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unbound.conf(5) |
local-unbound 1.15.0 |
unbound.conf(5) |
unbound.conf - Local-unbound configuration file.
unbound.conf is used to configure local-unbound(8). The file
format has attributes and values. Some attributes have attributes inside them.
The notation is: attribute: value.
Comments start with # and last to the end of line. Empty lines are
ignored as is whitespace at the beginning of a line.
The utility local-unbound-checkconf(8) can be used to check
unbound.conf prior to usage.
An example config file is shown below. Copy this to /etc/unbound/unbound.conf
and start the server with:
$ local-unbound -c /etc/unbound/unbound.conf
Most settings are the defaults. Stop the server with:
$ kill `cat /etc/unbound/unbound.pid`
Below is a minimal config file. The source distribution contains
an extensive example.conf file with all the options.
# unbound.conf(5) config file for local-unbound(8).
server:
directory: "/etc/unbound"
username: unbound
# make sure local-unbound can access entropy from inside the chroot.
# e.g. on linux the use these commands (on BSD, devfs(8) is used):
# mount --bind -n /dev/urandom /etc/unbound/dev/urandom
# and mount --bind -n /dev/log /etc/unbound/dev/log
chroot: "/etc/unbound"
# logfile: "/etc/unbound/unbound.log" #uncomment to use logfile.
pidfile: "/etc/unbound/unbound.pid"
# verbosity: 1 # uncomment and increase to get more logging.
# listen on all interfaces, answer queries from the local subnet.
interface: 0.0.0.0
interface: ::0
access-control: 10.0.0.0/8 allow
access-control: 2001:DB8::/64 allow
There must be whitespace between keywords. Attribute keywords end with a colon
':'. An attribute is followed by a value, or its containing attributes in
which case it is referred to as a clause. Clauses can be repeated throughout
the file (or included files) to group attributes under the same clause.
Files can be included using the include: directive. It can
appear anywhere, it accepts a single file name as argument. Processing
continues as if the text from the included file was copied into the config
file at that point. If also using chroot, using full path names for the
included files works, relative pathnames for the included names work if the
directory where the daemon is started equals its chroot/working directory or
is specified before the include statement with directory: dir. Wildcards can
be used to include multiple files, see glob(7).
For a more structural include option, the include-toplevel:
directive can be used. This closes whatever clause is currently active (if
any) and forces the use of clauses in the included files and right after
this directive.
These options are part of the server: clause.
- verbosity: <number>
- The verbosity number, level 0 means no verbosity, only errors. Level 1
gives operational information. Level 2 gives detailed operational
information including short information per query. Level 3 gives query
level information, output per query. Level 4 gives algorithm level
information. Level 5 logs client identification for cache misses. Default
is level 1. The verbosity can also be increased from the commandline, see
local-unbound(8).
- statistics-interval: <seconds>
- The number of seconds between printing statistics to the log for every
thread. Disable with value 0 or "". Default is disabled. The
histogram statistics are only printed if replies were sent during the
statistics interval, requestlist statistics are printed for every interval
(but can be 0). This is because the median calculation requires data to be
present.
- statistics-cumulative: <yes or no>
- If enabled, statistics are cumulative since starting Local-unbound,
without clearing the statistics counters after logging the statistics.
Default is no.
- extended-statistics: <yes or no>
- If enabled, extended statistics are printed from
local-unbound-control(8). Default is off, because keeping track of
more statistics takes time. The counters are listed in
local-unbound-control(8).
- num-threads: <number>
- The number of threads to create to serve clients. Use 1 for no
threading.
- port: <port number>
- The port number, default 53, on which the server responds to queries.
- interface: <ip address[@port]>
- Interface to use to connect to the network. This interface is listened to
for queries from clients, and answers to clients are given from it. Can be
given multiple times to work on several interfaces. If none are given the
default is to listen to localhost. If an interface name is used instead of
an ip address, the list of ip addresses on that interface are used. The
interfaces are not changed on a reload (kill -HUP) but only on restart. A
port number can be specified with @port (without spaces between interface
and port number), if not specified the default port (from port) is
used.
- ip-address: <ip address[@port]>
- Same as interface: (for ease of compatibility with nsd.conf).
- interface-automatic: <yes or no>
- Listen on all addresses on all (current and future) interfaces, detect the
source interface on UDP queries and copy them to replies. This is a lot
like ip-transparent, but this option services all interfaces whilst with
ip-transparent you can select which (future) interfaces Local-unbound
provides service on. This feature is experimental, and needs support in
your OS for particular socket options. Default value is no.
- outgoing-interface: <ip address or ip6 netblock>
- Interface to use to connect to the network. This interface is used to send
queries to authoritative servers and receive their replies. Can be given
multiple times to work on several interfaces. If none are given the
default (all) is used. You can specify the same interfaces in
interface: and outgoing-interface: lines, the interfaces are
then used for both purposes. Outgoing queries are sent via a random
outgoing interface to counter spoofing.
- If an IPv6 netblock is specified instead of an individual IPv6 address,
outgoing UDP queries will use a randomised source address taken from the
netblock to counter spoofing. Requires the IPv6 netblock to be routed to
the host running Local-unbound, and requires OS support for unprivileged
non-local binds (currently only supported on Linux). Several netblocks may
be specified with multiple outgoing-interface: options, but do not
specify both an individual IPv6 address and an IPv6 netblock, or the
randomisation will be compromised. Consider combining with prefer-ip6:
yes to increase the likelihood of IPv6 nameservers being selected for
queries. On Linux you need these two commands to be able to use the
freebind socket option to receive traffic for the ip6 netblock: ip -6 addr
add mynetblock/64 dev lo && ip -6 route add local mynetblock/64
dev lo
- outgoing-range: <number>
- Number of ports to open. This number of file descriptors can be opened per
thread. Must be at least 1. Default depends on compile options. Larger
numbers need extra resources from the operating system. For performance a
very large value is best, use libevent to make this possible.
- outgoing-port-permit: <port number or range>
- Permit Local-unbound to open this port or range of ports for use to send
queries. A larger number of permitted outgoing ports increases resilience
against spoofing attempts. Make sure these ports are not needed by other
daemons. By default only ports above 1024 that have not been assigned by
IANA are used. Give a port number or a range of the form
"low-high", without spaces.
- The outgoing-port-permit and outgoing-port-avoid statements
are processed in the line order of the config file, adding the permitted
ports and subtracting the avoided ports from the set of allowed ports. The
processing starts with the non IANA allocated ports above 1024 in the set
of allowed ports.
- outgoing-port-avoid: <port number or range>
- Do not permit Local-unbound to open this port or range of ports for use to
send queries. Use this to make sure Local-unbound does not grab a port
that another daemon needs. The port is avoided on all outgoing interfaces,
both IP4 and IP6. By default only ports above 1024 that have not been
assigned by IANA are used. Give a port number or a range of the form
"low-high", without spaces.
- outgoing-num-tcp: <number>
- Number of outgoing TCP buffers to allocate per thread. Default is 10. If
set to 0, or if do-tcp is "no", no TCP queries to authoritative
servers are done. For larger installations increasing this value is a good
idea.
- incoming-num-tcp: <number>
- Number of incoming TCP buffers to allocate per thread. Default is 10. If
set to 0, or if do-tcp is "no", no TCP queries from clients are
accepted. For larger installations increasing this value is a good
idea.
- edns-buffer-size: <number>
- Number of bytes size to advertise as the EDNS reassembly buffer size. This
is the value put into datagrams over UDP towards peers. The actual buffer
size is determined by msg-buffer-size (both for TCP and UDP). Do not set
higher than that value. Default is 1232 which is the DNS Flag Day 2020
recommendation. Setting to 512 bypasses even the most stringent path MTU
problems, but is seen as extreme, since the amount of TCP fallback
generated is excessive (probably also for this resolver, consider tuning
the outgoing tcp number).
- max-udp-size: <number>
- Maximum UDP response size (not applied to TCP response). 65536 disables
the udp response size maximum, and uses the choice from the client,
always. Suggested values are 512 to 4096. Default is 4096.
- stream-wait-size: <number>
- Number of bytes size maximum to use for waiting stream buffers. Default is
4 megabytes. A plain number is in bytes, append 'k', 'm' or 'g' for
kilobytes, megabytes or gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in a megabyte). As TCP
and TLS streams queue up multiple results, the amount of memory used for
these buffers does not exceed this number, otherwise the responses are
dropped. This manages the total memory usage of the server (under heavy
use), the number of requests that can be queued up per connection is also
limited, with further requests waiting in TCP buffers.
- msg-buffer-size: <number>
- Number of bytes size of the message buffers. Default is 65552 bytes,
enough for 64 Kb packets, the maximum DNS message size. No message larger
than this can be sent or received. Can be reduced to use less memory, but
some requests for DNS data, such as for huge resource records, will result
in a SERVFAIL reply to the client.
- msg-cache-size: <number>
- Number of bytes size of the message cache. Default is 4 megabytes. A plain
number is in bytes, append 'k', 'm' or 'g' for kilobytes, megabytes or
gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in a megabyte).
- msg-cache-slabs: <number>
- Number of slabs in the message cache. Slabs reduce lock contention by
threads. Must be set to a power of 2. Setting (close) to the number of
cpus is a reasonable guess.
- num-queries-per-thread: <number>
- The number of queries that every thread will service simultaneously. If
more queries arrive that need servicing, and no queries can be jostled out
(see jostle-timeout), then the queries are dropped. This forces the
client to resend after a timeout; allowing the server time to work on the
existing queries. Default depends on compile options, 512 or 1024.
- jostle-timeout: <msec>
- Timeout used when the server is very busy. Set to a value that usually
results in one roundtrip to the authority servers. If too many queries
arrive, then 50% of the queries are allowed to run to completion, and the
other 50% are replaced with the new incoming query if they have already
spent more than their allowed time. This protects against denial of
service by slow queries or high query rates. Default 200 milliseconds. The
effect is that the qps for long-lasting queries is about
(numqueriesperthread / 2) / (average time for such long queries) qps. The
qps for short queries can be about (numqueriesperthread / 2) /
(jostletimeout in whole seconds) qps per thread, about (1024/2)*5 = 2560
qps by default.
- delay-close: <msec>
- Extra delay for timeouted UDP ports before they are closed, in msec.
Default is 0, and that disables it. This prevents very delayed answer
packets from the upstream (recursive) servers from bouncing against closed
ports and setting off all sort of close-port counters, with eg. 1500 msec.
When timeouts happen you need extra sockets, it checks the ID and remote
IP of packets, and unwanted packets are added to the unwanted packet
counter.
- udp-connect: <yes or no>
- Perform connect for UDP sockets that mitigates ICMP side channel leakage.
Default is yes.
- unknown-server-time-limit: <msec>
- The wait time in msec for waiting for an unknown server to reply. Increase
this if you are behind a slow satellite link, to eg. 1128. That would then
avoid re-querying every initial query because it times out. Default is 376
msec.
- so-rcvbuf: <number>
- If not 0, then set the SO_RCVBUF socket option to get more buffer space on
UDP port 53 incoming queries. So that short spikes on busy servers do not
drop packets (see counter in netstat -su). Default is 0 (use system
value). Otherwise, the number of bytes to ask for, try "4m" on a
busy server. The OS caps it at a maximum, on linux Unbound needs root
permission to bypass the limit, or the admin can use sysctl
net.core.rmem_max. On BSD change kern.ipc.maxsockbuf in /etc/sysctl.conf.
On OpenBSD change header and recompile kernel. On Solaris ndd -set
/dev/udp udp_max_buf 8388608.
- so-sndbuf: <number>
- If not 0, then set the SO_SNDBUF socket option to get more buffer space on
UDP port 53 outgoing queries. This for very busy servers handles spikes in
answer traffic, otherwise 'send: resource temporarily unavailable' can get
logged, the buffer overrun is also visible by netstat -su. Default is 0
(use system value). Specify the number of bytes to ask for, try
"4m" on a very busy server. The OS caps it at a maximum, on
linux Local-unbound needs root permission to bypass the limit, or the
admin can use sysctl net.core.wmem_max. On BSD, Solaris changes are
similar to so-rcvbuf.
- so-reuseport: <yes or no>
- If yes, then open dedicated listening sockets for incoming queries for
each thread and try to set the SO_REUSEPORT socket option on each socket.
May distribute incoming queries to threads more evenly. Default is yes. On
Linux it is supported in kernels >= 3.9. On other systems, FreeBSD, OSX
it may also work. You can enable it (on any platform and kernel), it then
attempts to open the port and passes the option if it was available at
compile time, if that works it is used, if it fails, it continues silently
(unless verbosity 3) without the option. At extreme load it could be
better to turn it off to distribute the queries evenly, reported for Linux
systems (4.4.x).
- ip-transparent: <yes or no>
- If yes, then use IP_TRANSPARENT socket option on sockets where Unbound is
listening for incoming traffic. Default no. Allows you to bind to
non-local interfaces. For example for non-existent IP addresses that are
going to exist later on, with host failover configuration. This is a lot
like interface-automatic, but that one services all interfaces and with
this option you can select which (future) interfaces Unbound provides
service on. This option needs Local-unbound to be started with root
permissions on some systems. The option uses IP_BINDANY on FreeBSD systems
and SO_BINDANY on OpenBSD systems.
- ip-freebind: <yes or no>
- If yes, then use IP_FREEBIND socket option on sockets where Unbound is
listening to incoming traffic. Default no. Allows you to bind to IP
addresses that are nonlocal or do not exist, like when the network
interface or IP address is down. Exists only on Linux, where the similar
ip-transparent option is also available.
