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rndc - name server control utility
rndc [-b source-address] [-c config-file] [-k
key-file] [-s server] [-p port] [-q] [-r]
[-V] [-y key_id] [[-4] | [-6]] {command}
rndc controls the operation of a name server. If rndc is invoked
with no command line options or arguments, it prints a short summary of the
supported commands and the available options and their arguments.
rndc communicates with the name server over a TCP
connection, sending commands authenticated with digital signatures. In the
current versions of rndc and named, the only supported
authentication algorithms are HMAC-MD5 (for compatibility), HMAC-SHA1,
HMAC-SHA224, HMAC-SHA256 (default), HMAC-SHA384, and HMAC-SHA512. They use a
shared secret on each end of the connection, which provides TSIG-style
authentication for the command request and the name server's response. All
commands sent over the channel must be signed by a key_id known to the
server.
rndc reads a configuration file to determine how to contact
the name server and decide what algorithm and key it should use.
- -4
- This option indicates use of IPv4 only.
- -6
- This option indicates use of IPv6 only.
- -b source-address
- This option indicates source-address as the source address for the
connection to the server. Multiple instances are permitted, to allow
setting of both the IPv4 and IPv6 source addresses.
- -c config-file
- This option indicates config-file as the configuration file instead
of the default, /usr/local/etc/namedb/rndc.conf.
- -k key-file
- This option indicates key-file as the key file instead of the
default, /usr/local/etc/namedb/rndc.key. The key in
/usr/local/etc/namedb/rndc.key is used to authenticate commands
sent to the server if the config-file does not exist.
- -s server
- server is the name or address of the server which matches a server
statement in the configuration file for rndc. If no server is
supplied on the command line, the host named by the default-server clause
in the options statement of the rndc configuration file is
used.
- -p port
- This option instructs BIND 9 to send commands to TCP port port
instead of its default control channel port, 953.
- -q
- This option sets quiet mode, where message text returned by the server is
not printed unless there is an error.
- -r
- This option instructs rndc to print the result code returned by
named after executing the requested command (e.g., ISC_R_SUCCESS,
ISC_R_FAILURE, etc.).
- -V
- This option enables verbose logging.
- -y key_id
- This option indicates use of the key key_id from the configuration
file. For control message validation to succeed, key_id must be
known by named with the same algorithm and secret string. If no
key_id is specified, rndc first looks for a key clause in
the server statement of the server being used, or if no server statement
is present for that host, then in the default-key clause of the options
statement. Note that the configuration file contains shared secrets which
are used to send authenticated control commands to name servers, and
should therefore not have general read or write access.
A list of commands supported by rndc can be seen by running rndc
without arguments.
Currently supported commands are:
- addzone zone [class [view]] configuration
- This command adds a zone while the server is running. This command
requires the allow-new-zones option to be set to yes. The
configuration string specified on the command line is the zone
configuration text that would ordinarily be placed in named.conf.
The configuration is saved in a file called
viewname.nzf (or, if named is compiled with liblmdb, an
LMDB database file called viewname.nzd). viewname is the
name of the view, unless the view name contains characters that are
incompatible with use as a file name, in which case a cryptographic hash
of the view name is used instead. When named is restarted, the
file is loaded into the view configuration so that zones that were added
can persist after a restart.
This sample addzone command adds the zone
example.com to the default view:
rndc addzone example.com '{ type primary; file
"example.com.db"; };'
(Note the brackets around and semi-colon after the zone
configuration text.)
See also rndc delzone and rndc modzone.
- delzone [-clean] zone [class [view]]
- This command deletes a zone while the server is running.
If the -clean argument is specified, the zone's master
file (and journal file, if any) are deleted along with the zone. Without
the -clean option, zone files must be deleted manually. (If the
zone is of type secondary or stub, the files needing to be
removed are reported in the output of the rndc delzone
command.)
If the zone was originally added via rndc addzone, then
it is removed permanently. However, if it was originally configured in
named.conf, then that original configuration remains in place;
when the server is restarted or reconfigured, the zone is recreated. To
remove it permanently, it must also be removed from
named.conf.
