4.8.0 and newer, because
the database feature has been removed.
zonelistfile: <filename>
By default /var/nsd/db/zone.list is used. The specified file is
used to store the dynamically added list of zones. The list is
written to by NSD to add and delete zones. It is a text file
with a zone-name and pattern-name on each line. This file is
used for the nsd-control addzone and delzone commands.
identity: <string>
Returns the specified identity when asked for CH TXT ID.SERVER.
Default is the name as returned by gethostname(3). Same as com-
mand-line option -i. See hide-identity to set the server to not
respond to such queries.
version: <string>
Returns the specified version string when asked for CH TXT ver-
sion.server, and version.bind queries. Default is the compiled
package version. See hide-version to set the server to not re-
spond to such queries.
nsid: <string>
Add the specified nsid to the EDNS section of the answer when
queried with an NSID EDNS enabled packet. As a sequence of hex
characters or with ascii_ prefix and then an ascii string. Same
as command-line option -I.
logfile: <filename>
Log messages to the logfile. The default is to log to stderr and
syslog (with facility LOG_DAEMON). Same as command-line option
-l.
log-only-syslog: <yes or no>
Log messages only to syslog. Useful with systemd so that print
to stderr does not cause duplicate log strings in journald. Be-
fore syslog has been opened, the server uses stderr. Stderr is
also used if syslog is not available. Default is no.
server-count: <number>
Start this many NSD servers. Default is 1. Same as command-line
option -N.
cpu-affinity: <number> <number> ...
Overall CPU affinity for NSD server(s). Default is no affinity.
-n.
server-N-cpu-affinity: <number>
Bind NSD server specified by N to a specific core. Default is to
have affinity set to every core specified in cpu-affinity. This
setting only takes effect if cpu-affinity is enabled. -n
xfrd-cpu-affinity: <number>
Bind xfrd to a specific core. Default is to have affinity set to
every core specified in cpu-affinity. This setting only takes
effect if cpu-affinity is enabled. -n
tcp-count: <number>
The maximum number of concurrent, active TCP connections by each
server. Default is 100. Same as command-line option -n.
tcp-reject-overflow: <yes or no>
If set to yes, TCP connections made beyond the maximum set by
tcp-count will be dropped immediately (accepted and closed).
Default is no.
tcp-query-count: <number>
The maximum number of queries served on a single TCP connection.
Default is 0, meaning there is no maximum.
tcp-timeout: <number>
Overrides the default TCP timeout. This also affects zone trans-
fers over TCP. The default is 120 seconds.
tcp-mss: <number>
Maximum segment size (MSS) of TCP socket on which the server re-
sponds to queries. Value lower than common MSS on Ethernet (1220
for example) will address path MTU problem. Note that not all
platform supports socket option to set MSS (TCP_MAXSEG). De-
fault is system default MSS determined by interface MTU and ne-
gotiation between server and client.
outgoing-tcp-mss: <number>
Maximum segment size (MSS) of TCP socket for outgoing XFR re-
quest to other nameservers. Value lower than common MSS on Eth-
ernet (1220 for example) will address path MTU problem. Note
that not all platform supports socket option to set MSS
(TCP_MAXSEG). Default is system default MSS determined by in-
terface MTU and negotiation between NSD and other servers.
xfrd-tcp-max: <number>
Number of sockets for xfrd to use for outgoing zone transfers.
Default 128. Increase it to allow more zone transfer sockets,
like to 256. To save memory, this can be lowered, set it lower
together with some other settings to have reduced memory foot-
print for NSD. xfrd-tcp-max: 32 and xfrd-tcp-pipeline: 128 and
rrl-size: 1000
This reduces memory footprint, other memory usage is caused
mainly by the server-count setting, the number of server
processes, and the tcp-count setting, which keeps buffers per
server process, and by the size of the zone data.
xfrd-tcp-pipeline: <number>
Number of simultaneous outgoing zone transfers that are possible
on the tcp sockets of xfrd. Max is 65536, default is 128.
ipv4-edns-size: <number>
Preferred EDNS buffer size for IPv4. Default 1232.
ipv6-edns-size: <number>
Preferred EDNS buffer size for IPv6. Default 1232.
pidfile: <filename>
Use the pid file instead of the platform specific default. Same
as command-line option -P. With "" there is no pidfile, for
some startup management setups, where a pidfile is not useful to
have.
port: <number>
Answer queries on the specified port. Default is 53. Same as
command-line option -p.
statistics: <number>
If not present no statistics are dumped. Statistics are produced
every number seconds. Same as command-line option -s.
chroot: <directory>
NSD will chroot on startup to the specified directory. Note that
if elsewhere in the configuration you specify an absolute path-
name to a file inside the chroot, you have to prepend the chroot
path. That way, you can switch the chroot option on and off
without having to modify anything else in the configuration. Set
the value to "" (the empty string) to disable the chroot. By de-
fault "/var/nsd" is used. Same as command-line option -t.