- ip-dscp: <number>
- The value of the Differentiated Services Codepoint (DSCP) in the
differentiated services field (DS) of the outgoing IP packet headers. The
field replaces the outdated IPv4 Type-Of-Service field and the IPV6
traffic class field.
- rrset-cache-size: <number>
- Number of bytes size of the RRset cache. Default is 4 megabytes. A plain
number is in bytes, append 'k', 'm' or 'g' for kilobytes, megabytes or
gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in a megabyte).
- rrset-cache-slabs: <number>
- Number of slabs in the RRset cache. Slabs reduce lock contention by
threads. Must be set to a power of 2.
- cache-max-ttl: <seconds>
- Time to live maximum for RRsets and messages in the cache. Default is
86400 seconds (1 day). When the TTL expires, the cache item has expired.
Can be set lower to force the resolver to query for data often, and not
trust (very large) TTL values. Downstream clients also see the lower
TTL.
- cache-min-ttl: <seconds>
- Time to live minimum for RRsets and messages in the cache. Default is 0.
If the minimum kicks in, the data is cached for longer than the domain
owner intended, and thus less queries are made to look up the data. Zero
makes sure the data in the cache is as the domain owner intended, higher
values, especially more than an hour or so, can lead to trouble as the
data in the cache does not match up with the actual data any more.
- cache-max-negative-ttl: <seconds>
- Time to live maximum for negative responses, these have a SOA in the
authority section that is limited in time. Default is 3600. This applies
to nxdomain and nodata answers.
- infra-host-ttl: <seconds>
- Time to live for entries in the host cache. The host cache contains
roundtrip timing, lameness and EDNS support information. Default is
900.
- infra-cache-slabs: <number>
- Number of slabs in the infrastructure cache. Slabs reduce lock contention
by threads. Must be set to a power of 2.
- infra-cache-numhosts: <number>
- Number of hosts for which information is cached. Default is 10000.
- infra-cache-min-rtt: <msec>
- Lower limit for dynamic retransmit timeout calculation in infrastructure
cache. Default is 50 milliseconds. Increase this value if using forwarders
needing more time to do recursive name resolution.
- infra-keep-probing: <yes or no>
- If enabled the server keeps probing hosts that are down, in the one probe
at a time regime. Default is no. Hosts that are down, eg. they did not
respond during the one probe at a time period, are marked as down and it
may take infra-host-ttl time to get probed again.
- define-tag: <"list of tags">
- Define the tags that can be used with local-zone and access-control.
Enclose the list between quotes ("") and put spaces between
tags.
- do-ip4: <yes or no>
- Enable or disable whether ip4 queries are answered or issued. Default is
yes.
- do-ip6: <yes or no>
- Enable or disable whether ip6 queries are answered or issued. Default is
yes. If disabled, queries are not answered on IPv6, and queries are not
sent on IPv6 to the internet nameservers. With this option you can disable
the ipv6 transport for sending DNS traffic, it does not impact the
contents of the DNS traffic, which may have ip4 and ip6 addresses in
it.
- prefer-ip4: <yes or no>
- If enabled, prefer IPv4 transport for sending DNS queries to internet
nameservers. Default is no. Useful if the IPv6 netblock the server has,
the entire /64 of that is not owned by one operator and the reputation of
the netblock /64 is an issue, using IPv4 then uses the IPv4 filters that
the upstream servers have.
- prefer-ip6: <yes or no>
- If enabled, prefer IPv6 transport for sending DNS queries to internet
nameservers. Default is no.
- do-udp: <yes or no>
- Enable or disable whether UDP queries are answered or issued. Default is
yes.
- do-tcp: <yes or no>
- Enable or disable whether TCP queries are answered or issued. Default is
yes.
- tcp-mss: <number>
- Maximum segment size (MSS) of TCP socket on which the server responds 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). Default is system default MSS determined
by interface MTU and negotiation between server and client.
- outgoing-tcp-mss: <number>
- Maximum segment size (MSS) of TCP socket for outgoing queries (from
Local-unbound to other servers). 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). Default is system
default MSS determined by interface MTU and negotiation between
Local-unbound and other servers.
- tcp-idle-timeout: <msec>
- The period Local-unbound will wait for a query on a TCP connection. If
this timeout expires Local-unbound closes the connection. This option
defaults to 30000 milliseconds. When the number of free incoming TCP
buffers falls below 50% of the total number configured, the option value
used is progressively reduced, first to 1% of the configured value, then
to 0.2% of the configured value if the number of free buffers falls below
35% of the total number configured, and finally to 0 if the number of free
buffers falls below 20% of the total number configured. A minimum timeout
of 200 milliseconds is observed regardless of the option value used.
- tcp-reuse-timeout: <msec>
- The period Local-unbound will keep TCP persistent connections open to
authority servers. This option defaults to 60000 milliseconds.
- max-reuse-tcp-queries: <number>
- The maximum number of queries that can be sent on a persistent TCP
connection. This option defaults to 200 queries.
- tcp-auth-query-timeout: <number>
- Timeout in milliseconds for TCP queries to auth servers. This option
defaults to 3000 milliseconds.
- edns-tcp-keepalive: <yes or no>
- Enable or disable EDNS TCP Keepalive. Default is no.
- edns-tcp-keepalive-timeout: <msec>
- The period Local-unbound will wait for a query on a TCP connection when
EDNS TCP Keepalive is active. If this timeout expires Local-unbound closes
the connection. If the client supports the EDNS TCP Keepalive option,
Local-unbound sends the timeout value to the client to encourage it to
close the connection before the server times out. This option defaults to
120000 milliseconds. When the number of free incoming TCP buffers falls
below 50% of the total number configured, the advertised timeout is
progressively reduced to 1% of the configured value, then to 0.2% of the
configured value if the number of free buffers falls below 35% of the
total number configured, and finally to 0 if the number of free buffers
falls below 20% of the total number configured. A minimum actual timeout
of 200 milliseconds is observed regardless of the advertised timeout.
- tcp-upstream: <yes or no>
- Enable or disable whether the upstream queries use TCP only for transport.
Default is no. Useful in tunneling scenarios. If set to no you can specify
TCP transport only for selected forward or stub zones using
forward-tcp-upstream or stub-tcp-upstream respectively.
- udp-upstream-without-downstream: <yes or no>
- Enable udp upstream even if do-udp is no. Default is no, and this does not
change anything. Useful for TLS service providers, that want no udp
downstream but use udp to fetch data upstream.
- tls-upstream: <yes or no>
- Enabled or disable whether the upstream queries use TLS only for
transport. Default is no. Useful in tunneling scenarios. The TLS contains
plain DNS in TCP wireformat. The other server must support this (see
tls-service-key). If you enable this, also configure a
tls-cert-bundle or use tls-win-cert to load CA certs, otherwise the
connections cannot be authenticated. This option enables TLS for all of
them, but if you do not set this you can configure TLS specifically for
some forward zones with forward-tls-upstream. And also with
stub-tls-upstream.
- ssl-upstream: <yes or no>
- Alternate syntax for tls-upstream. If both are present in the
config file the last is used.
- tls-service-key: <file>
- If enabled, the server provides DNS-over-TLS or DNS-over-HTTPS service on
the TCP ports marked implicitly or explicitly for these services with
tls-port or https-port. The file must contain the private key for the TLS
session, the public certificate is in the tls-service-pem file and it must
also be specified if tls-service-key is specified. The default is
"", turned off. Enabling or disabling this service requires a
restart (a reload is not enough), because the key is read while root
permissions are held and before chroot (if any). The ports enabled
implicitly or explicitly via tls-port: and https-port: do
not provide normal DNS TCP service. Local-unbound needs to be compiled
with libnghttp2 in order to provide DNS-over-HTTPS.
- ssl-service-key: <file>
- Alternate syntax for tls-service-key.
- tls-service-pem: <file>
- The public key certificate pem file for the tls service. Default is
"", turned off.
- ssl-service-pem: <file>
- Alternate syntax for tls-service-pem.
- tls-port: <number>
- The port number on which to provide TCP TLS service, default 853, only
interfaces configured with that port number as @number get the TLS
service.
- ssl-port: <number>
- Alternate syntax for tls-port.
- tls-cert-bundle: <file>
- If null or "", no file is used. Set it to the certificate bundle
file, for example "/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt". These
certificates are used for authenticating connections made to outside
peers. For example auth-zone urls, and also DNS over TLS connections. It
is read at start up before permission drop and chroot.
- ssl-cert-bundle: <file>
- Alternate syntax for tls-cert-bundle.
- tls-win-cert: <yes or no>
- Add the system certificates to the cert bundle certificates for
authentication. If no cert bundle, it uses only these certificates.
Default is no. On windows this option uses the certificates from the cert
store. Use the tls-cert-bundle option on other systems.
- tls-additional-port: <portnr>
- List portnumbers as tls-additional-port, and when interfaces are defined,
eg. with the @port suffix, as this port number, they provide dns over TLS
service. Can list multiple, each on a new statement.
- tls-session-ticket-keys: <file>
- If not "", lists files with 80 bytes of random contents that are
used to perform TLS session resumption for clients using the Local-unbound
server. These files contain the secret key for the TLS session tickets.
First key use to encrypt and decrypt TLS session tickets. Other keys use
to decrypt only. With this you can roll over to new keys, by generating a
new first file and allowing decrypt of the old file by listing it after
the first file for some time, after the wait clients are not using the old
key any more and the old key can be removed. One way to create the file is
dd if=/dev/random bs=1 count=80 of=ticket.dat The first 16 bytes should be
different from the old one if you create a second key, that is the name
used to identify the key. Then there is 32 bytes random data for an AES
key and then 32 bytes random data for the HMAC key.
- tls-ciphers: <string with cipher list>
- Set the list of ciphers to allow when serving TLS. Use "" for
defaults, and that is the default.
- tls-ciphersuites: <string with ciphersuites list>
- Set the list of ciphersuites to allow when serving TLS. This is for newer
TLS 1.3 connections. Use "" for defaults, and that is the
default.
- pad-responses: <yes or no>
- If enabled, TLS serviced queries that contained an EDNS Padding option
will cause responses padded to the closest multiple of the size specified
in pad-responses-block-size. Default is yes.
- pad-responses-block-size: <number>
- The block size with which to pad responses serviced over TLS. Only
responses to padded queries will be padded. Default is 468.
- pad-queries: <yes or no>
- If enabled, all queries sent over TLS upstreams will be padded to the
closest multiple of the size specified in pad-queries-block-size.
Default is yes.
- pad-queries-block-size: <number>
- The block size with which to pad queries sent over TLS upstreams. Default
is 128.
- tls-use-sni: <yes or no>
- Enable or disable sending the SNI extension on TLS connections. Default is
yes. Changing the value requires a reload.
- https-port: <number>
- The port number on which to provide DNS-over-HTTPS service, default 443,
only interfaces configured with that port number as @number get the HTTPS
service.
- http-endpoint: <endpoint string>
- The HTTP endpoint to provide DNS-over-HTTPS service on. Default
"/dns-query".
- http-max-streams: <number of streams>
- Number used in the SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS parameter in the HTTP/2
SETTINGS frame for DNS-over-HTTPS connections. Default 100.
- http-query-buffer-size: <size in bytes>
- Maximum number of bytes used for all HTTP/2 query buffers combined. These
buffers contain (partial) DNS queries waiting for request stream
completion. An RST_STREAM frame will be send to streams exceeding this
limit. Default is 4 megabytes. A plain number is in bytes, append 'k', 'm'
or 'g' for kilobytes, megabytes or gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in a
megabyte).
- http-response-buffer-size: <size in bytes>
- Maximum number of bytes used for all HTTP/2 response buffers combined.
These buffers contain DNS responses waiting to be written back to the
clients. An RST_STREAM frame will be send to streams exceeding this limit.
Default is 4 megabytes. A plain number is in bytes, append 'k', 'm' or 'g'
for kilobytes, megabytes or gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in a
megabyte).
- http-nodelay: <yes or no>
- Set TCP_NODELAY socket option on sockets used to provide DNS-over-HTTPS
service. Ignored if the option is not available. Default is yes.
- http-notls-downstream: <yes or no>
- Disable use of TLS for the downstream DNS-over-HTTP connections. Useful
for local back end servers. Default is no.
- use-systemd: <yes or no>
- Enable or disable systemd socket activation. Default is no.
- do-daemonize: <yes or no>
- Enable or disable whether the Local-unbound server forks into the
background as a daemon. Set the value to no when Local-unbound runs
as systemd service. Default is yes.
- tcp-connection-limit: <IP netblock> <limit>
- Allow up to limit simultaneous TCP connections from the given
netblock. When at the limit, further connections are accepted but closed
immediately. This option is experimental at this time.
- access-control: <IP netblock> <action>
- The netblock is given as an IP4 or IP6 address with /size appended for a
classless network block. The action can be deny, refuse,
allow, allow_setrd, allow_snoop,
deny_non_local or refuse_non_local. The most specific
netblock match is used, if none match deny is used. The order of
the access-control statements therefore does not matter.
- The action deny stops queries from hosts from that netblock.
- The action refuse stops queries too, but sends a DNS rcode REFUSED
error message back.
- The action allow gives access to clients from that netblock. It
gives only access for recursion clients (which is what almost all clients
need). Nonrecursive queries are refused.