See also rndc addzone and rndc modzone.
- dnssec (-status | -rollover -key id [-alg algorithm] [-when time] |
-checkds [-key id [-alg algorithm]] [-when time] published | withdrawn))
zone [class [view]]
- This command allows you to interact with the "dnssec-policy" of
a given zone.
rndc dnssec -status show the DNSSEC signing state for
the specified zone.
rndc dnssec -rollover allows you to schedule key
rollover for a specific key (overriding the original key lifetime).
rndc dnssec -checkds will let named know that
the DS for the given key has been seen published into or withdrawn from
the parent. This is required in order to complete a KSK rollover. If the
-key id argument is specified, look for the key with the given
identifier, otherwise if there is only one key acting as a KSK in the
zone, assume the DS of that key (if there are multiple keys with the
same tag, use -alg algorithm to select the correct algorithm).
The time that the DS has been published or withdrawn is set to now,
unless otherwise specified with the argument -when time.
- dnstap (-reopen | -roll [number])
- This command closes and re-opens DNSTAP output files. rndc dnstap
-reopen allows the output file to be renamed externally, so that
named can truncate and re-open it. rndc dnstap -roll causes
the output file to be rolled automatically, similar to log files. The most
recent output file has ".0" appended to its name; the previous
most recent output file is moved to ".1", and so on. If
number is specified, then the number of backup log files is limited
to that number.
- dumpdb [-all | -cache | -zones | -adb | -bad | -expired | -fail] [view
...]
- This command dumps the server's caches (default) and/or zones to the dump
file for the specified views. If no view is specified, all views are
dumped. (See the dump-file option in the BIND 9 Administrator
Reference Manual.)
- flush
- This command flushes the server's cache.
- flushname name [view]
- This command flushes the given name from the view's DNS cache and, if
applicable, from the view's nameserver address database, bad server cache,
and SERVFAIL cache.
- flushtree name [view]
- This command flushes the given name, and all of its subdomains, from the
view's DNS cache, address database, bad server cache, and SERVFAIL
cache.
- freeze [zone [class [view]]]
- This command suspends updates to a dynamic zone. If no zone is specified,
then all zones are suspended. This allows manual edits to be made to a
zone normally updated by dynamic update, and causes changes in the journal
file to be synced into the master file. All dynamic update attempts are
refused while the zone is frozen.
See also rndc thaw.
- halt [-p]
- This command stops the server immediately. Recent changes made through
dynamic update or IXFR are not saved to the master files, but are rolled
forward from the journal files when the server is restarted. If -p
is specified, named's process ID is returned. This allows an
external process to determine when named has completed halting.
See also rndc stop.
- loadkeys [zone [class [view]]]
- This command fetches all DNSSEC keys for the given zone from the key
directory. If they are within their publication period, they are merged
into the zone's DNSKEY RRset. Unlike rndc sign, however, the zone
is not immediately re-signed by the new keys, but is allowed to
incrementally re-sign over time.
This command requires that the zone be configured with a
dnssec-policy, or that the auto-dnssec zone option be set
to maintain, and also requires the zone to be configured to allow
dynamic DNS. (See "Dynamic Update Policies" in the
Administrator Reference Manual for more details.)
- managed-keys (status | refresh | sync | destroy) [class
[view]]
- This command inspects and controls the "managed-keys" database
which handles RFC 5011 DNSSEC trust anchor maintenance. If a view
is specified, these commands are applied to that view; otherwise, they are
applied to all views.
- When run with the status keyword, this prints the current status of
the managed-keys database.
- When run with the refresh keyword, this forces an immediate refresh
query to be sent for all the managed keys, updating the managed-keys
database if any new keys are found, without waiting the normal refresh
interval.
- When run with the sync keyword, this forces an immediate dump of
the managed-keys database to disk (in the file managed-keys.bind or
(viewname.mkeys). This synchronizes the database with its journal
file, so that the database's current contents can be inspected
visually.
- When run with the destroy keyword, the managed-keys database is
shut down and deleted, and all key maintenance is terminated. This command
should be used only with extreme caution.