username: <username>
After binding the socket, drop user privileges and assume the
username. Can be username, id or id.gid. Same as command-line
option -u.
zonesdir: <directory>
Change the working directory to the specified directory before
accessing zone files. Also, NSD will access zonelistfile, log-
file, pidfile, xfrdfile, xfrdir, server-key-file, server-cert-
file, control-key-file and control-cert-file relative to this
directory. Set the value to "" (the empty string) to disable the
change of working directory. By default "/var/nsd/zones" is
used.
difffile: <filename>
Ignored, for compatibility with NSD3 config files.
xfrdfile: <filename>
The soa timeout and zone transfer daemon in NSD will save its
state to this file. State is read back after a restart. The
state file can be deleted without too much harm, but timestamps
of zones will be gone. If it is configured as "", the state
file is not used, all secondary zones are checked for updates
upon startup. For more details see the section on zone expiry
behavior of NSD. Default is /var/nsd/run/xfrd.state.
xfrdir: <directory>
The zone transfers are stored here before they are processed. A
directory is created here that is removed when NSD exits. De-
fault is /var/nsd/run/xfr.
xfrd-reload-timeout: <number>
If this value is -1, xfrd will not trigger a reload after a zone
transfer. If positive xfrd will trigger a reload after a zone
transfer, then it will wait for the number of seconds before it
will trigger a new reload. Setting this value throttles the re-
loads to once per the number of seconds. The default is 1 sec-
ond.
verbosity: <level>
This value specifies the verbosity level for (non-debug) log-
ging. Default is 0. 1 gives more information about incoming no-
tifies and zone transfers. 2 lists soft warnings that are en-
countered. 3 prints more information.
Verbosity 0 will print warnings and errors, and other events
that are important to keep NSD running.
Verbosity 1 prints additionally messages of interest. Success-
ful notifies, successful incoming zone transfer (the zone is up-
dated), failed incoming zone transfers or the inability to
process zone updates.
Verbosity 2 prints additionally soft errors, like connection re-
sets over TCP. And notify refusal, and axfr request refusals.
hide-version: <yes or no>
Prevent NSD from replying with the version string on CHAOS class
queries. Default is no.
hide-identity: <yes or no>
Prevent NSD from replying with the identity string on CHAOS
class queries. Default is no.
drop-updates: <yes or no>
If set to yes, drop received packets with the UPDATE opcode.
Default is no.
use-systemd: <yes or no>
This option is deprecated and ignored. If compiled with libsys-
temd, NSD signals readiness to systemd and use of the option is
not necessary.
log-time-ascii: <yes or no>
Log time in ascii, if "no" then in seconds epoch. Default is
yes. This chooses the format when logging to file. The print-
out via syslog has a timestamp formatted by syslog.
round-robin: <yes or no>
Enable round robin rotation of records in the answer. This
changes the order of records in the answer and this may balance
load across them. The default is no.
minimal-responses: <yes or no>
Enable minimal responses for smaller answers. This makes pack-
ets smaller. Extra data is only added for referrals, when it is
really necessary. This is different from the --enable-minimal-
responses configure time option, that reduces packets, but ex-
actly to the fragmentation length, the nsd.conf option reduces
packets as small as possible. The default is yes.
confine-to-zone: <yes or no>
If set to yes, additional information will not be added to the
response if the apex zone of the additional information does not
match the apex zone of the initial query (E.G. CNAME resolu-
tion). Default is no.
refuse-any: <yes or no>
Refuse queries of type ANY. This is useful to stop query floods
trying to get large responses. Note that rrl ratelimiting also
has type ANY as a ratelimiting type. It sends truncation in re-
sponse to UDP type ANY queries, and it allows TCP type ANY
queries like normal. The default is yes.
zonefiles-check: <yes or no>
Make NSD check the mtime of zone files on start and sighup. If
you disable it it starts faster (less disk activity in case of a
lot of zones). The default is yes. The nsd-control reload com-
mand reloads zone files regardless of this option.
zonefiles-write: <seconds>
Write updated secondary zones to their zonefile every N seconds.
If the zone or pattern's "zonefile" option is set to "" (empty
string), no zonefile is written. The default is 3600 (1 hour).
rrl-size: <numbuckets>
This option gives the size of the hashtable. Default 1000000.
More buckets use more memory, and reduce the chance of hash col-
lisions.
rrl-ratelimit: <qps>
The max qps allowed (from one query source). Default is on (with
a suggested 200 qps). If set to 0 then it is disabled (unlimited
rate), also set the whitelist-ratelimit to 0 to disable rate-
limit processing. If you set verbosity to 2 the blocked and un-
blocked subnets are logged. Blocked queries are blocked and
some receive TCP fallback replies. Once the rate limit is
reached, NSD begins dropping responses. However, one in every
"rrl-slip" number of responses is allowed, with the TC bit set.