- The allow action does allow nonrecursive queries to access the
local-data that is configured. The reason is that this does not involve
the Local-unbound server recursive lookup algorithm, and static data is
served in the reply. This supports normal operations where nonrecursive
queries are made for the authoritative data. For nonrecursive queries any
replies from the dynamic cache are refused.
- The allow_setrd action ignores the recursion desired (RD) bit and
treats all requests as if the recursion desired bit is set. Note that this
behavior violates RFC 1034 which states that a name server should never
perform recursive service unless asked via the RD bit since this
interferes with trouble shooting of name servers and their databases. This
prohibited behavior may be useful if another DNS server must forward
requests for specific zones to a resolver DNS server, but only supports
stub domains and sends queries to the resolver DNS server with the RD bit
cleared.
- The action allow_snoop gives nonrecursive access too. This give
both recursive and non recursive access. The name allow_snoop
refers to cache snooping, a technique to use nonrecursive queries to
examine the cache contents (for malicious acts). However, nonrecursive
queries can also be a valuable debugging tool (when you want to examine
the cache contents). In that case use allow_snoop for your
administration host.
- By default only localhost is allowed, the rest is refused.
The default is refused, because that is protocol-friendly. The DNS
protocol is not designed to handle dropped packets due to policy, and
dropping may result in (possibly excessive) retried queries.
- The deny_non_local and refuse_non_local settings are for hosts that are
only allowed to query for the authoritative local-data, they are not
allowed full recursion but only the static data. With deny_non_local,
messages that are disallowed are dropped, with refuse_non_local they
receive error code REFUSED.
- access-control-tag: <IP netblock> <"list of
tags">
- Assign tags to access-control elements. Clients using this access control
element use localzones that are tagged with one of these tags. Tags must
be defined in define-tags. Enclose list of tags in quotes
("") and put spaces between tags. If access-control-tag is
configured for a netblock that does not have an access-control, an
access-control element with action allow is configured for this
netblock.
- access-control-tag-action: <IP netblock> <tag>
<action>
- Set action for particular tag for given access control element. If you
have multiple tag values, the tag used to lookup the action is the first
tag match between access-control-tag and local-zone-tag where
"first" comes from the order of the define-tag values.
- access-control-tag-data: <IP netblock> <tag>
<"resource record string">
- Set redirect data for particular tag for given access control
element.
- access-control-view: <IP netblock> <view
name>
- Set view for given access control element.
- chroot: <directory>
- If chroot is enabled, you should pass the configfile (from the
commandline) as a full path from the original root. After the chroot has
been performed the now defunct portion of the config file path is removed
to be able to reread the config after a reload.
- All other file paths (working dir, logfile, roothints, and key files) can
be specified in several ways: as an absolute path relative to the new
root, as a relative path to the working directory, or as an absolute path
relative to the original root. In the last case the path is adjusted to
remove the unused portion.
- The pidfile can be either a relative path to the working directory, or an
absolute path relative to the original root. It is written just prior to
chroot and dropping permissions. This allows the pidfile to be
/var/run/unbound.pid and the chroot to be /var/unbound, for example. Note
that Local-unbound is not able to remove the pidfile after termination
when it is located outside of the chroot directory.
- Additionally, Local-unbound may need to access /dev/urandom (for entropy)
from inside the chroot.
- If given a chroot is done to the given directory. By default chroot is
enabled and the default is "@UNBOUND_CHROOT_DIR@". If you give
"" no chroot is performed.
- username: <name>
- If given, after binding the port the user privileges are dropped. Default
is "@UNBOUND_USERNAME@". If you give username: "" no
user change is performed.
- If this user is not capable of binding the port, reloads (by signal HUP)
will still retain the opened ports. If you change the port number in the
config file, and that new port number requires privileges, then a reload
will fail; a restart is needed.
- directory: <directory>
- Sets the working directory for the program. Default is
"@UNBOUND_RUN_DIR@". On Windows the string
"%EXECUTABLE%" tries to change to the directory that unbound.exe
resides in. If you give a server: directory: dir before include: file
statements then those includes can be relative to the working
directory.
- logfile: <filename>
- If "" is given, logging goes to stderr, or nowhere once
daemonized. The logfile is appended to, in the following format:
[seconds since 1970] local-unbound[pid:tid]: type: message.
If this option is given, the use-syslog is option is set to "no".
The logfile is reopened (for append) when the config file is reread, on
SIGHUP.
- use-syslog: <yes or no>
- Sets Local-unbound to send log messages to the syslogd, using
syslog(3). The log facility LOG_DAEMON is used, with identity
"local-unbound". The logfile setting is overridden when
use-syslog is turned on. The default is to log to syslog.
- log-identity: <string>
- If "" is given (default), then the name of the executable,
usually "local-unbound" is used to report to the log. Enter a
string to override it with that, which is useful on systems that run more
than one instance of Local-unbound, with different configurations, so that
the logs can be easily distinguished against.
- log-time-ascii: <yes or no>
- Sets logfile lines to use a timestamp in UTC ascii. Default is no, which
prints the seconds since 1970 in brackets. No effect if using syslog, in
that case syslog formats the timestamp printed into the log files.
- log-queries: <yes or no>
- Prints one line per query to the log, with the log timestamp and IP
address, name, type and class. Default is no. Note that it takes time to
print these lines which makes the server (significantly) slower. Odd
(nonprintable) characters in names are printed as '?'.
- log-replies: <yes or no>
- Prints one line per reply to the log, with the log timestamp and IP
address, name, type, class, return code, time to resolve, from cache and
response size. Default is no. Note that it takes time to print these lines
which makes the server (significantly) slower. Odd (nonprintable)
characters in names are printed as '?'.
- log-tag-queryreply: <yes or no>
- Prints the word 'query' and 'reply' with log-queries and log-replies. This
makes filtering logs easier. The default is off (for backwards
compatibility).
- log-local-actions: <yes or no>
- Print log lines to inform about local zone actions. These lines are like
the local-zone type inform prints out, but they are also printed for the
other types of local zones.
- log-servfail: <yes or no>
- Print log lines that say why queries return SERVFAIL to clients. This is
separate from the verbosity debug logs, much smaller, and printed at the
error level, not the info level of debug info from verbosity.
- pidfile: <filename>
- The process id is written to the file. Default is
"@UNBOUND_PIDFILE@". So,
kill -HUP `cat @UNBOUND_PIDFILE@`
triggers a reload,
kill -TERM `cat @UNBOUND_PIDFILE@`
gracefully terminates.
- root-hints: <filename>
- Read the root hints from this file. Default is nothing, using builtin
hints for the IN class. The file has the format of zone files, with root
nameserver names and addresses only. The default may become outdated, when
servers change, therefore it is good practice to use a root-hints
file.
- hide-identity: <yes or no>
- If enabled id.server and hostname.bind queries are refused.
- identity: <string>
- Set the identity to report. If set to "", the default, then the
hostname of the server is returned.
- hide-version: <yes or no>
- If enabled version.server and version.bind queries are refused.
- version: <string>
- Set the version to report. If set to "", the default, then the
package version is returned.
- hide-http-user-agent: <yes or no>
- If enabled the HTTP header User-Agent is not set. Use with caution as some
webserver configurations may reject HTTP requests lacking this header. If
needed, it is better to explicitly set the http-user-agent
below.
- http-user-agent: <string>
- Set the HTTP User-Agent header for outgoing HTTP requests. If set to
"", the default, then the package name and version are
used.
- 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.
- hide-trustanchor: <yes or no>
- If enabled trustanchor.local-unbound queries are refused.
- target-fetch-policy: <"list of
numbers">
- Set the target fetch policy used by Local-unbound to determine if it
should fetch nameserver target addresses opportunistically. The policy is
described per dependency depth.
- The number of values determines the maximum dependency depth that
Local-unbound will pursue in answering a query. A value of -1 means to
fetch all targets opportunistically for that dependency depth. A value of
0 means to fetch on demand only. A positive value fetches that many
targets opportunistically.
- Enclose the list between quotes ("") and put spaces between
numbers. The default is "3 2 1 0 0". Setting all zeroes, "0
0 0 0 0" gives behaviour closer to that of BIND 9, while setting
"-1 -1 -1 -1 -1" gives behaviour rumoured to be closer to that
of BIND 8.
- harden-short-bufsize: <yes or no>
- Very small EDNS buffer sizes from queries are ignored. Default is on, as
described in the standard.
- harden-large-queries: <yes or no>
- Very large queries are ignored. Default is off, since it is legal protocol
wise to send these, and could be necessary for operation if TSIG or EDNS
payload is very large.
- harden-glue: <yes or no>
- Will trust glue only if it is within the servers authority. Default is
yes.
- harden-dnssec-stripped: <yes or no>
- Require DNSSEC data for trust-anchored zones, if such data is absent, the
zone becomes bogus. If turned off, and no DNSSEC data is received (or the
DNSKEY data fails to validate), then the zone is made insecure, this
behaves like there is no trust anchor. You could turn this off if you are
sometimes behind an intrusive firewall (of some sort) that removes DNSSEC
data from packets, or a zone changes from signed to unsigned to badly
signed often. If turned off you run the risk of a downgrade attack that
disables security for a zone. Default is yes.
- harden-below-nxdomain: <yes or no>
- From RFC 8020 (with title "NXDOMAIN: There Really Is Nothing
Underneath"), returns nxdomain to queries for a name below another
name that is already known to be nxdomain. DNSSEC mandates noerror for
empty nonterminals, hence this is possible. Very old software might return
nxdomain for empty nonterminals (that usually happen for reverse IP
address lookups), and thus may be incompatible with this. To try to avoid
this only DNSSEC-secure nxdomains are used, because the old software does
not have DNSSEC. Default is yes. The nxdomain must be secure, this means
nsec3 with optout is insufficient.
- harden-referral-path: <yes or no>
- Harden the referral path by performing additional queries for
infrastructure data. Validates the replies if trust anchors are configured
and the zones are signed. This enforces DNSSEC validation on nameserver NS
sets and the nameserver addresses that are encountered on the referral
path to the answer. Default no, because it burdens the authority servers,
and it is not RFC standard, and could lead to performance problems because
of the extra query load that is generated. Experimental option. If you
enable it consider adding more numbers after the target-fetch-policy to
increase the max depth that is checked to.
- harden-algo-downgrade: <yes or no>
- Harden against algorithm downgrade when multiple algorithms are advertised
in the DS record. If no, allows the weakest algorithm to validate the
zone. Default is no. Zone signers must produce zones that allow this
feature to work, but sometimes they do not, and turning this option off
avoids that validation failure.
- use-caps-for-id: <yes or no>
- Use 0x20-encoded random bits in the query to foil spoof attempts. This
perturbs the lowercase and uppercase of query names sent to authority
servers and checks if the reply still has the correct casing. Disabled by
default. This feature is an experimental implementation of draft
dns-0x20.
- caps-exempt: <domain>
- Exempt the domain so that it does not receive caps-for-id perturbed
queries. For domains that do not support 0x20 and also fail with fallback
because they keep sending different answers, like some load balancers. Can
be given multiple times, for different domains.
- caps-whitelist: <yes or no>
- Alternate syntax for caps-exempt.
- qname-minimisation: <yes or no>
- Send minimum amount of information to upstream servers to enhance privacy.
Only send minimum required labels of the QNAME and set QTYPE to A when
possible. Best effort approach; full QNAME and original QTYPE will be sent
when upstream replies with a RCODE other than NOERROR, except when
receiving NXDOMAIN from a DNSSEC signed zone. Default is yes.
- qname-minimisation-strict: <yes or no>
- QNAME minimisation in strict mode. Do not fall-back to sending full QNAME
to potentially broken nameservers. A lot of domains will not be resolvable
when this option in enabled. Only use if you know what you are doing. This
option only has effect when qname-minimisation is enabled. Default is
no.
- aggressive-nsec: <yes or no>
- Aggressive NSEC uses the DNSSEC NSEC chain to synthesize NXDOMAIN and
other denials, using information from previous NXDOMAINs answers. Default
is yes. It helps to reduce the query rate towards targets that get a very
high nonexistent name lookup rate.
- private-address: <IP address or subnet>
- Give IPv4 of IPv6 addresses or classless subnets. These are addresses on
your private network, and are not allowed to be returned for public
internet names. Any occurrence of such addresses are removed from DNS
answers. Additionally, the DNSSEC validator may mark the answers bogus.
This protects against so-called DNS Rebinding, where a user browser is
turned into a network proxy, allowing remote access through the browser to
other parts of your private network. Some names can be allowed to contain
your private addresses, by default all the local-data that you
configured is allowed to, and you can specify additional names using
private-domain. No private addresses are enabled by default. We
consider to enable this for the RFC1918 private IP address space by
default in later releases. That would enable private addresses for
10.0.0.0/8 172.16.0.0/12 192.168.0.0/16 169.254.0.0/16 fd00::/8 and
fe80::/10, since the RFC standards say these addresses should not be
visible on the public internet. Turning on 127.0.0.0/8 would hinder many
spamblocklists as they use that. Adding ::ffff:0:0/96 stops IPv4-mapped
IPv6 addresses from bypassing the filter.
- private-domain: <domain name>
- Allow this domain, and all its subdomains to contain private addresses.
Give multiple times to allow multiple domain names to contain private
addresses. Default is none.
- unwanted-reply-threshold: <number>
- If set, a total number of unwanted replies is kept track of in every
thread. When it reaches the threshold, a defensive action is taken and a
warning is printed to the log. The defensive action is to clear the rrset
and message caches, hopefully flushing away any poison. A value of 10
million is suggested. Default is 0 (turned off).