Existing keys that are already trusted are not deleted from
memory; DNSSEC validation can continue after this command is used.
However, key maintenance operations cease until named is
restarted or reconfigured, and all existing key maintenance states are
deleted.
Running rndc reconfig or restarting named
immediately after this command causes key maintenance to be
reinitialized from scratch, just as if the server were being started for
the first time. This is primarily intended for testing, but it may also
be used, for example, to jumpstart the acquisition of new keys in the
event of a trust anchor rollover, or as a brute-force repair for key
maintenance problems.
- modzone zone [class [view]] configuration
- This command modifies the configuration of a zone while the server is
running. This command requires the allow-new-zones option to be set
to yes. As with addzone, the configuration string specified
on the command line is the zone configuration text that would ordinarily
be placed in named.conf.
If the zone was originally added via rndc addzone, the
configuration changes are recorded permanently and are still in effect
after the server is restarted or reconfigured. However, if it was
originally configured in named.conf, then that original
configuration remains in place; when the server is restarted or
reconfigured, the zone reverts to its original configuration. To make
the changes permanent, it must also be modified in
named.conf.
See also rndc addzone and rndc delzone.
- notify zone [class [view]]
- This command resends NOTIFY messages for the zone.
- notrace
- This command sets the server's debugging level to 0.
See also rndc trace.
- nta [(-class class | -dump | -force | -remove | -lifetime duration)]
domain [view]
- This command sets a DNSSEC negative trust anchor (NTA) for domain,
with a lifetime of duration. The default lifetime is configured in
named.conf via the nta-lifetime option, and defaults to one
hour. The lifetime cannot exceed one week.
A negative trust anchor selectively disables DNSSEC validation
for zones that are known to be failing because of misconfiguration
rather than an attack. When data to be validated is at or below an
active NTA (and above any other configured trust anchors), named
aborts the DNSSEC validation process and treats the data as insecure
rather than bogus. This continues until the NTA's lifetime has
elapsed.
NTAs persist across restarts of the named server. The
NTAs for a view are saved in a file called name.nta, where
name is the name of the view; if it contains characters that are
incompatible with use as a file name, a cryptographic hash is generated
from the name of the view.
An existing NTA can be removed by using the -remove
option.
An NTA's lifetime can be specified with the -lifetime
option. TTL-style suffixes can be used to specify the lifetime in
seconds, minutes, or hours. If the specified NTA already exists, its
lifetime is updated to the new value. Setting lifetime to zero is
equivalent to -remove.
If -dump is used, any other arguments are ignored and a
list of existing NTAs is printed. Note that this may include NTAs that
are expired but have not yet been cleaned up.
Normally, named periodically tests to see whether data
below an NTA can now be validated (see the nta-recheck option in
the Administrator Reference Manual for details). If data can be
validated, then the NTA is regarded as no longer necessary and is
allowed to expire early. The -force parameter overrides this
behavior and forces an NTA to persist for its entire lifetime,
regardless of whether data could be validated if the NTA were not
present.
The view class can be specified with -class. The
default is class IN, which is the only class for which DNSSEC is
currently supported.
All of these options can be shortened, i.e., to -l,
-r, -d, -f, and -c.
Unrecognized options are treated as errors. To refer to a
domain or view name that begins with a hyphen, use a double-hyphen (--)
on the command line to indicate the end of options.
- querylog [(on | off)]
- This command enables or disables query logging. For backward
compatibility, this command can also be used without an argument to toggle
query logging on and off.
Query logging can also be enabled by explicitly directing the
queries category to a channel in the logging
section of named.conf, or by specifying querylog yes; in
the options section of named.conf.
- reconfig
- This command reloads the configuration file and loads new zones, but does
not reload existing zone files even if they have changed. This is faster
than a full rndc reload when there is a large number of zones,
because it avoids the need to examine the modification times of the zone
files.
- recursing
- This command dumps the list of queries named is currently recursing
on, and the list of domains to which iterative queries are currently being
sent.
The first list includes all unique clients that are waiting
for recursion to complete, including the query that is awaiting a
response and the timestamp (seconds since the Unix epoch) of when named
started processing this client query.