If slip is set to 2, the outgoing response rate will be halved.
If it's set to 3, the outgoing response rate will be one-third,
and so on. If you set rrl-slip to 10, traffic is reduced to
1/10th. Ratelimit options rrl-ratelimit, rrl-size and
rrl-whitelist-ratelimit are updated when nsd-control reconfig is
done (also the zone-specific ratelimit options are updated).
rrl-slip: <numpackets>
This option controls the number of packets discarded before we
send back a SLIP response (a response with "truncated" bit set
to one). 0 disables the sending of SLIP packets, 1 means every
query will get a SLIP response. Default is 2, cuts traffic in
half and legit users have a fair chance to get a +TC response.
rrl-ipv4-prefix-length: <subnet>
IPv4 prefix length. Addresses are grouped by netblock. Default
24.
rrl-ipv6-prefix-length: <subnet>
IPv6 prefix length. Addresses are grouped by netblock. Default
64.
rrl-whitelist-ratelimit: <qps>
The max qps for query sorts for a source, which have been
whitelisted. Default on (with a suggested 2000 qps). With the
rrl-whitelist option you can set specific queries to receive
this qps limit instead of the normal limit. With the value 0
the rate is unlimited.
answer-cookie: <yes or no>
Enable to answer to requests containing DNS Cookies as specified
in RFC7873. Default is yes.
cookie-secret: <128 bit hex string>
Servers in an anycast deployment need to be able to verify
each other's DNS Server Cookies. For this they need to share
the secret used to construct and verify the DNS Cookies. De-
fault is a 128 bits random secret generated at startup time.
This option is ignored if a cookie-secret-file is present. In
that case the secrets from that file are used in DNS Cookie cal-
culations.
cookie-secret-file: <filename>
File from which the secrets are read used in DNS Cookie calcula-
tions. When this file exists, the secrets in this file are used
and the secret specified by the cookie-secret option is ignored.
Default is /var/nsd/etc/nsd_cookiesecrets.txt
The content of this file must be manipulated with the
add_cookie_secret, drop_cookie_secret and activate_cookie_secret
commands to the nsd-control(8) tool. Please see that manpage how
to perform a safe cookie secret rollover.
tls-service-key: <filename>
If enabled, the server provides TLS service on TCP sockets with
the TLS service port number. The port number (853) is config-
ured with tls-port. To turn it on, create an interface: option
line in config with @port appended to the IP-address. This cre-
ates the extra socket on which the DNS over TLS service is pro-
vided.
The file is the private key for the TLS session. The public cer-
tificate is in the tls-service-pem file. Default is "", turned
off. Requires a restart (a reload is not enough) if changed, be-
cause the private key is read while root permissions are held
and before chroot (if any).
tls-service-pem: <filename>
The public key certificate pem file for the tls service. Default
is "", turned off.
tls-service-ocsp: <filename>
The ocsp pem file for the tls service, for OCSP stapling. De-
fault is "", turned off. An external process prepares and up-
dates the OCSP stapling data. Like this,
openssl ocsp -no_nonce \
-respout /path/to/ocsp.pem \
-CAfile /path/to/ca_and_any_intermediate.pem \
-issuer /path/to/direct_issuer.pem \
-cert /path/to/cert.pem \
-url "$( openssl x509 -noout -text -in /path/to/cert.pem |
grep 'OCSP - URI:' | cut -d: -f2,3 )"
tls-port: <number>
The port number on which to provide TCP TLS service, default is
853, only interfaces configured with that port number as @number
get DNS over TLS service.
tls-cert-bundle: <filename>
If null or "", the default verify locations are used. Set it to
the certificate bundle file, for example "/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-
bundle.crt". These certificates are used for authenticating
Transfer over TLS (XoT) connections.
proxy-protocol-port: <number>
The port number for proxy protocol service. If the statement is
given multiple times, additional port numbers can be used for
proxy protocol service. The interface definitions that use this
port number expect PROXYv2 proxy protocol traffic, for UDP, TCP
and for TLS service.
Remote Control
The remote-control: clause is used to set options for using the
nsd-control(8) tool to give commands to the running NSD server. It is
disabled by default, and listens for localhost by default. It uses TLS
over TCP where the server and client authenticate to each other with
self-signed certificates. The self-signed certificates can be gener-
ated with the nsd-control-setup tool. The key files are read by NSD
before the chroot and before dropping user permissions, so they can be
outside the chroot and readable by the superuser only.
control-enable: <yes or no>
Enable remote control, default is no.
control-interface: <ip4 or ip6 | interface name | absolute path>
NSD will bind to the listed addresses to service control re-
quests (on TCP). Can be given multiple times to bind multiple
ip-addresses. Use 0.0.0.0 and ::0 to service the wildcard in-
terface. If none are given NSD listens to the localhost
127.0.0.1 and ::1 interfaces for control, if control is enabled
with control-enable.