- do-not-query-address: <IP address>
- Do not query the given IP address. Can be IP4 or IP6. Append /num to
indicate a classless delegation netblock, for example like 10.2.3.4/24 or
2001::11/64.
- do-not-query-localhost: <yes or no>
- If yes, localhost is added to the do-not-query-address entries, both IP6
::1 and IP4 127.0.0.1/8. If no, then localhost can be used to send queries
to. Default is yes.
- prefetch: <yes or no>
- If yes, message cache elements are prefetched before they expire to keep
the cache up to date. Default is no. Turning it on gives about 10 percent
more traffic and load on the machine, but popular items do not expire from
the cache.
- prefetch-key: <yes or no>
- If yes, fetch the DNSKEYs earlier in the validation process, when a DS
record is encountered. This lowers the latency of requests. It does use a
little more CPU. Also if the cache is set to 0, it is no use. Default is
no.
- deny-any: <yes or no>
- If yes, deny queries of type ANY with an empty response. Default is no. If
disabled, Local-unbound responds with a short list of resource records if
some can be found in the cache and makes the upstream type ANY query if
there are none.
- rrset-roundrobin: <yes or no>
- If yes, Local-unbound rotates RRSet order in response (the random number
is taken from the query ID, for speed and thread safety). Default is
yes.
- minimal-responses: <yes or no>
- If yes, Local-unbound does not insert authority/additional sections into
response messages when those sections are not required. This reduces
response size significantly, and may avoid TCP fallback for some
responses. This may cause a slight speedup. The default is yes, even
though the DNS protocol RFCs mandate these sections, and the additional
content could be of use and save roundtrips for clients. Because they are
not used, and the saved roundtrips are easier saved with prefetch, whilst
this is faster.
- disable-dnssec-lame-check: <yes or no>
- If true, disables the DNSSEC lameness check in the iterator. This check
sees if RRSIGs are present in the answer, when dnssec is expected, and
retries another authority if RRSIGs are unexpectedly missing. The
validator will insist in RRSIGs for DNSSEC signed domains regardless of
this setting, if a trust anchor is loaded.
- module-config: <"module names">
- Module configuration, a list of module names separated by spaces, surround
the string with quotes (""). The modules can be respip,
validator, or iterator (and possibly more, see below).
Setting this to just "iterator" will result in a
non-validating server. Setting this to "validator
iterator" will turn on DNSSEC validation. The ordering of the
modules is significant, the order decides the order of processing. You
must also set trust-anchors for validation to be useful. Adding
respip to the front will cause RPZ processing to be done on all
queries. The default is "validator iterator".
- When the server is built with EDNS client subnet support the default is
"subnetcache validator iterator". Most modules
that need to be listed here have to be listed at the beginning of the
line. The subnetcachedb module has to be listed just before the iterator.
The python module can be listed in different places, it then processes the
output of the module it is just before. The dynlib module can be listed
pretty much anywhere, it is only a very thin wrapper that allows dynamic
libraries to run in its place.
- trust-anchor-file: <filename>
- File with trusted keys for validation. Both DS and DNSKEY entries can
appear in the file. The format of the file is the standard DNS Zone file
format. Default is "", or no trust anchor file.
- auto-trust-anchor-file: <filename>
- File with trust anchor for one zone, which is tracked with RFC5011 probes.
The probes are run several times per month, thus the machine must be
online frequently. The initial file can be one with contents as described
in trust-anchor-file. The file is written to when the anchor is
updated, so the Local-unbound user must have write permission. Write
permission to the file, but also to the directory it is in (to create a
temporary file, which is necessary to deal with filesystem full events),
it must also be inside the chroot (if that is used).
- trust-anchor: <"Resource Record">
- A DS or DNSKEY RR for a key to use for validation. Multiple entries can be
given to specify multiple trusted keys, in addition to the
trust-anchor-files. The resource record is entered in the same format as
'dig' or 'drill' prints them, the same format as in the zone file. Has to
be on a single line, with "" around it. A TTL can be specified
for ease of cut and paste, but is ignored. A class can be specified, but
class IN is default.
- trusted-keys-file: <filename>
- File with trusted keys for validation. Specify more than one file with
several entries, one file per entry. Like trust-anchor-file but has
a different file format. Format is BIND-9 style format, the trusted-keys {
name flag proto algo "key"; }; clauses are read. It is possible
to use wildcards with this statement, the wildcard is expanded on start
and on reload.
- trust-anchor-signaling: <yes or no>
- Send RFC8145 key tag query after trust anchor priming. Default is
yes.
- root-key-sentinel: <yes or no>
- Root key trust anchor sentinel. Default is yes.
- domain-insecure: <domain name>
- Sets domain name to be insecure, DNSSEC chain of trust is ignored towards
the domain name. So a trust anchor above the domain name can not make the
domain secure with a DS record, such a DS record is then ignored. Can be
given multiple times to specify multiple domains that are treated as if
unsigned. If you set trust anchors for the domain they override this
setting (and the domain is secured).
- This can be useful if you want to make sure a trust anchor for external
lookups does not affect an (unsigned) internal domain. A DS record
externally can create validation failures for that internal domain.
- val-override-date: <rrsig-style date spec>
- Default is "" or "0", which disables this debugging
feature. If enabled by giving a RRSIG style date, that date is used for
verifying RRSIG inception and expiration dates, instead of the current
date. Do not set this unless you are debugging signature inception and
expiration. The value -1 ignores the date altogether, useful for some
special applications.
- val-sig-skew-min: <seconds>
- Minimum number of seconds of clock skew to apply to validated signatures.
A value of 10% of the signature lifetime (expiration - inception) is used,
capped by this setting. Default is 3600 (1 hour) which allows for daylight
savings differences. Lower this value for more strict checking of short
lived signatures.
- val-sig-skew-max: <seconds>
- Maximum number of seconds of clock skew to apply to validated signatures.
A value of 10% of the signature lifetime (expiration - inception) is used,
capped by this setting. Default is 86400 (24 hours) which allows for
timezone setting problems in stable domains. Setting both min and max very
low disables the clock skew allowances. Setting both min and max very high
makes the validator check the signature timestamps less strictly.
- val-max-restart: <number>
- The maximum number the validator should restart validation with another
authority in case of failed validation. Default is 5.
- val-bogus-ttl: <number>
- The time to live for bogus data. This is data that has failed validation;
due to invalid signatures or other checks. The TTL from that data cannot
be trusted, and this value is used instead. The value is in seconds,
default 60. The time interval prevents repeated revalidation of bogus
data.
- val-clean-additional: <yes or no>
- Instruct the validator to remove data from the additional section of
secure messages that are not signed properly. Messages that are insecure,
bogus, indeterminate or unchecked are not affected. Default is yes. Use
this setting to protect the users that rely on this validator for
authentication from potentially bad data in the additional section.
- val-log-level: <number>
- Have the validator print validation failures to the log. Regardless of the
verbosity setting. Default is 0, off. At 1, for every user query that
fails a line is printed to the logs. This way you can monitor what happens
with validation. Use a diagnosis tool, such as dig or drill, to find out
why validation is failing for these queries. At 2, not only the query that
failed is printed but also the reason why Local-unbound thought it was
wrong and which server sent the faulty data.
- val-permissive-mode: <yes or no>
- Instruct the validator to mark bogus messages as indeterminate. The
security checks are performed, but if the result is bogus (failed
security), the reply is not withheld from the client with SERVFAIL as
usual. The client receives the bogus data. For messages that are found to
be secure the AD bit is set in replies. Also logging is performed as for
full validation. The default value is "no".
- ignore-cd-flag: <yes or no>
- Instruct Local-unbound to ignore the CD flag from clients and refuse to
return bogus answers to them. Thus, the CD (Checking Disabled) flag does
not disable checking any more. This is useful if legacy (w2008) servers
that set the CD flag but cannot validate DNSSEC themselves are the
clients, and then Local-unbound provides them with DNSSEC protection. The
default value is "no".
- serve-expired: <yes or no>
- If enabled, Local-unbound attempts to serve old responses from cache with
a TTL of serve-expired-reply-ttl in the response without waiting
for the actual resolution to finish. The actual resolution answer ends up
in the cache later on. Default is "no".
- serve-expired-ttl: <seconds>
- Limit serving of expired responses to configured seconds after expiration.
0 disables the limit. This option only applies when serve-expired
is enabled. A suggested value per RFC 8767 is between 86400 (1 day) and
259200 (3 days). The default is 0.
- serve-expired-ttl-reset: <yes or no>
- Set the TTL of expired records to the serve-expired-ttl value after
a failed attempt to retrieve the record from upstream. This makes sure
that the expired records will be served as long as there are queries for
it. Default is "no".
- serve-expired-reply-ttl: <seconds>
- TTL value to use when replying with expired data. If
serve-expired-client-timeout is also used then it is RECOMMENDED to
use 30 as the value (RFC 8767). The default is 30.
- serve-expired-client-timeout: <msec>
- Time in milliseconds before replying to the client with expired data. This
essentially enables the serve-stale behavior as specified in RFC 8767 that
first tries to resolve before immediately responding with expired data. A
recommended value per RFC 8767 is 1800. Setting this to 0 will disable
this behavior. Default is 0.
- serve-original-ttl: <yes or no>
- If enabled, Local-unbound will always return the original TTL as received
from the upstream name server rather than the decrementing TTL as stored
in the cache. This feature may be useful if Local-unbound serves as a
front-end to a hidden authoritative name server. Enabling this feature
does not impact cache expiry, it only changes the TTL Local-unbound embeds
in responses to queries. Note that enabling this feature implicitly
disables enforcement of the configured minimum and maximum TTL, as it is
assumed users who enable this feature do not want Local-unbound to change
the TTL obtained from an upstream server. Thus, the values set using
cache-min-ttl and cache-max-ttl are ignored. Default is
"no".
- val-nsec3-keysize-iterations: <"list of
values">
- List of keysize and iteration count values, separated by spaces,
surrounded by quotes. Default is "1024 150 2048 150 4096 150".
This determines the maximum allowed NSEC3 iteration count before a message
is simply marked insecure instead of performing the many hashing
iterations. The list must be in ascending order and have at least one
entry. If you set it to "1024 65535" there is no restriction to
NSEC3 iteration values. This table must be kept short; a very long list
could cause slower operation.
- zonemd-permissive-mode: <yes or no>
- If enabled the ZONEMD verification failures are only logged and do not
cause the zone to be blocked and only return servfail. Useful for testing
out if it works, or if the operator only wants to be notified of a problem
without disrupting service. Default is no.
- add-holddown: <seconds>
- Instruct the auto-trust-anchor-file probe mechanism for RFC5011
autotrust updates to add new trust anchors only after they have been
visible for this time. Default is 30 days as per the RFC.
- del-holddown: <seconds>
- Instruct the auto-trust-anchor-file probe mechanism for RFC5011
autotrust updates to remove revoked trust anchors after they have been
kept in the revoked list for this long. Default is 30 days as per the
RFC.
- keep-missing: <seconds>
- Instruct the auto-trust-anchor-file probe mechanism for RFC5011
autotrust updates to remove missing trust anchors after they have been
unseen for this long. This cleans up the state file if the target zone
does not perform trust anchor revocation, so this makes the auto probe
mechanism work with zones that perform regular (non-5011) rollovers. The
default is 366 days. The value 0 does not remove missing anchors, as per
the RFC.
- permit-small-holddown: <yes or no>
- Debug option that allows the autotrust 5011 rollover timers to assume very
small values. Default is no.
- key-cache-size: <number>
- Number of bytes size of the key cache. Default is 4 megabytes. A plain
number is in bytes, append 'k', 'm' or 'g' for kilobytes, megabytes or
gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in a megabyte).
- key-cache-slabs: <number>
- Number of slabs in the key cache. Slabs reduce lock contention by threads.
Must be set to a power of 2. Setting (close) to the number of cpus is a
reasonable guess.
- neg-cache-size: <number>
- Number of bytes size of the aggressive negative cache. Default is 1
megabyte. A plain number is in bytes, append 'k', 'm' or 'g' for
kilobytes, megabytes or gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in a megabyte).
- unblock-lan-zones: <yes or no>
- Default is disabled. If enabled, then for private address space, the
reverse lookups are no longer filtered. This allows Local-unbound when
running as dns service on a host where it provides service for that host,
to put out all of the queries for the 'lan' upstream. When enabled, only
localhost, 127.0.0.1 reverse and ::1 reverse zones are configured with
default local zones. Disable the option when Local-unbound is running as a
(DHCP-) DNS network resolver for a group of machines, where such lookups
should be filtered (RFC compliance), this also stops potential data
leakage about the local network to the upstream DNS servers.
- insecure-lan-zones: <yes or no>
- Default is disabled. If enabled, then reverse lookups in private address
space are not validated. This is usually required whenever
unblock-lan-zones is used.
- local-zone: <zone> <type>
- Configure a local zone. The type determines the answer to give if there is
no match from local-data. The types are deny, refuse, static, transparent,
redirect, nodefault, typetransparent, inform, inform_deny,
inform_redirect, always_transparent, always_refuse, always_nxdomain,
always_null, noview, and are explained below. After that the default
settings are listed. Use local-data: to enter data into the local zone.
Answers for local zones are authoritative DNS answers. By default the
zones are class IN.