The second list comprises of domains for which there are
active (or recently active) fetches in progress. It reports the number
of active fetches for each domain and the number of queries that have
been passed (allowed) or dropped (spilled) as a result of the
fetches-per-zone limit. (Note: these counters are not cumulative
over time; whenever the number of active fetches for a domain drops to
zero, the counter for that domain is deleted, and the next time a fetch
is sent to that domain, it is recreated with the counters set to
zero).
- refresh zone [class [view]]
- This command schedules zone maintenance for the given zone.
- reload
- This command reloads the configuration file and zones.
If a zone is specified, this command reloads only the given
zone.
- retransfer zone [class [view]]
- This command retransfers the given secondary zone from the primary server.
If the zone is configured to use inline-signing, the
signed version of the zone is discarded; after the retransfer of the
unsigned version is complete, the signed version is regenerated with new
signatures.
- scan
- This command scans the list of available network interfaces for changes,
without performing a full rndc reconfig or waiting for the
interface-interval timer.
- secroots [-] [view ...]
- This command dumps the security roots (i.e., trust anchors configured via
trust-anchors, or the managed-keys or trusted-keys
statements [both deprecated], or dnssec-validation auto) and
negative trust anchors for the specified views. If no view is specified,
all views are dumped. Security roots indicate whether they are configured
as trusted keys, managed keys, or initializing managed keys (managed keys
that have not yet been updated by a successful key refresh query).
If the first argument is -, then the output is returned
via the rndc response channel and printed to the standard output.
Otherwise, it is written to the secroots dump file, which defaults to
named.secroots, but can be overridden via the
secroots-file option in named.conf.
See also rndc managed-keys.
- serve-stale (on | off | reset | status) [class [view]]
- This command enables, disables, resets, or reports the current status of
the serving of stale answers as configured in named.conf.
If serving of stale answers is disabled by rndc-serve-stale
off, then it remains disabled even if named is reloaded or
reconfigured. rndc serve-stale reset restores the setting
as configured in named.conf.
rndc serve-stale status reports whether caching and
serving of stale answers is currently enabled or disabled. It also
reports the values of stale-answer-ttl and
max-stale-ttl.
- showzone zone [class [view]]
- This command prints the configuration of a running zone.
See also rndc zonestatus.
- sign zone [class [view]]
- This command fetches all DNSSEC keys for the given zone from the key
directory (see the key-directory option in the BIND 9 Administrator
Reference Manual). If they are within their publication period, they are
merged into the zone's DNSKEY RRset. If the DNSKEY RRset is changed, then
the zone is automatically re-signed with the new key set.
This command requires that the zone be configured with a
dnssec-policy, or that the auto-dnssec zone option be set
to allow or maintain, and also requires the zone to be
configured to allow dynamic DNS. (See "Dynamic Update
Policies" in the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual for more
details.)
See also rndc loadkeys.
- signing [(-list | -clear keyid/algorithm | -clear all | -nsec3param
(parameters | none) | -serial value) zone [class [view]]
- This command lists, edits, or removes the DNSSEC signing-state records for
the specified zone. The status of ongoing DNSSEC operations, such as
signing or generating NSEC3 chains, is stored in the zone in the form of
DNS resource records of type sig-signing-type. rndc signing
-list converts these records into a human-readable form, indicating
which keys are currently signing or have finished signing the zone, and
which NSEC3 chains are being created or removed.
rndc signing -clear can remove a single key (specified
in the same format that rndc signing -list uses to display it),
or all keys. In either case, only completed keys are removed; any record
indicating that a key has not yet finished signing the zone is
retained.
rndc signing -nsec3param sets the NSEC3 parameters for
a zone. This is the only supported mechanism for using NSEC3 with
inline-signing zones. Parameters are specified in the same format
as an NSEC3PARAM resource record: hash algorithm, flags,
iterations, and salt, in that order.
Currently, the only defined value for hash algorithm is
1, representing SHA-1. The flags may be set to 0 or
1, depending on whether the opt-out bit in the NSEC3 chain should
be set. iterations defines the number of additional times to
apply the algorithm when generating an NSEC3 hash. The salt is a
string of data expressed in hexadecimal, a hyphen (-') if no salt is
to be used, or the keyword ``auto`, which causes named
to generate a random 64-bit salt.