If an interface name is used instead of ip4 or ip6, the list of
IP addresses associated with that interface is picked up and
used at server start.
With an absolute path, a unix local named pipe is used for con-
trol. The file is created with user and group that is config-
ured and access bits are set to allow members of the group ac-
cess. Further access can be controlled by setting permissions
on the directory containing the control socket file. The key
and cert files are not used when control is via the named pipe,
because access control is via file and directory permission.
control-port: <number>
The port number for remote control service. 8952 by default.
server-key-file: <filename>
Path to the server private key, by default
/var/nsd/etc/nsd_server.key. This file is generated by the
nsd-control-setup utility. This file is used by the nsd server,
but not by nsd-control.
server-cert-file: <filename>
Path to the server self signed certificate, by default
/var/nsd/etc/nsd_server.pem. This file is generated by the
nsd-control-setup utility. This file is used by the nsd server,
and also by nsd-control.
control-key-file: <filename>
Path to the control client private key, by default
/var/nsd/etc/nsd_control.key. This file is generated by the
nsd-control-setup utility. This file is used by nsd-control.
control-cert-file: <filename>
Path to the control client certificate, by default
/var/nsd/etc/nsd_control.pem. This certificate has to be signed
with the server certificate. This file is generated by the
nsd-control-setup utility. This file is used by nsd-control.
Verifier options
The verify: clause is used to enable or disable zone verification, con-
figure listen interfaces and control the global defaults.
enable: <yes or no>
Enable zone verification. Default is no.
port: <number>
The port to answer verifier queries on. Default is 5347.
ip-address:
Interfaces to bind for zone verification (default are the local-
host interfaces, usually 127.0.0.1 and ::1). To bind to multiple
IP addresses, list them one by one. Optionally, Socket options
cannot be specified for verify ip-address
verify-zones: <yes or no>
Verify zones by default.
verifier: <command>
When an update is received for the zone (by IXFR or AXFR) this
program will be run to assess the zone with the update. If the
program exits with a status code of 0, the zone is considered
good and will be served. Any other status code will designate
the zone bad and the received update will be discarded. The
zone will continue to be served but without the update.
The following environment variables are available to verifiers:
VERIFY_ZONE
The domain name of the zone to be verified.
VERIZFY_ZONE_ON_STDIN
When the zone can be read from standard input
(stdin), this variable is set to "yes", otherwise
it is set to "no".
VERIFY_IP_ADDRESSES
The first address on which the zones to be as-
sessed will be served. If IPv6 is available an
IPv6 address will be preferred over IPv4.
VERIFY_PORT
The port number for VERIFY_IP_ADDRESS.
VERIFY_IPV6_ADDRESS
The first IPv6 address on which the zones to be
assessed will be served.
VERIFY_IPV6_PORT
The port number for VERIFY_IPV6_ADDRESS.
VERIFY_IPV4_ADDRESS
The first IPv4 address on which the zones to be
assessed will be served.
VERIFY_IPV4_PORT
The port number for VERIFY_IPV4_ADDRESS.
verifier-count: <number>
Maximum number of verifiers to run concurrently. Default is 1.
verifier-feed-zone: <yes or no>
Feed the updated zone to the verifier over standard input
(stdin).
verifier-timeout: <seconds>
The maximum number of seconds a verifier is allowed to run for
assessing one zone. If the verifier takes longer, it will be
terminated and the zone update will be discarded. The default is
0 seconds which means the verifier may take as long as it needs.
Pattern Options
The pattern: clause is used to denote a set of options to apply to some
zones. The same zone options as for a zone are allowed.
name: <string>
The name of the pattern. This is a (case sensitive) string.
The pattern names that start with "_implicit_" are used inter-
nally for zones that have no pattern (they are defined in
nsd.conf directly).
include-pattern: <pattern-name>
The options from the given pattern are included at this point in
this pattern. The referenced pattern must be defined above this
one.
<zone option>: <value>
The zone options such as zonefile, allow-query, allow-notify,
request-xfr, allow-axfr-fallback, notify, notify-retry, pro-
vide-xfr, store-ixfr, ixfr-number, ixfr-size, create-ixfr, zon-
estats, outgoing-interface, verify-zone, verifier, veri-
fier-feed-zone, verifier-timeout, catalog, and catalog-mem-
ber-pattern can be given. They are applied to the patterns and
zones that include this pattern.
Zone Options
For every zone the options need to be specified in one zone: clause.
The access control list elements can be given multiple times to add
multiple servers. These elements need to be added explicitly.
For zones that are configured in the nsd.conf config file their set-
tings are hardcoded (in an implicit pattern for themselves only) and
they cannot be deleted via delzone, but remove them from the config
file and repattern.
name: <string>
The name of the zone. This is the domain name of the apex of the
zone. May end with a '.' (in FQDN notation). For example "exam-
ple.com", "sub.example.net.". This attribute must be present in
each zone.
zonefile: <filename>
The file containing the zone information. If this attribute is
present it is used to read and write the zone contents. If the
attribute is absent it prevents writing out of the zone.