- If you need more complicated authoritative data, with referrals,
wildcards, CNAME/DNAME support, or DNSSEC authoritative service, setup a
stub-zone for it as detailed in the stub zone section below.
- deny
- Do not send an answer, drop the query. If there is a match from local
data, the query is answered.
- refuse
- Send an error message reply, with rcode REFUSED. If there is a match from
local data, the query is answered.
- static
- If there is a match from local data, the query is answered. Otherwise, the
query is answered with nodata or nxdomain. For a negative answer a SOA is
included in the answer if present as local-data for the zone apex
domain.
- transparent
- If there is a match from local data, the query is answered. Otherwise if
the query has a different name, the query is resolved normally. If the
query is for a name given in localdata but no such type of data is given
in localdata, then a noerror nodata answer is returned. If no local-zone
is given local-data causes a transparent zone to be created by
default.
- typetransparent
- If there is a match from local data, the query is answered. If the query
is for a different name, or for the same name but for a different type,
the query is resolved normally. So, similar to transparent but types that
are not listed in local data are resolved normally, so if an A record is
in the local data that does not cause a nodata reply for AAAA
queries.
- redirect
- The query is answered from the local data for the zone name. There may be
no local data beneath the zone name. This answers queries for the zone,
and all subdomains of the zone with the local data for the zone. It can be
used to redirect a domain to return a different address record to the end
user, with local-zone: "example.com." redirect and local-data:
"example.com. A 127.0.0.1" queries for www.example.com and
www.foo.example.com are redirected, so that users with web browsers cannot
access sites with suffix example.com.
- inform
- The query is answered normally, same as transparent. The client IP address
(@portnumber) is printed to the logfile. The log message is: timestamp,
local-unbound-pid, info: zonename inform IP@port queryname type class.
This option can be used for normal resolution, but machines looking up
infected names are logged, eg. to run antivirus on them.
- inform_deny
- The query is dropped, like 'deny', and logged, like 'inform'. Ie. find
infected machines without answering the queries.
- inform_redirect
- The query is redirected, like 'redirect', and logged, like 'inform'. Ie.
answer queries with fixed data and also log the machines that ask.
- always_transparent
- Like transparent, but ignores local data and resolves normally.
- always_refuse
- Like refuse, but ignores local data and refuses the query.
- always_nxdomain
- Like static, but ignores local data and returns nxdomain for the
query.
- always_nodata
- Like static, but ignores local data and returns nodata for the query.
- always_deny
- Like deny, but ignores local data and drops the query.
- always_null
- Always returns 0.0.0.0 or ::0 for every name in the zone. Like redirect
with zero data for A and AAAA. Ignores local data in the zone. Used for
some block lists.
- noview
- Breaks out of that view and moves towards the global local zones for
answer to the query. If the view first is no, it'll resolve normally. If
view first is enabled, it'll break perform that step and check the global
answers. For when the view has view specific overrides but some zone has
to be answered from global local zone contents.
- nodefault
- Used to turn off default contents for AS112 zones. The other types also
turn off default contents for the zone. The 'nodefault' option has no
other effect than turning off default contents for the given zone. Use
nodefault if you use exactly that zone, if you want to use a
subzone, use transparent.
The default zones are localhost, reverse 127.0.0.1 and ::1, the
home.arpa, the onion, test, invalid and the AS112 zones. The AS112 zones are
reverse DNS zones for private use and reserved IP addresses for which the
servers on the internet cannot provide correct answers. They are configured
by default to give nxdomain (no reverse information) answers. The defaults
can be turned off by specifying your own local-zone of that name, or using
the 'nodefault' type. Below is a list of the default zone contents.
- localhost
- The IP4 and IP6 localhost information is given. NS and SOA records are
provided for completeness and to satisfy some DNS update tools. Default
content:
local-zone: "localhost." redirect
local-data: "localhost. 10800 IN NS localhost."
local-data: "localhost. 10800 IN
SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200 604800 10800"
local-data: "localhost. 10800 IN A 127.0.0.1"
local-data: "localhost. 10800 IN AAAA ::1"
- reverse IPv4 loopback
- Default content:
local-zone: "127.in-addr.arpa." static
local-data: "127.in-addr.arpa. 10800 IN NS localhost."
local-data: "127.in-addr.arpa. 10800 IN
SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200 604800 10800"
local-data: "1.0.0.127.in-addr.arpa. 10800 IN
PTR localhost."
- reverse IPv6 loopback
- Default content:
local-zone: "1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa." static
local-data: "1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa. 10800 IN
NS localhost."
local-data: "1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa. 10800 IN
SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200 604800 10800"
local-data: "1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa. 10800 IN
PTR localhost."
- home.arpa (RFC 8375)
- Default content:
local-zone: "home.arpa." static
local-data: "home.arpa. 10800 IN NS localhost."
local-data: "home.arpa. 10800 IN
SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200 604800 10800"
- onion (RFC 7686)
- Default content:
local-zone: "onion." static
local-data: "onion. 10800 IN NS localhost."
local-data: "onion. 10800 IN
SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200 604800 10800"
- test (RFC 6761)
- Default content:
local-zone: "test." static
local-data: "test. 10800 IN NS localhost."
local-data: "test. 10800 IN
SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200 604800 10800"
- invalid (RFC 6761)
- Default content:
local-zone: "invalid." static
local-data: "invalid. 10800 IN NS localhost."
local-data: "invalid. 10800 IN
SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200 604800 10800"
- reverse RFC1918 local use zones
- Reverse data for zones 10.in-addr.arpa, 16.172.in-addr.arpa to
31.172.in-addr.arpa, 168.192.in-addr.arpa. The local-zone: is set
static and as local-data: SOA and NS records are provided.
- reverse RFC3330 IP4 this, link-local, testnet and broadcast
- Reverse data for zones 0.in-addr.arpa, 254.169.in-addr.arpa,
2.0.192.in-addr.arpa (TEST NET 1), 100.51.198.in-addr.arpa (TEST NET 2),
113.0.203.in-addr.arpa (TEST NET 3), 255.255.255.255.in-addr.arpa. And
from 64.100.in-addr.arpa to 127.100.in-addr.arpa (Shared Address
Space).
- reverse RFC4291 IP6 unspecified
- Reverse data for zone
0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa.
- reverse RFC4193 IPv6 Locally Assigned Local Addresses
- Reverse data for zone D.F.ip6.arpa.
- reverse RFC4291 IPv6 Link Local Addresses
- Reverse data for zones 8.E.F.ip6.arpa to B.E.F.ip6.arpa.
- reverse IPv6 Example Prefix
- Reverse data for zone 8.B.D.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa. This zone is used for
tutorials and examples. You can remove the block on this zone with:
local-zone: 8.B.D.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa. nodefault
You can also selectively unblock a part of the zone by making that part
transparent with a local-zone statement. This also works with the other
default zones.
- local-data: "<resource record string>"
- Configure local data, which is served in reply to queries for it. The
query has to match exactly unless you configure the local-zone as
redirect. If not matched exactly, the local-zone type determines further
processing. If local-data is configured that is not a subdomain of a
local-zone, a transparent local-zone is configured. For record types such
as TXT, use single quotes, as in local-data: 'example. TXT
"text"'.
- If you need more complicated authoritative data, with referrals,
wildcards, CNAME/DNAME support, or DNSSEC authoritative service, setup a
stub-zone for it as detailed in the stub zone section below.
- local-data-ptr: "IPaddr name"
- Configure local data shorthand for a PTR record with the reversed IPv4 or
IPv6 address and the host name. For example "192.0.2.4
www.example.com". TTL can be inserted like this: "2001:DB8::4
7200 www.example.com"
- local-zone-tag: <zone> <"list of
tags">
- Assign tags to localzones. Tagged localzones will only be applied when the
used access-control element has a matching tag. Tags must be defined in
define-tags. Enclose list of tags in quotes ("") and put
spaces between tags. When there are multiple tags it checks if the
intersection of the list of tags for the query and local-zone-tag is
non-empty.
- local-zone-override: <zone> <IP netblock>
<type>
- Override the localzone type for queries from addresses matching netblock.
Use this localzone type, regardless the type configured for the local-zone
(both tagged and untagged) and regardless the type configured using
access-control-tag-action.
- response-ip: <IP-netblock> <action>
- This requires use of the "respip" module.
- If the IP address in an AAAA or A RR in the answer section of a response
matches the specified IP netblock, the specified action will apply.
<action> has generally the same semantics as that for
access-control-tag-action, but there are some exceptions.
- Actions for response-ip are different from those for
local-zone in that in case of the former there is no point of such
conditions as "the query matches it but there is no local data".
Because of this difference, the semantics of response-ip actions
are modified or simplified as follows: The static, refuse,
transparent, typetransparent, and nodefault actions are
invalid for response-ip. Using any of these will cause the
configuration to be rejected as faulty. The deny action is
non-conditional, i.e. it always results in dropping the corresponding
query. The resolution result before applying the deny action is still
cached and can be used for other queries.
- response-ip-data: <IP-netblock> <"resource record
string">
- This requires use of the "respip" module.
- This specifies the action data for response-ip with action being to
redirect as specified by "resource record string".
"Resource record string" is similar to that of
access-control-tag-action, but it must be of either AAAA, A or
CNAME types. If the IP-netblock is an IPv6/IPV4 prefix, the record must be
AAAA/A respectively, unless it is a CNAME (which can be used for both
versions of IP netblocks). If it is CNAME there must not be more than one
response-ip-data for the same IP-netblock. Also, CNAME and other
types of records must not coexist for the same IP-netblock, following the
normal rules for CNAME records. The textual domain name for the CNAME does
not have to be explicitly terminated with a dot ("."); the root
name is assumed to be the origin for the name.
- response-ip-tag: <IP-netblock> <"list of
tags">
- This requires use of the "respip" module.
- Assign tags to response IP-netblocks. If the IP address in an AAAA or A RR
in the answer section of a response matches the specified IP-netblock, the
specified tags are assigned to the IP address. Then, if an
access-control-tag is defined for the client and it includes one of
the tags for the response IP, the corresponding
access-control-tag-action will apply. Tag matching rule is the same
as that for access-control-tag and local-zones. Unlike
local-zone-tag, response-ip-tag can be defined for an
IP-netblock even if no response-ip is defined for that netblock. If
multiple response-ip-tag options are specified for the same
IP-netblock in different statements, all but the first will be ignored.
However, this will not be flagged as a configuration error, but the result
is probably not what was intended.
- Actions specified in an access-control-tag-action that has a
matching tag with response-ip-tag can be those that are
"invalid" for response-ip listed above, since
access-control-tag-actions can be shared with local zones. For
these actions, if they behave differently depending on whether local data
exists or not in case of local zones, the behavior for
response-ip-data will generally result in NOERROR/NODATA instead of
NXDOMAIN, since the response-ip data are inherently type specific,
and non-existence of data does not indicate anything about the existence
or non-existence of the qname itself. For example, if the matching tag
action is static but there is no data for the corresponding
response-ip configuration, then the result will be NOERROR/NODATA.
The only case where NXDOMAIN is returned is when an always_nxdomain
action applies.
- ratelimit: <number or 0>
- Enable ratelimiting of queries sent to nameserver for performing
recursion. If 0, the default, it is disabled. This option is experimental
at this time. The ratelimit is in queries per second that are allowed.
More queries are turned away with an error (servfail). This stops
recursive floods, eg. random query names, but not spoofed reflection
floods. Cached responses are not ratelimited by this setting. The zone of
the query is determined by examining the nameservers for it, the zone name
is used to keep track of the rate. For example, 1000 may be a suitable
value to stop the server from being overloaded with random names, and
keeps Local-unbound from sending traffic to the nameservers for those
zones. Configured forwarders are excluded from ratelimiting.
- ratelimit-size: <memory size>
- Give the size of the data structure in which the current ongoing rates are
kept track in. Default 4m. In bytes or use m(mega), k(kilo), g(giga). The
ratelimit structure is small, so this data structure likely does not need
to be large.
- ratelimit-slabs: <number>
- Give power of 2 number of slabs, this is used to reduce lock contention in
the ratelimit tracking data structure. Close to the number of cpus is a
fairly good setting.
- ratelimit-factor: <number>
- Set the amount of queries to rate limit when the limit is exceeded. If set
to 0, all queries are dropped for domains where the limit is exceeded. If
set to another value, 1 in that number is allowed through to complete.
Default is 10, allowing 1/10 traffic to flow normally. This can make
ordinary queries complete (if repeatedly queried for), and enter the
cache, whilst also mitigating the traffic flow by the factor given.
- ratelimit-backoff: <yes or no>
- If enabled, the ratelimit is treated as a hard failure instead of the
default maximum allowed constant rate. When the limit is reached, traffic
is ratelimited and demand continues to be kept track of for a 2 second
rate window. No traffic is allowed, except for ratelimit-factor, until
demand decreases below the configured ratelimit for a 2 second rate
window. Useful to set ratelimit to a suspicious rate to aggressively limit
unusually high traffic. Default is off.
- ratelimit-for-domain: <domain> <number qps or
0>
- Override the global ratelimit for an exact match domain name with the
listed number. You can give this for any number of names. For example, for
a top-level-domain you may want to have a higher limit than other names. A
value of 0 will disable ratelimiting for that domain.
- ratelimit-below-domain: <domain> <number qps or
0>
- Override the global ratelimit for a domain name that ends in this name.