So, for example, to create an NSEC3 chain using the SHA-1 hash
algorithm, no opt-out flag, 10 iterations, and a salt value of
"FFFF", use: rndc signing -nsec3param 1 0 10 FFFF zone.
To set the opt-out flag, 15 iterations, and no salt, use: rndc
signing -nsec3param 1 1 15 - zone.
rndc signing -nsec3param none removes an existing NSEC3
chain and replaces it with NSEC.
rndc signing -serial value sets the serial number of
the zone to value. If the value would cause the serial number to
go backwards, it is rejected. The primary use of this parameter is to
set the serial number on inline signed zones.
- stats
- This command writes server statistics to the statistics file. (See the
statistics-file option in the BIND 9 Administrator Reference
Manual.)
- status
- This command displays the status of the server. Note that the number of
zones includes the internal bind/CH zone and the default
./IN hint zone, if there is no explicit root zone configured.
- stop -p
- This command stops the server, making sure any recent changes made through
dynamic update or IXFR are first saved to the master files of the updated
zones. If -p is specified, named's process ID is returned.
This allows an external process to determine when named has
completed stopping.
See also rndc halt.
- sync -clean [zone [class [view]]]
- This command syncs changes in the journal file for a dynamic zone to the
master file. If the "-clean" option is specified, the journal
file is also removed. If no zone is specified, then all zones are
synced.
- tcp-timeouts [initial idle keepalive advertised]
- When called without arguments, this command displays the current values of
the tcp-initial-timeout, tcp-idle-timeout,
tcp-keepalive-timeout, and tcp-advertised-timeout options.
When called with arguments, these values are updated. This allows an
administrator to make rapid adjustments when under a denial-of-service
(DoS) attack. See the descriptions of these options in the BIND 9
Administrator Reference Manual for details of their use.
- thaw [zone [class [view]]]
- This command enables updates to a frozen dynamic zone. If no zone is
specified, then all frozen zones are enabled. This causes the server to
reload the zone from disk, and re-enables dynamic updates after the load
has completed. After a zone is thawed, dynamic updates are no longer
refused. If the zone has changed and the ixfr-from-differences
option is in use, the journal file is updated to reflect changes in the
zone. Otherwise, if the zone has changed, any existing journal file is
removed.
See also rndc freeze.
- trace [level]
- If no level is specified, this command increments the server's debugging
level by one.
- level
- If specified, this command sets the server's debugging level to the
provided value.
See also rndc notrace.
- tsig-delete keyname [view]
- This command deletes a given TKEY-negotiated key from the server. This
does not apply to statically configured TSIG keys.
- tsig-list
- This command lists the names of all TSIG keys currently configured for use
by named in each view. The list includes both statically configured
keys and dynamic TKEY-negotiated keys.
- validation (on | off | status) [view ...]
- This command enables, disables, or checks the current status of DNSSEC
validation. By default, validation is enabled.
The cache is flushed when validation is turned on or off to
avoid using data that might differ between states.
- zonestatus zone [class [view]]
- This command displays the current status of the given zone, including the
master file name and any include files from which it was loaded, when it
was most recently loaded, the current serial number, the number of nodes,
whether the zone supports dynamic updates, whether the zone is DNSSEC
signed, whether it uses automatic DNSSEC key management or inline signing,
and the scheduled refresh or expiry times for the zone.
See also rndc showzone.
rndc commands that specify zone names, such as
reload retransfer, or zonestatus, can be ambiguous when
applied to zones of type redirect. Redirect zones are always called
., and can be confused with zones of type hint or with
secondary copies of the root zone. To specify a redirect zone, use the
special zone name -redirect, without a trailing period. (With a
trailing period, this would specify a zone called
"-redirect".)
There is currently no way to provide the shared secret for a key_id
without using the configuration file.
Several error messages could be clearer.
rndc.conf(5), rndc-confgen(8), named(8),
named.conf(5), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual.
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