The string is processed so that one string can be used (in a
pattern) for a lot of different zones. If the label or charac-
ter does not exist the percent-character is replaced with a pe-
riod for output (i.e. for the third character in a two letter
domain name).
%s is replaced with the zone name.
%1 is replaced with the first character of the zone name.
%2 is replaced with the second character of the zone name.
%3 is replaced with the third character of the zone name.
%z is replaced with the toplevel domain name of the zone.
%y is replaced with the next label under the toplevel domain.
%x is replaced with the next-next label under the toplevel do-
main.
allow-query: <ip-spec> <key-name | NOKEY | BLOCKED>
Access control list. When at least one allow-query option is
specified, then the in the allow-query options specified ad-
dresses are are allowed to query the server for the zone.
Queries from unlisted or specifically BLOCKED addresses are dis-
carded. If NOKEY is given no TSIG signature is required.
BLOCKED supersedes other entries, other entries are scanned for
a match in the order of the statements. Without allow-query op-
tions, queries are allowed from any IP address without TSIG key
(which is the default).
The ip-spec is either a plain IP address (IPv4 or IPv6), or can
be a subnet of the form 1.2.3.4/24, or masked like
1.2.3.4&255.255.255.0 or a range of the form 1.2.3.4-1.2.3.25.
Note the ip-spec ranges do not use spaces around the /, &, @ and
- symbols.
allow-notify: <ip-spec> <key-name | NOKEY | BLOCKED>
Access control list. The listed (primary) address is allowed to
send notifies to this (secondary) server. Notifies from unlisted
or specifically BLOCKED addresses are discarded. If NOKEY is
given no TSIG signature is required. BLOCKED supersedes other
entries, other entries are scanned for a match in the order of
the statements.
The ip-spec is either a plain IP address (IPv4 or IPv6), or can
be a subnet of the form 1.2.3.4/24, or masked like
1.2.3.4&255.255.255.0 or a range of the form 1.2.3.4-1.2.3.25.
A port number can be added using a suffix of @number, for exam-
ple 1.2.3.4@5300 or 1.2.3.4/24@5300 for port 5300. Note the
ip-spec ranges do not use spaces around the /, &, @ and - sym-
bols.
request-xfr: [AXFR|UDP] <ip-address> <key-name | NOKEY> [tls-auth-name]
Access control list. The listed address (the primary) is queried
for AXFR/IXFR on update. A port number can be added using a suf-
fix of @number, for example 1.2.3.4@5300. The specified key is
used during AXFR/IXFR. If tls-auth-name is included, the speci-
fied tls-auth clause will be used to perform authenticated XFR-
over-TLS.
If the AXFR option is given, the server will not be contacted
with IXFR queries but only AXFR requests will be made to the
server. This allows an NSD secondary to have a primary server
that runs NSD. If the AXFR option is left out then both IXFR and
AXFR requests are made to the primary server.
If the UDP option is given, the secondary will use UDP to trans-
mit the IXFR requests. You should deploy TSIG when allowing UDP
transport, to authenticate notifies and zone transfers. Other-
wise, NSD is more vulnerable for Kaminsky-style attacks. If the
UDP option is left out then IXFR will be transmitted using TCP.
If a tls-auth-name is given then TLS (by default on port 853)
will be used for all zone transfers for the zone. If authentica-
tion of the primary based on the specified tls-auth authentica-
tion information fails, the XFR request will not be sent. Sup-
port for TLS 1.3 is required for XFR-over-TLS.
allow-axfr-fallback: <yes or no>
This option should be accompanied by request-xfr. It (dis)allows
NSD (as secondary) to fallback to AXFR if the primary name
server does not support IXFR. Default is yes.
size-limit-xfr: <number>
This option should be accompanied by request-xfr. It specifies
XFR temporary file size limit. It can be used to stop very
large zone retrieval, that could otherwise use up a lot of mem-
ory and disk space. If this option is 0, unlimited. Default
value is 0.
notify: <ip-address> <key-name | NOKEY>
Access control list. The listed address (a secondary) is noti-
fied of updates to this zone. A port number can be added using a
suffix of @number, for example 1.2.3.4@5300. The specified key
is used to sign the notify. Only on secondary configurations
will NSD be able to detect zone updates (as it gets notified it-
self, or refreshes after a time).
notify-retry: <number>
This option should be accompanied by notify. It sets the number
of retries when sending notifies.
provide-xfr: <ip-spec> <key-name | NOKEY | BLOCKED>
Access control list. The listed address (a secondary) is allowed
to request XFR from this server. Zone data will be provided to
the address. The specified key is used during XFR. For unlisted
or BLOCKED addresses no data is provided and requests are dis-
carded. BLOCKED supersedes other entries and other entries are
scanned for a match in the order of the statements.