You can give this multiple times, it then describes different settings in
different parts of the namespace. The closest matching suffix is used to
determine the qps limit. The rate for the exact matching domain name is
not changed, use ratelimit-for-domain to set that, you might want to use
different settings for a top-level-domain and subdomains. A value of 0
will disable ratelimiting for domain names that end in this name.
- ip-ratelimit: <number or 0>
- Enable global ratelimiting of queries accepted per IP address. If 0, the
default, it is disabled. This option is experimental at this time. The
ratelimit is in queries per second that are allowed. More queries are
completely dropped and will not receive a reply, SERVFAIL or otherwise. IP
ratelimiting happens before looking in the cache. This may be useful for
mitigating amplification attacks.
- ip-ratelimit-size: <memory size>
- Give the size of the data structure in which the current ongoing rates are
kept track in. Default 4m. In bytes or use m(mega), k(kilo), g(giga). The
ip ratelimit structure is small, so this data structure likely does not
need to be large.
- ip-ratelimit-slabs: <number>
- Give power of 2 number of slabs, this is used to reduce lock contention in
the ip ratelimit tracking data structure. Close to the number of cpus is a
fairly good setting.
- ip-ratelimit-factor: <number>
- Set the amount of queries to rate limit when the limit is exceeded. If set
to 0, all queries are dropped for addresses where the limit is exceeded.
If set to another value, 1 in that number is allowed through to complete.
Default is 10, allowing 1/10 traffic to flow normally. This can make
ordinary queries complete (if repeatedly queried for), and enter the
cache, whilst also mitigating the traffic flow by the factor given.
- ip-ratelimit-backoff: <yes or no>
- If enabled, the ratelimit is treated as a hard failure instead of the
default maximum allowed constant rate. When the limit is reached, traffic
is ratelimited and demand continues to be kept track of for a 2 second
rate window. No traffic is allowed, except for ip-ratelimit-factor, until
demand decreases below the configured ratelimit for a 2 second rate
window. Useful to set ip-ratelimit to a suspicious rate to aggressively
limit unusually high traffic. Default is off.
- outbound-msg-retry: <number>
- The number of retries Local-unbound will do in case of a non positive
response is received. If a forward nameserver is used, this is the number
of retries per forward nameserver in case of throwaway response.
- fast-server-permil: <number>
- Specify how many times out of 1000 to pick from the set of fastest
servers. 0 turns the feature off. A value of 900 would pick from the
fastest servers 90 percent of the time, and would perform normal
exploration of random servers for the remaining time. When prefetch is
enabled (or serve-expired), such prefetches are not sped up, because there
is no one waiting for it, and it presents a good moment to perform server
exploration. The fast-server-num option can be used to specify the
size of the fastest servers set. The default for fast-server-permil is
0.
- fast-server-num: <number>
- Set the number of servers that should be used for fast server selection.
Only use the fastest specified number of servers with the
fast-server-permil option, that turns this on or off. The default is to
use the fastest 3 servers.
- edns-client-string: <IP netblock> <string>
- Include an EDNS0 option containing configured ascii string in queries with
destination address matching the configured IP netblock. This
configuration option can be used multiple times. The most specific match
will be used.
- edns-client-string-opcode: <opcode>
- EDNS0 option code for the edns-client-string option, from 0 to
65535. A value from the `Reserved for Local/Experimental` range
(65001-65534) should be used. Default is 65001.
In the remote-control: clause are the declarations for the remote control
facility. If this is enabled, the local-unbound-control(8) utility can
be used to send commands to the running Local-unbound server. The server uses
these clauses to setup TLSv1 security for the connection. The
local-unbound-control(8) utility also reads the remote-control
section for options. To setup the correct self-signed certificates use the
local-unbound-control-setup(8) utility.
- control-enable: <yes or no>
- The option is used to enable remote control, default is "no". If
turned off, the server does not listen for control commands.
- control-interface: <ip address or path>
- Give IPv4 or IPv6 addresses or local socket path to listen on for control
commands. By default localhost (127.0.0.1 and ::1) is listened to. Use
0.0.0.0 and ::0 to listen to all interfaces. If you change this and
permissions have been dropped, you must restart the server for the change
to take effect.
- If you set it to an absolute path, a local socket is used. The local
socket does not use the certificates and keys, so those files need not be
present. To restrict access, Local-unbound sets permissions on the file to
the user and group that is configured, the access bits are set to allow
the group members to access the control socket file. Put users that need
to access the socket in the that group. To restrict access further, create
a directory to put the control socket in and restrict access to that
directory.
- control-port: <port number>
- The port number to listen on for IPv4 or IPv6 control interfaces, default
is 8953. If you change this and permissions have been dropped, you must
restart the server for the change to take effect.
- control-use-cert: <yes or no>
- For localhost control-interface you can disable the use of TLS by setting
this option to "no", default is "yes". For local
sockets, TLS is disabled and the value of this option is ignored.
- server-key-file: <private key file>
- Path to the server private key, by default unbound_server.key. This file
is generated by the local-unbound-control-setup utility. This file
is used by the Local-unbound server, but not by
local-unbound-control.
- server-cert-file: <certificate file.pem>
- Path to the server self signed certificate, by default unbound_server.pem.
This file is generated by the local-unbound-control-setup utility.
This file is used by the Local-unbound server, and also by
local-unbound-control.
- control-key-file: <private key file>
- Path to the control client private key, by default unbound_control.key.
This file is generated by the local-unbound-control-setup utility.
This file is used by local-unbound-control.
- control-cert-file: <certificate file.pem>
- Path to the control client certificate, by default unbound_control.pem.
This certificate has to be signed with the server certificate. This file
is generated by the local-unbound-control-setup utility. This file
is used by local-unbound-control.
There may be multiple stub-zone: clauses. Each with a name: and zero or
more hostnames or IP addresses. For the stub zone this list of nameservers is
used. Class IN is assumed. The servers should be authority servers, not
recursors; Local-unbound performs the recursive processing itself for stub
zones.
The stub zone can be used to configure authoritative data to be
used by the resolver that cannot be accessed using the public internet
servers. This is useful for company-local data or private zones. Setup an
authoritative server on a different host (or different port). Enter a config
entry for Local-unbound with stub-addr: <ip address of
host[@port]>. The Local-unbound resolver can then access the data,
without referring to the public internet for it.
This setup allows DNSSEC signed zones to be served by that
authoritative server, in which case a trusted key entry with the public key
can be put in config, so that Local-unbound can validate the data and set
the AD bit on replies for the private zone (authoritative servers do not set
the AD bit). This setup makes Local-unbound capable of answering queries for
the private zone, and can even set the AD bit ('authentic'), but the AA
('authoritative') bit is not set on these replies.
Consider adding server: statements for
domain-insecure: and for local-zone: name nodefault for
the zone if it is a locally served zone. The insecure clause stops DNSSEC
from invalidating the zone. The local zone nodefault (or transparent)
clause makes the (reverse-) zone bypass Local-unbound's filtering of RFC1918
zones.
- name: <domain name>
- Name of the stub zone. This is the full domain name of the zone.
- stub-host: <domain name>
- Name of stub zone nameserver. Is itself resolved before it is used. To use
a nondefault port for DNS communication append '@' with the port number.
If tls is enabled, then you can append a '#' and a name, then it'll check
the tls authentication certificates with that name. If you combine the '@'
and '#', the '@' comes first. If only '#' is used the default port is the
configured tls-port.
- stub-addr: <IP address>
- IP address of stub zone nameserver. Can be IP 4 or IP 6. To use a
nondefault port for DNS communication append '@' with the port number. If
tls is enabled, then you can append a '#' and a name, then it'll check the
tls authentication certificates with that name. If you combine the '@' and
'#', the '@' comes first. If only '#' is used the default port is the
configured tls-port.
- stub-prime: <yes or no>
- This option is by default no. If enabled it performs NS set priming, which
is similar to root hints, where it starts using the list of nameservers
currently published by the zone. Thus, if the hint list is slightly
outdated, the resolver picks up a correct list online.
- stub-first: <yes or no>
- If enabled, a query is attempted without the stub clause if it fails. The
data could not be retrieved and would have caused SERVFAIL because the
servers are unreachable, instead it is tried without this clause. The
default is no.
- stub-tls-upstream: <yes or no>
- Enabled or disable whether the queries to this stub use TLS for transport.
Default is no.
- stub-ssl-upstream: <yes or no>
- Alternate syntax for stub-tls-upstream.
- stub-tcp-upstream: <yes or no>
- If it is set to "yes" then upstream queries use TCP only for
transport regardless of global flag tcp-upstream. Default is no.
- stub-no-cache: <yes or no>
- Default is no. If enabled, data inside the stub is not cached. This is
useful when you want immediate changes to be visible.
There may be multiple forward-zone: clauses. Each with a name: and
zero or more hostnames or IP addresses. For the forward zone this list of
nameservers is used to forward the queries to. The servers listed as
forward-host: and forward-addr: have to handle further recursion
for the query. Thus, those servers are not authority servers, but are (just
like Local-unbound is) recursive servers too; Local-unbound does not perform
recursion itself for the forward zone, it lets the remote server do it. Class
IN is assumed. CNAMEs are chased by Local-unbound itself, asking the remote
server for every name in the indirection chain, to protect the local cache
from illegal indirect referenced items. A forward-zone entry with name
"." and a forward-addr target will forward all queries to that other
server (unless it can answer from the cache).
- name: <domain name>
- Name of the forward zone. This is the full domain name of the zone.
- forward-host: <domain name>
- Name of server to forward to. Is itself resolved before it is used. To use
a nondefault port for DNS communication append '@' with the port number.
If tls is enabled, then you can append a '#' and a name, then it'll check
the tls authentication certificates with that name. If you combine the '@'
and '#', the '@' comes first. If only '#' is used the default port is the
configured tls-port.
- forward-addr: <IP address>
- IP address of server to forward to. Can be IP 4 or IP 6. To use a
nondefault port for DNS communication append '@' with the port number. If
tls is enabled, then you can append a '#' and a name, then it'll check the
tls authentication certificates with that name. If you combine the '@' and
'#', the '@' comes first. If only '#' is used the default port is the
configured tls-port.
- At high verbosity it logs the TLS certificate, with TLS enabled. If you
leave out the '#' and auth name from the forward-addr, any name is
accepted. The cert must also match a CA from the tls-cert-bundle.
- forward-first: <yes or no>
- If a forwarded query is met with a SERVFAIL error, and this option is
enabled, Local-unbound will fall back to normal recursive resolution for
this query as if no query forwarding had been specified. The default is
"no".
- forward-tls-upstream: <yes or no>
- Enabled or disable whether the queries to this forwarder use TLS for
transport. Default is no. If you enable this, also configure a
tls-cert-bundle or use tls-win-cert to load CA certs, otherwise the
connections cannot be authenticated.
- forward-ssl-upstream: <yes or no>
- Alternate syntax for forward-tls-upstream.
- forward-tcp-upstream: <yes or no>
- If it is set to "yes" then upstream queries use TCP only for
transport regardless of global flag tcp-upstream. Default is no.
- forward-no-cache: <yes or no>
- Default is no. If enabled, data inside the forward is not cached. This is
useful when you want immediate changes to be visible.
Authority zones are configured with auth-zone:, and each one must have a
name:. There can be multiple ones, by listing multiple auth-zone
clauses, each with a different name, pertaining to that part of the namespace.
The authority zone with the name closest to the name looked up is used.
Authority zones are processed after local-zones and before cache
(for-downstream: yes), and when used in this manner make
Local-unbound respond like an authority server. Authority zones are also
processed after cache, just before going to the network to fetch information
for recursion (for-upstream: yes), and when used in this manner
provide a local copy of an authority server that speeds up lookups of that
data.
Authority zones can be read from zonefile. And can be kept updated
via AXFR and IXFR. After update the zonefile is rewritten. The update
mechanism uses the SOA timer values and performs SOA UDP queries to detect
zone changes.
If the update fetch fails, the timers in the SOA record are used
to time another fetch attempt. Until the SOA expiry timer is reached. Then
the zone is expired. When a zone is expired, queries are SERVFAIL, and any
new serial number is accepted from the primary (even if older), and if
fallback is enabled, the fallback activates to fetch from the upstream
instead of the SERVFAIL.
- name: <zone name>
- Name of the authority zone.
- primary: <IP address or host name>
- Where to download a copy of the zone from, with AXFR and IXFR. Multiple
primaries can be specified. They are all tried if one fails. To use a
nondefault port for DNS communication append '@' with the port number. You
can append a '#' and a name, then AXFR over TLS can be used and the tls
authentication certificates will be checked with that name. If you combine
the '@' and '#', the '@' comes first. If you point it at another
Local-unbound instance, it would not work because that does not support
AXFR/IXFR for the zone, but if you used url: to download the
zonefile as a text file from a webserver that would work. If you specify
the hostname, you cannot use the domain from the zonefile, because it may
not have that when retrieving that data, instead use a plain IP address to
avoid a circular dependency on retrieving that IP address.
- master: <IP address or host name>
- Alternate syntax for primary.
- url: <url to zonefile>
- Where to download a zonefile for the zone. With http or https. An example
for the url is "http://www.example.com/example.org.zone".
Multiple url statements can be given, they are tried in turn. If only urls
are given the SOA refresh timer is used to wait for making new downloads.