The ip-spec is either a plain IP address (IPv4 or IPv6), or can
be a subnet of the form 1.2.3.4/24, or masked like
1.2.3.4&255.255.255.0 or a range of the form 1.2.3.4-1.2.3.25.
A port number can be added using a suffix of @number, for exam-
ple 1.2.3.4@5300 or 1.2.3.4/24@5300 for port 5300. Note the
ip-spec ranges do not use spaces around the /, &, @ and - sym-
bols.
outgoing-interface: <ip-address>
Access control list. The listed address is used to request
AXFR|IXFR (in case of a secondary) or used to send notifies (in
case of a primary).
The ip-address is a plain IP address (IPv4 or IPv6). A port
number can be added using a suffix of @number, for example
1.2.3.4@5300.
store-ixfr: <yes or no>
If enabled, IXFR contents are stored and provided to the set of
clients specified in the provide-xfr statement. Default is no.
IXFR content is a smaller set of changes that differ between
zone versions, whereas an AXFR contains the full contents of the
zone.
ixfr-number: <number>
The number of IXFR versions to store for this zone, at most. De-
fault is 5.
ixfr-size: <number>
The max storage to use for IXFR versions for this zone, in
bytes. Default is 1048576. A value of 0 means unlimited. If you
want to turn off IXFR storage, set the store-ixfr option to no.
NSD does not elide IXFR contents from versions that add and re-
move the same data. It stores and transmits IXFRs as they were
transmitted by the upstream server.
create-ixfr: <yes or no>
If enabled, IXFR data is created when a zonefile is read by the
server. This requires store-ixfr to be set to yes, so that the
IXFR contents are saved to disk. Default is off. If the server
is not running, the nsd-checkzone -i option can be used to cre-
ate an IXFR file. When an IXFR is created, the server spools a
version of the zone to a temporary file, at the location where
the ixfr files are stored. This creates IXFR data when the zone
is read from file, but not when a zone is read by AXFR transfer
from a server, because then the topmost server that originates
the data is the one place where IXFR differences are computed
and those differences are then transmitted verbatim to all the
other servers.
max-refresh-time: <seconds>
Limit refresh time for secondary zones. This is the timer which
checks to see if the zone has to be refetched when it expires.
Normally the value from the SOA record is used, but this option
restricts that value.
min-refresh-time: <seconds>
Limit refresh time for secondary zones.
max-retry-time: <seconds>
Limit retry time for secondary zones. This is the timer which
retries after a failed fetch attempt for the zone. Normally the
value from the SOA record is used, followed by an exponential
backoff, but this option restricts that value.
min-retry-time: <seconds>
Limit retry time for secondary zones.
min-expire-time: <seconds or refresh+retry+1>
Limit expire time for secondary zones. The value can be ex-
pressed either by a number of seconds, or the string "re-
fresh+retry+1". With the latter the expire time will be lower
bound to the refresh plus the retry value from the SOA record,
plus 1. The refresh and retry values will be subject to the
bounds configured with max-refresh-time, min-refresh-time,
max-retry-time and min-retry-time if given.
zonestats: <name>
When compiled with --enable-zone-stats NSD can collect statis-
tics per zone. This name gives the group where statistics are
added to. The groups are output from nsd-control stats and
stats_noreset. Default is "". You can use "%s" to use the name
of the zone to track its statistics. If not compiled in, the
option can be given but is ignored.
include-pattern: <pattern-name>
The options from the given pattern are included at this point.
The referenced pattern must be defined above this zone.
rrl-whitelist: <rrltype>
This option causes queries of this rrltype to be whitelisted,
for this zone. They receive the whitelist-ratelimit. You can
give multiple lines, each enables a new rrltype to be
whitelisted for the zone. Default has none whitelisted. The rrl-
type is the query classification that the NSD RRL employs to
make different types not interfere with one another. The types
are logged in the loglines when a subnet is blocked (in ver-
bosity 2). The RRL classification types are: nxdomain, error,
referral, any, rrsig, wildcard, nodata, dnskey, positive, all.
multi-primary-check: <yes or no>
Default no. If enabled, checks all primaries for the last ver-
sion. It uses the higher version of all the configured pri-
maries. Useful if you have multiple primaries that have differ-
ent version numbers served.
multi-master-check: <yes or no>
It is the same as multi-primary-check.
verify-zone: <yes or no>
Enable or disable verification for this zone. Default is
value-zones configured in verify:.
verifier: <command>
Command to execute to assess this zone. Default is verifier con-
figured in verify:.
verifier-feed-zone: <yes or no>
Feed updated zone to verifier over standard input. Default is
verifier-feed-zone configured in verify:.
verifier-timeout: <seconds>
Number of seconds before verifier is forcefully terminated.
Specify 0 (zero) to not use a specific timeout. Default is veri-
fier-timeout from verify:.
catalog: <consumer or producer>
If set to consumer, catalog zone processing is enabled for the
zone. Only a single zone may be configured as a catalog con-
sumer zone. When more than one catalog consumer zone is config-
ured, none of them will be processed. Member zones of the cata-
log will use the pattern specified by the group property, or if
a group property is missing or invalid, the pattern specified by
the catalog-member-pattern option is used. Group properties are
valid if there is only a single value matching the name of a for
member zones valid pattern.
A zone with the option set to producer, can be used to produce a
catalog zone. Member zones for catalog producer zones can be
added with "nsd-control addzone <zone> <pattern>", where <pat-
tern> has a catalog-producer-zone option pointing to a catalog
producer zone. Members will get a group property with the pat-
tern name as value. Catalog producer zones must be primary
zones and may not have a request-xfr option. Catalog producer
zones will not read content from zone files, but will recon-
struct the zone on startup from the member zone entries in
/var/nsd/db/zone.list, specified with the zonelistfile option.
The status of both catalog consumer and producer zones can be
verified with nsd-control zonestatus. It will show the number of
member zones and, if the catalog zone is invalid, the reason for
it to be invalid is shown. nsd-control zonestatus will also
show the entry of a catalog member zone in the catalog (consumer
or producer) zone as catalog-member-id:.
A catalog zone can either be catalog consumer zone or a catalog
producer zone but not both. Likewise, catalog member zones can
be either a member of catalog consumer zone or a catalog pro-
ducer zone but not both.
Catalog zones contain a list of zones that are served. Use al-
low-query: 0.0.0.0/0 BLOCKED and allow-query: ::0/0 BLOCKED in a
catalog zone zone or pattern clause to prevent revealing the
catalog. Also consider using transfers over TLS to further pro-
tect the catalog against eavesdroppers.
catalog-member-pattern: <pattern-name>
If this option is provided for a catalog consumer zone, members
of that catalog that have a missing or an invalid group property
will be added using pattern <pattern-name>.
catalog-producer-zone: <zone-name>
This option can only be used in a pattern. Adding a zone using
"nsd-control addzone <zone> <pattern> with a <pattern> contain-
ing this option, will cause a catalog member entry to be created
in the catalog producer zone <zone-name>. <zone-name> must ex-
ist and must be a valid catalog producer zone.
Key Declarations
The key: clause establishes a key for use in access control lists. It
has the following attributes.
name: <string>
The key name. Used to refer to this key in the access control
list. The key name has to be correct for tsig to work. This is
because the key name is output on the wire.
algorithm: <string>
Authentication algorithm for this key. Such as hmac-md5,
hmac-sha1, hmac-sha224, hmac-sha256, hmac-sha384 and
hmac-sha512. Can also be abbreviated as 'sha1', 'sha256'. De-
fault is sha256. Algorithms are only available when they were
compiled in (available in the crypto library).
secret: <base64 blob>
The base64 encoded shared secret. It is possible to put the se-
cret: declaration (and base64 blob) into a different file, and
then to include: that file. In this way the key secret and the
rest of the configuration file, which may have different secu-
rity policies, can be split apart. The content of the secret is
the agreed base64 secret content. To make it up, enter a pass-
word (its length must be a multiple of 4 characters, A-Za-z0-9),
or use dev-random output through a base64 encode filter.
TLS Auth Declarations
The tls-auth: clause establishes authentication attributes to use when
authenticating the far end of an outgoing TLS connection used in access
control lists for XFR-over-TLS. It has the following attributes.
name: <string>
The tls-auth name. Used to refer to this TLS authentication in-
formation in the access control list.
auth-domain-name: <string>
The authentication domain name as defined in RFC8310.
client-cert: <file name of clientcert.pem>
If you want to use mutual TLS authentication, this is where the
client certificates can be configured that NSD uses to connect
to the upstream server to download the zone. The client public
key pem cert file can be configured here. Also configure a pri-
vate key with client-key.
client-key: <file name of clientkey.key>
If you want to use mutual TLS authentication, the private key
file can be configured here for the client authentication.
client-key-pw: <string>
If the client-key file uses a password to decrypt the key before
it can be used, then the password can be specified here as a
string. It is possible to include other config files with the
include: option, and this can be used to move that sensitive
data to another file, if you wish.
DNSTAP Logging Options
DNSTAP support, when compiled in, is enabled in the dnstap: section.
This starts a collector process that writes the log information to the
destination.
dnstap-enable: <yes or no>
If dnstap is enabled. Default no. If yes, it connects to the
dnstap server and if any of the dnstap-log-..-messages options
is enabled it sends logs for those messages to the server.
dnstap-socket-path: <file name>
Sets the unix socket file name for connecting to the server that
is listening on that socket. Default is "/var/run/nsd-
dnstap.sock".
dnstap-ip: <"" or addr[@port]>
If disabled with "", the socket path is used. With a value, like
address or address@port, like "127.0.0.1@3333" TCP or TLS is
used. Default is "".
dnstap-tls: <yes or no>
If enabled, TLS is used to the address specified in dnstap-ip.