If also primaries are listed, the primaries are first probed with UDP SOA
queries to see if the SOA serial number has changed, reducing the number
of downloads. If none of the urls work, the primaries are tried with IXFR
and AXFR. For https, the tls-cert-bundle and the hostname from the
url are used to authenticate the connection. If you specify a hostname in
the URL, you cannot use the domain from the zonefile, because it may not
have that when retrieving that data, instead use a plain IP address to
avoid a circular dependency on retrieving that IP address. Avoid
dependencies on name lookups by using a notation like
"http://192.0.2.1/unbound-primaries/example.com.zone", with an
explicit IP address.
- allow-notify: <IP address or host name or
netblockIP/prefix>
- With allow-notify you can specify additional sources of notifies. When
notified, the server attempts to first probe and then zone transfer. If
the notify is from a primary, it first attempts that primary. Otherwise
other primaries are attempted. If there are no primaries, but only urls,
the file is downloaded when notified. The primaries from primary:
statements are allowed notify by default.
- fallback-enabled: <yes or no>
- Default no. If enabled, Local-unbound falls back to querying the internet
as a resolver for this zone when lookups fail. For example for DNSSEC
validation failures.
- for-downstream: <yes or no>
- Default yes. If enabled, Local-unbound serves authority responses to
downstream clients for this zone. This option makes Local-unbound behave,
for the queries with names in this zone, like one of the authority servers
for that zone. Turn it off if you want Local-unbound to provide recursion
for the zone but have a local copy of zone data. If for-downstream is no
and for-upstream is yes, then Local-unbound will DNSSEC validate the
contents of the zone before serving the zone contents to clients and store
validation results in the cache.
- for-upstream: <yes or no>
- Default yes. If enabled, Local-unbound fetches data from this data
collection for answering recursion queries. Instead of sending queries
over the internet to the authority servers for this zone, it'll fetch the
data directly from the zone data. Turn it on when you want Local-unbound
to provide recursion for downstream clients, and use the zone data as a
local copy to speed up lookups.
- zonemd-check: <yes or no>
- Enable this option to check ZONEMD records in the zone. Default is
disabled. The ZONEMD record is a checksum over the zone data. This
includes glue in the zone and data from the zone file, and excludes
comments from the zone file. When there is a DNSSEC chain of trust, DNSSEC
signatures are checked too.
- zonemd-reject-absence: <yes or no>
- Enable this option to reject the absence of the ZONEMD record. Without it,
when zonemd is not there it is not checked. It is useful to enable for a
nonDNSSEC signed zone where the operator wants to require the verification
of a ZONEMD, hence a missing ZONEMD is a failure. The action upon failure
is controlled by the zonemd-permissive-mode option, for log only or
also block the zone. The default is no.
- Without the option absence of a ZONEMD is only a failure when the zone is
DNSSEC signed, and we have a trust anchor, and the DNSSEC verification of
the absence of the ZONEMD fails. With the option enabled, the absence of a
ZONEMD is always a failure, also for nonDNSSEC signed zones.
- zonefile: <filename>
- The filename where the zone is stored. If not given then no zonefile is
used. If the file does not exist or is empty, Local-unbound will attempt
to fetch zone data (eg. from the primary servers).
There may be multiple view: clauses. Each with a name: and zero or
more local-zone and local-data elements. Views can also contain
view-first, response-ip, response-ip-data and local-data-ptr elements. View
can be mapped to requests by specifying the view name in an
access-control-view element. Options from matching views will override
global options. Global options will be used if no matching view is found, or
when the matching view does not have the option specified.
- name: <view name>
- Name of the view. Must be unique. This name is used in access-control-view
elements.
- local-zone: <zone> <type>
- View specific local-zone elements. Has the same types and behaviour as the
global local-zone elements. When there is at least one local-zone
specified and view-first is no, the default local-zones will be added to
this view. Defaults can be disabled using the nodefault type. When
view-first is yes or when a view does not have a local-zone, the global
local-zone will be used including it's default zones.
- local-data: "<resource record string>"
- View specific local-data elements. Has the same behaviour as the global
local-data elements.
- local-data-ptr: "IPaddr name"
- View specific local-data-ptr elements. Has the same behaviour as the
global local-data-ptr elements.
- view-first: <yes or no>
- If enabled, it attempts to use the global local-zone and local-data if
there is no match in the view specific options. The default is no.
The python: clause gives the settings for the python(1) script
module. This module acts like the iterator and validator modules do, on
queries and answers. To enable the script module it has to be compiled into
the daemon, and the word "python" has to be put in the
module-config: option (usually first, or between the validator and
iterator). Multiple instances of the python module are supported by adding the
word "python" more than once.
If the chroot: option is enabled, you should make sure
Python's library directory structure is bind mounted in the new root
environment, see mount(8). Also the python-script: path should
be specified as an absolute path relative to the new root, or as a relative
path to the working directory.
- python-script: <python file>
- The script file to load. Repeat this option for every python module
instance added to the module-config: option.
The dynlib: clause gives the settings for the dynlib module. This
module is only a very small wrapper that allows dynamic modules to be loaded
on runtime instead of being compiled into the application. To enable the
dynlib module it has to be compiled into the daemon, and the word
"dynlib" has to be put in the module-config: option. Multiple
instances of dynamic libraries are supported by adding the word
"dynlib" more than once.
The dynlib-file: path should be specified as an absolute
path relative to the new path set by chroot: option, or as a relative
path to the working directory.
- dynlib-file: <dynlib file>
- The dynamic library file to load. Repeat this option for every dynlib
module instance added to the module-config: option.
The dns64 module must be configured in the module-config: "dns64
validator iterator" directive and be compiled into the daemon to be
enabled. These settings go in the server: section.
- dns64-prefix: <IPv6 prefix>
- This sets the DNS64 prefix to use to synthesize AAAA records with. It must
be /96 or shorter. The default prefix is 64:ff9b::/96.
- dns64-synthall: <yes or no>
- Debug option, default no. If enabled, synthesize all AAAA records despite
the presence of actual AAAA records.
- dns64-ignore-aaaa: <name>
- List domain for which the AAAA records are ignored and the A record is
used by dns64 processing instead. Can be entered multiple times, list a
new domain for which it applies, one per line. Applies also to names
underneath the name given.
The dnscrypt: clause gives the settings of the dnscrypt channel. While
those options are available, they are only meaningful if Local-unbound was
compiled with --enable-dnscrypt. Currently certificate and
secret/public keys cannot be generated by Unbound. You can use
dnscrypt-wrapper to generate those:
https://github.com/cofyc/dnscrypt-wrapper/blob/master/README.md#usage
- dnscrypt-enable: <yes or no>
- Whether or not the dnscrypt config should be enabled. You may
define configuration but not activate it. The default is no.
- dnscrypt-port: <port number>
- On which port should dnscrypt should be activated. Note that you
should have a matching interface option defined in the
server section for this port.
- dnscrypt-provider: <provider name>
- The provider name to use to distribute certificates. This is of the form:
2.dnscrypt-cert.example.com.. The name MUST end with a
dot.
- dnscrypt-secret-key: <path to secret key file>
- Path to the time limited secret key file. This option may be specified
multiple times.
- dnscrypt-provider-cert: <path to cert file>
- Path to the certificate related to the dnscrypt-secret-keys. This
option may be specified multiple times.
- dnscrypt-provider-cert-rotated: <path to cert
file>
- Path to a certificate that we should be able to serve existing connection
from but do not want to advertise over dnscrypt-provider's TXT
record certs distribution. A typical use case is when rotating
certificates, existing clients may still use the client magic from the old
cert in their queries until they fetch and update the new cert. Likewise,
it would allow one to prime the new cert/key without distributing the new
cert yet, this can be useful when using a network of servers using anycast
and on which the configuration may not get updated at the exact same time.
By priming the cert, the servers can handle both old and new certs traffic
while distributing only one. This option may be specified multiple
times.
- dnscrypt-shared-secret-cache-size: <memory size>
- Give the size of the data structure in which the shared secret keys are
kept in. Default 4m. In bytes or use m(mega), k(kilo), g(giga). The shared
secret cache is used when a same client is making multiple queries using
the same public key. It saves a substantial amount of CPU.
- dnscrypt-shared-secret-cache-slabs: <number>
- Give power of 2 number of slabs, this is used to reduce lock contention in
the dnscrypt shared secrets cache. Close to the number of cpus is a fairly
good setting.
- dnscrypt-nonce-cache-size: <memory size>
- Give the size of the data structure in which the client nonces are kept
in. Default 4m. In bytes or use m(mega), k(kilo), g(giga). The nonce cache
is used to prevent dnscrypt message replaying. Client nonce should be
unique for any pair of client pk/server sk.
- dnscrypt-nonce-cache-slabs: <number>
- Give power of 2 number of slabs, this is used to reduce lock contention in
the dnscrypt nonce cache. Close to the number of cpus is a fairly good
setting.
The ECS module must be configured in the module-config: "subnetcache
validator iterator" directive and be compiled into the daemon to be
enabled. These settings go in the server: section.
If the destination address is allowed in the configuration
Local-unbound will add the EDNS0 option to the query containing the relevant
part of the client's address. When an answer contains the ECS option the
response and the option are placed in a specialized cache. If the authority
indicated no support, the response is stored in the regular cache.
Additionally, when a client includes the option in its queries,
Local-unbound will forward the option when sending the query to addresses
that are explicitly allowed in the configuration using
send-client-subnet. The option will always be forwarded, regardless
the allowed addresses, if client-subnet-always-forward is set to yes.
In this case the lookup in the regular cache is skipped.
The maximum size of the ECS cache is controlled by
'msg-cache-size' in the configuration file. On top of that, for each query
only 100 different subnets are allowed to be stored for each address family.
Exceeding that number, older entries will be purged from cache.
- send-client-subnet: <IP address>
- Send client source address to this authority. Append /num to indicate a
classless delegation netblock, for example like 10.2.3.4/24 or
2001::11/64. Can be given multiple times. Authorities not listed will not
receive edns-subnet information, unless domain in query is specified in
client-subnet-zone.
- client-subnet-zone: <domain>
- Send client source address in queries for this domain and its subdomains.
Can be given multiple times. Zones not listed will not receive edns-subnet
information, unless hosted by authority specified in
send-client-subnet.
- client-subnet-always-forward: <yes or no>
- Specify whether the ECS address check (configured using
send-client-subnet) is applied for all queries, even if the
triggering query contains an ECS record, or only for queries for which the
ECS record is generated using the querier address (and therefore did not
contain ECS data in the client query). If enabled, the address check is
skipped when the client query contains an ECS record. And the lookup in
the regular cache is skipped. Default is no.
- max-client-subnet-ipv6: <number>
- Specifies the maximum prefix length of the client source address we are
willing to expose to third parties for IPv6. Defaults to 56.
- max-client-subnet-ipv4: <number>
- Specifies the maximum prefix length of the client source address we are
willing to expose to third parties for IPv4. Defaults to 24.
- min-client-subnet-ipv6: <number>
- Specifies the minimum prefix length of the IPv6 source mask we are willing
to accept in queries. Shorter source masks result in REFUSED answers.
Source mask of 0 is always accepted. Default is 0.
- min-client-subnet-ipv4: <number>
- Specifies the minimum prefix length of the IPv4 source mask we are willing
to accept in queries. Shorter source masks result in REFUSED answers.
Source mask of 0 is always accepted. Default is 0.
- max-ecs-tree-size-ipv4: <number>
- Specifies the maximum number of subnets ECS answers kept in the ECS radix
tree. This number applies for each qname/qclass/qtype tuple. Defaults to
100.
- max-ecs-tree-size-ipv6: <number>
- Specifies the maximum number of subnets ECS answers kept in the ECS radix
tree. This number applies for each qname/qclass/qtype tuple. Defaults to
100.
The IPsec module must be configured in the module-config: "ipsecmod
validator iterator" directive and be compiled into Local-unbound by using
--enable-ipsecmod to be enabled. These settings go in the
server: section.
When Local-unbound receives an A/AAAA query that is not in the
cache and finds a valid answer, it will withhold returning the answer and
instead will generate an IPSECKEY subquery for the same domain name. If an
answer was found, Unbound will call an external hook passing the following
arguments:
- QNAME
- Domain name of the A/AAAA and IPSECKEY query. In string format.
- IPSECKEY TTL
- TTL of the IPSECKEY RRset.
- A/AAAA
- String of space separated IP addresses present in the A/AAAA RRset. The IP
addresses are in string format.
- IPSECKEY
- String of space separated IPSECKEY RDATA present in the IPSECKEY RRset.
The IPSECKEY RDATA are in DNS presentation format.
The A/AAAA answer is then cached and returned to the client. If
the external hook was called the TTL changes to ensure it doesn't surpass
ipsecmod-max-ttl.
The same procedure is also followed when prefetch: is used,
but the A/AAAA answer is given to the client before the hook is called.
ipsecmod-max-ttl ensures that the A/AAAA answer given from cache is
still relevant for opportunistic IPsec.
- ipsecmod-enabled: <yes or no>
- Specifies whether the IPsec module is enabled or not. The IPsec module
still needs to be defined in the module-config: directive. This
option facilitates turning on/off the module without restarting/reloading
Unbound. Defaults to yes.
- ipsecmod-hook: <filename>
- Specifies the external hook that Local-unbound will call with
system(3). The file can be specified as an absolute/relative path.
The file needs the proper permissions to be able to be executed by the
same user that runs Unbound. It must be present when the IPsec module is
defined in the module-config: directive.
- ipsecmod-strict: <yes or no>
- If enabled Local-unbound requires the external hook to return a success
value of 0. Failing to do so Local-unbound will reply with SERVFAIL. The
A/AAAA answer will also not be cached. Defaults to no.