Otherwise, TCP is used. Default is yes.
dnstap-tls-server-name: <string>
The name for authenticating the upstream server. With "" dis-
abled.
dnstap-tls-client-key-file: <file name>
The key file for client authentication, or "" disabled.
dnstap-tls-client-cert-file: <file name>
The cert file for client authentication, or "" disabled.
dnstap-send-identity: <yes or no>
If enabled, the server identity is included in the log messages.
Default is no.
dnstap-send-version: <yes or no>
If enabled, the server version if included in the log messages.
Default is no.
dnstap-identity: <string>
The identity to send with messages, if "" the hostname is used.
Default is "".
dnstap-version: <string>
The version to send with messages, if "" the package version is
used. Default is "".
dnstap-log-auth-query-messages: <yes or no>
Enable to log auth query messages. Default is no. These are
client queries to NSD.
dnstap-log-auth-response-messages: <yes or no>
Enable to log auth response messages. Default is no. These are
responses from NSD to clients.
NSD CONFIGURATION FOR BIND9 HACKERS
BIND9 is a name server implementation with its own configuration file
format, named.conf(5). BIND9 types zones as 'Master' or 'Slave'.
Slave zones
For a secondary zone, the primary servers are listed. The primary
servers are queried for zone data, and are listened to for update noti-
fications. In NSD these two properties need to be configured sepa-
rately, by listing the primary address in allow-notify and request-xfr
statements.
In BIND9 you only need to provide allow-notify elements for any extra
sources of notifications (i.e. the operators), NSD needs to have al-
low-notify for both primaries and operators. BIND9 allows additional
transfer sources, in NSD you list those as request-xfr.
Here is an example of a secondary zone in BIND9 syntax.
# Config file for example.org options {
dnssec-enable yes;
};
key tsig.example.org. {
algorithm hmac-md5;
secret "aaaaaabbbbbbccccccdddddd";
};
server 162.0.4.49 {
keys { tsig.example.org. ; };
};
zone "example.org" {
type secondary;
file "secondary/example.org.signed";
primaries { 162.0.4.49; };
};
For NSD, DNSSEC is enabled automatically for zones that are signed. The
dnssec-enable statement in the options clause is not needed. In NSD
keys are associated with an IP address in the access control list
statement, therefore the server{} statement is not needed. Below is the
same example in an NSD config file.
# Config file for example.org
key:
name: tsig.example.org.
algorithm: hmac-md5
secret: "aaaaaabbbbbbccccccdddddd"
zone:
name: "example.org"
zonefile: "secondary/example.org.signed"
# the primary is allowed to notify and will provide zone data.
allow-notify: 162.0.4.49 NOKEY
request-xfr: 162.0.4.49 tsig.example.org.
Notice that the primary is listed twice, once to allow it to send noti-
fies to this secondary server and once to tell the secondary server
where to look for updates zone data. More allow-notify and request-xfr
lines can be added to specify more primaries.
It is possible to specify extra allow-notify lines for addresses that
are also allowed to send notifications to this secondary server.
Master zones
For a primary zone in BIND9, the secondary servers are listed. These
secondary servers are sent notifications of updated and are allowed to
request transfer of the zone data. In NSD these two properties need to
be configured separately.
Here is an example of a primary zone in BIND9 syntax.
zone "example.nl" {
type primary;
file "example.nl";
};
In NSD syntax this becomes:
zone:
name: "example.nl"
zonefile: "example.nl"
# allow anybody to request xfr.
provide-xfr: 0.0.0.0/0 NOKEY
provide-xfr: ::0/0 NOKEY
# to list a secondary server you would in general give
# provide-xfr: 1.2.3.4 tsig-key.name.
# notify: 1.2.3.4 NOKEY
Other
NSD is an authoritative only DNS server. This means that it is meant as
a primary or secondary server for zones, providing DNS data to DNS re-
solvers and caches. BIND9 can function as an authoritative DNS server,
the configuration options for that are compared with those for NSD in
this section. However, BIND9 can also function as a resolver or cache.
The configuration options that BIND9 has for the resolver or caching
thus have no equivalents for NSD.
FILES
/var/nsd/etc/nsd.conf
default NSD configuration file
SEE ALSO
nsd(8), nsd-checkconf(8), nsd-control(8)
AUTHORS
NSD was written by a combined team from NLnet Labs and RIPE NCC. Please
see the CREDITS file in the distribution for further details.
BUGS
nsd.conf is parsed by a primitive parser. Error messages may not be to
the point.
NLnet Labs Apr 4, 2024 nsd.conf(5)