- ipsecmod-max-ttl: <seconds>
- Time to live maximum for A/AAAA cached records after calling the external
hook. Defaults to 3600.
- ipsecmod-ignore-bogus: <yes or no>
- Specifies the behaviour of Local-unbound when the IPSECKEY answer is
bogus. If set to yes, the hook will be called and the A/AAAA answer will
be returned to the client. If set to no, the hook will not be called and
the answer to the A/AAAA query will be SERVFAIL. Mainly used for testing.
Defaults to no.
- ipsecmod-allow: <domain>
- Allow the ipsecmod functionality for the domain so that the module logic
will be executed. Can be given multiple times, for different domains. If
the option is not specified, all domains are treated as being allowed
(default).
- ipsecmod-whitelist: <yes or no>
- Alternate syntax for ipsecmod-allow.
The Cache DB module must be configured in the module-config:
"validator cachedb iterator" directive and be compiled into the
daemon with --enable-cachedb. If this module is enabled and configured,
the specified backend database works as a second level cache: When
Local-unbound cannot find an answer to a query in its built-in in-memory
cache, it consults the specified backend. If it finds a valid answer in the
backend, Local-unbound uses it to respond to the query without performing
iterative DNS resolution. If Local-unbound cannot even find an answer in the
backend, it resolves the query as usual, and stores the answer in the backend.
This module interacts with the serve-expired-* options and
will reply with expired data if Local-unbound is configured for that.
Currently the use of serve-expired-client-timeout: and
serve-expired-reply-ttl: is not consistent for data originating from
the external cache as these will result in a reply with 0 TTL without trying
to update the data first, ignoring the configured values.
If Local-unbound was built with --with-libhiredis on a
system that has installed the hiredis C client library of Redis, then the
"redis" backend can be used. This backend communicates with the
specified Redis server over a TCP connection to store and retrieve cache
data. It can be used as a persistent and/or shared cache backend. It should
be noted that Local-unbound never removes data stored in the Redis server,
even if some data have expired in terms of DNS TTL or the Redis server has
cached too much data; if necessary the Redis server must be configured to
limit the cache size, preferably with some kind of least-recently-used
eviction policy. Additionally, the redis-expire-records option can be
used in order to set the relative DNS TTL of the message as timeout to the
Redis records; keep in mind that some additional memory is used per key and
that the expire information is stored as absolute Unix timestamps in Redis
(computer time must be stable). This backend uses synchronous communication
with the Redis server based on the assumption that the communication is
stable and sufficiently fast. The thread waiting for a response from the
Redis server cannot handle other DNS queries. Although the backend has the
ability to reconnect to the server when the connection is closed
unexpectedly and there is a configurable timeout in case the server is
overly slow or hangs up, these cases are assumed to be very rare. If
connection close or timeout happens too often, Local-unbound will be
effectively unusable with this backend. It's the administrator's
responsibility to make the assumption hold.
The cachedb: clause gives custom settings of the cache DB
module.
- backend: <backend name>
- Specify the backend database name. The default database is the in-memory
backend named "testframe", which, as the name suggests, is not
of any practical use. Depending on the build-time configuration,
"redis" backend may also be used as described above.
- secret-seed: <"secret string">
- Specify a seed to calculate a hash value from query information. This
value will be used as the key of the corresponding answer for the backend
database and can be customized if the hash should not be predictable
operationally. If the backend database is shared by multiple Local-unbound
instances, all instances must use the same secret seed. This option
defaults to "default".
The following cachedb options are specific to the redis
backend.
- redis-server-host: <server address or name>
- The IP (either v6 or v4) address or domain name of the Redis server. In
general an IP address should be specified as otherwise Local-unbound will
have to resolve the name of the server every time it establishes a
connection to the server. This option defaults to
"127.0.0.1".
- redis-server-port: <port number>
- The TCP port number of the Redis server. This option defaults to
6379.
- redis-timeout: <msec>
- The period until when Local-unbound waits for a response from the Redis
sever. If this timeout expires Local-unbound closes the connection, treats
it as if the Redis server does not have the requested data, and will try
to re-establish a new connection later. This option defaults to 100
milliseconds.
- redis-expire-records: <yes or no>
- If Redis record expiration is enabled. If yes, Local-unbound sets timeout
for Redis records so that Redis can evict keys that have expired
automatically. If Local-unbound is configured with serve-expired
and serve-expired-ttl is 0, this option is internally reverted to
"no". Redis SETEX support is required for this option (Redis
>= 2.0.0). This option defaults to no.
DNSTAP support, when compiled in by using --enable-dnstap, is enabled in
the dnstap: section. This starts an extra thread (when compiled with
threading) that writes the log information to the destination. If
Local-unbound is compiled without threading it does not spawn a thread, but
connects per-process 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-bidirectional: <yes or no>
- Use frame streams in bidirectional mode to transfer DNSTAP messages.
Default is yes.
- dnstap-socket-path: <file name>
- Sets the unix socket file name for connecting to the server that is
listening on that socket. Default is
"@DNSTAP_SOCKET_PATH@".
- dnstap-ip: <IPaddress[@port]>
- If "", the unix socket is used, if set with an IP address (IPv4
or IPv6) that address is used to connect to the server.
- dnstap-tls: <yes or no>
- Set this to use TLS to connect to the server specified in
dnstap-ip. The default is yes. If set to no, TCP is used to connect
to the server.
- dnstap-tls-server-name: <name of TLS
authentication>
- The TLS server name to authenticate the server with. Used when
dnstap-tls is enabled. If "" it is ignored, default
"".
- dnstap-tls-cert-bundle: <file name of cert
bundle>
- The pem file with certs to verify the TLS server certificate. If
"" the server default cert bundle is used, or the windows cert
bundle on windows. Default is "".
- dnstap-tls-client-key-file: <file name>
- The client key file for TLS client authentication. If "" client
authentication is not used. Default is "".
- dnstap-tls-client-cert-file: <file name>
- The client cert file for TLS client authentication. Default is
"".
- 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-resolver-query-messages: <yes or no>
- Enable to log resolver query messages. Default is no. These are messages
from Local-unbound to upstream servers.
- dnstap-log-resolver-response-messages: <yes or
no>
- Enable to log resolver response messages. Default is no. These are replies
from upstream servers to Unbound.
- dnstap-log-client-query-messages: <yes or no>
- Enable to log client query messages. Default is no. These are client
queries to Unbound.
- dnstap-log-client-response-messages: <yes or no>
- Enable to log client response messages. Default is no. These are responses
from Local-unbound to clients.
- dnstap-log-forwarder-query-messages: <yes or no>
- Enable to log forwarder query messages. Default is no.
- dnstap-log-forwarder-response-messages: <yes or
no>
- Enable to log forwarder response messages. Default is no.
Response Policy Zones are configured with rpz:, and each one must have a
name:. There can be multiple ones, by listing multiple rpz clauses,
each with a different name. RPZ clauses are applied in order of configuration.
The respip module needs to be added to the module-config, e.g.:
module-config: "respip validator iterator".
QNAME, Response IP Address, nsdname, nsip and clientip triggers
are supported. Supported actions are: NXDOMAIN, NODATA, PASSTHRU, DROP,
Local Data, tcp-only and drop. RPZ QNAME triggers are applied after
local-zones and before auth-zones.
The rpz zone is formatted with a SOA start record as usual. The
items in the zone are entries, that specify what to act on (the trigger) and
what to do (the action). The trigger to act on is recorded in the name, the
action to do is recorded as the resource record. The names all end in the
zone name, so you could type the trigger names without a trailing dot in the
zonefile.
An example RPZ record, that answers example.com with NXDOMAIN
example.com CNAME .
The triggers are encoded in the name on the left
name query name
netblock.rpz-client-ip client IP address
netblock.rpz-ip response IP address in the answer
name.rpz-nsdname nameserver name
netblock.rpz-nsip nameserver IP address
The netblock is written as <netblocklen>.<ip address in reverse>.
For IPv6 use 'zz' for '::'. Specify individual addresses with scope length of
32 or 128. For example, 24.10.100.51.198.rpz-ip is 198.51.100.10/24 and
32.10.zz.db8.2001.rpz-ip is 2001:db8:0:0:0:0:0:10/32.
The actions are specified with the record on the right
CNAME . nxdomain reply
CNAME *. nodata reply
CNAME rpz-passthru. do nothing, allow to continue
CNAME rpz-drop. the query is dropped
CNAME rpz-tcp-only. answer over TCP
A 192.0.2.1 answer with this IP address
Other records like AAAA, TXT and other CNAMEs (not rpz-..) can also be used to
answer queries with that content.
The RPZ zones can be configured in the config file with these
settings in the rpz: block.
- name: <zone name>
- Name of the authority zone.
- primary: <IP address or host name>
- Where to download a copy of the zone from, with AXFR and IXFR. Multiple
primaries can be specified. They are all tried if one fails. To use a
nondefault port for DNS communication append '@' with the port number. You
can append a '#' and a name, then AXFR over TLS can be used and the tls
authentication certificates will be checked with that name. If you combine
the '@' and '#', the '@' comes first. If you point it at another
Local-unbound instance, it would not work because that does not support
AXFR/IXFR for the zone, but if you used url: to download the
zonefile as a text file from a webserver that would work. If you specify
the hostname, you cannot use the domain from the zonefile, because it may
not have that when retrieving that data, instead use a plain IP address to
avoid a circular dependency on retrieving that IP address.
- master: <IP address or host name>
- Alternate syntax for primary.
- url: <url to zonefile>
- Where to download a zonefile for the zone. With http or https. An example
for the url is "http://www.example.com/example.org.zone".
Multiple url statements can be given, they are tried in turn. If only urls
are given the SOA refresh timer is used to wait for making new downloads.
If also primaries are listed, the primaries are first probed with UDP SOA
queries to see if the SOA serial number has changed, reducing the number
of downloads. If none of the urls work, the primaries are tried with IXFR
and AXFR. For https, the tls-cert-bundle and the hostname from the
url are used to authenticate the connection.
- allow-notify: <IP address or host name or
netblockIP/prefix>
- With allow-notify you can specify additional sources of notifies. When
notified, the server attempts to first probe and then zone transfer. If
the notify is from a primary, it first attempts that primary. Otherwise
other primaries are attempted. If there are no primaries, but only urls,
the file is downloaded when notified. The primaries from primary:
statements are allowed notify by default.
- zonefile: <filename>
- The filename where the zone is stored. If not given then no zonefile is
used. If the file does not exist or is empty, Local-unbound will attempt
to fetch zone data (eg. from the primary servers).
- rpz-action-override: <action>
- Always use this RPZ action for matching triggers from this zone. Possible
action are: nxdomain, nodata, passthru, drop, disabled and cname.
- rpz-cname-override: <domain>
- The CNAME target domain to use if the cname action is configured for
rpz-action-override.
- rpz-log: <yes or no>
- Log all applied RPZ actions for this RPZ zone. Default is no.
- rpz-log-name: <name>
- Specify a string to be part of the log line, for easy referencing.
- rpz-signal-nxdomain-ra: <yes or no>
- Signal when a query is blocked by the RPZ with NXDOMAIN with an unset RA
flag. This allows certain clients, like dnsmasq, to infer that the domain
is externally blocked. Default is no.
- for-downstream: <yes or no>
- If enabled the zone is authoritatively answered for and queries for the
RPZ zone information are answered to downstream clients. This is useful
for monitoring scripts, that can then access the SOA information to check
if the rpz information is up to date. Default is no.
- tags: <list of tags>
- Limit the policies from this RPZ clause to clients with a matching tag.
Tags need to be defined in define-tag and can be assigned to client
addresses using access-control-tag. Enclose list of tags in quotes
("") and put spaces between tags. If no tags are specified the
policies from this clause will be applied for all clients.
In the example config settings below memory usage is reduced. Some service
levels are lower, notable very large data and a high TCP load are no longer
supported. Very large data and high TCP loads are exceptional for the DNS.
DNSSEC validation is enabled, just add trust anchors. If you do not have to
worry about programs using more than 3 Mb of memory, the below example is not
for you. Use the defaults to receive full service, which on BSD-32bit tops out
at 30-40 Mb after heavy usage.
# example settings that reduce memory usage
server:
num-threads: 1
outgoing-num-tcp: 1 # this limits TCP service, uses less buffers.
incoming-num-tcp: 1
outgoing-range: 60 # uses less memory, but less performance.
msg-buffer-size: 8192 # note this limits service, 'no huge stuff'.
msg-cache-size: 100k
msg-cache-slabs: 1
rrset-cache-size: 100k
rrset-cache-slabs: 1
infra-cache-numhosts: 200
infra-cache-slabs: 1
key-cache-size: 100k
key-cache-slabs: 1
neg-cache-size: 10k
num-queries-per-thread: 30
target-fetch-policy: "2 1 0 0 0 0"
harden-large-queries: "yes"
harden-short-bufsize: "yes"
- @UNBOUND_RUN_DIR@
- default Local-unbound working directory.
- @UNBOUND_CHROOT_DIR@
- default chroot(2) location.
- @ub_conf_file@
- Local-unbound configuration file.
- @UNBOUND_PIDFILE@
- default Local-unbound pidfile with process ID of the running daemon.
- unbound.log
- Local-unbound log file. default is to log to syslog(3).
local-unbound(8), local-unbound-checkconf(8).
Unbound was written by NLnet Labs. Please see CREDITS file in the
distribution for further details.
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