rndc.conf(5)



RNDC.CONF(5)                        BIND 9                        RNDC.CONF(5)

NAME
       rndc.conf - rndc configuration file

SYNOPSIS
       rndc.conf

DESCRIPTION
       rndc.conf  is  the  configuration file for rndc, the BIND 9 name server
       control utility. This file  has  a  similar  structure  and  syntax  to
       named.conf.  Statements  are  enclosed  in braces and terminated with a
       semi-colon. Clauses in the statements are also  semi-colon  terminated.
       The usual comment styles are supported:

       C style: /* */

       C++ style: // to end of line

       Unix style: # to end of line

       rndc.conf  is  much simpler than named.conf. The file uses three state-
       ments: an options statement, a server statement and a key statement.

       The options statement contains five clauses. The default-server  clause
       is  followed by the name or address of a name server. This host will be
       used when no name server is given as an  argument  to  rndc.   The  de-
       fault-key  clause  is followed by the name of a key which is identified
       by a key statement. If no keyid is provided on the rndc  command  line,
       and no key clause is found in a matching server statement, this default
       key will be used to authenticate the server's commands  and  responses.
       The  default-port  clause  is followed by the port to connect to on the
       remote name server. If no port option is provided on the  rndc  command
       line,  and no port clause is found in a matching server statement, this
       default port will be used to connect.  The  default-source-address  and
       default-source-address-v6 clauses which can be used to set the IPv4 and
       IPv6 source addresses respectively.

       After the server keyword, the server statement includes a string  which
       is  the  hostname or address for a name server. The statement has three
       possible clauses: key, port and addresses. The key name must match  the
       name of a key statement in the file. The port number specifies the port
       to connect to. If an addresses clause is supplied these addresses  will
       be  used  instead of the server name. Each address can take an optional
       port. If an source-address or source-address-v6 of supplied then  these
       will  be  used  to  specify  the IPv4 and IPv6 source addresses respec-
       tively.

       The key statement begins with an identifying string, the  name  of  the
       key.  The statement has two clauses. algorithm identifies the authenti-
       cation algorithm for rndc to use; currently only HMAC-MD5 (for compati-
       bility), HMAC-SHA1, HMAC-SHA224, HMAC-SHA256 (default), HMAC-SHA384 and
       HMAC-SHA512 are supported. This is followed by a  secret  clause  which
       contains  the  base-64  encoding of the algorithm's authentication key.
       The base-64 string is enclosed in double quotes.

       There are two common ways to generate the base-64 string  for  the  se-
       cret.  The BIND 9 program rndc-confgen can be used to generate a random
       key, or the mmencode program, also known as mimencode, can be  used  to
       generate a base-64 string from known input. mmencode does not ship with
       BIND 9 but is available on many systems. See the  EXAMPLE  section  for
       sample command lines for each.

EXAMPLE
          options {
            default-server  localhost;
            default-key     samplekey;
          };

          server localhost {
            key             samplekey;
          };

          server testserver {
            key     testkey;
            addresses   { localhost port 5353; };
          };

          key samplekey {
            algorithm       hmac-sha256;
            secret          "6FMfj43Osz4lyb24OIe2iGEz9lf1llJO+lz";
          };

          key testkey {
            algorithm   hmac-sha256;
            secret      "R3HI8P6BKw9ZwXwN3VZKuQ==";
          };

       In  the above example, rndc will by default use the server at localhost
       (127.0.0.1) and the key called samplekey.  Commands  to  the  localhost
       server  will  use  the samplekey key, which must also be defined in the
       server's configuration file with the same  name  and  secret.  The  key
       statement  indicates  that samplekey uses the HMAC-SHA256 algorithm and
       its secret clause contains the base-64 encoding of the HMAC-SHA256  se-
       cret enclosed in double quotes.

       If  rndc  -s testserver is used then rndc will connect to server on lo-
       calhost port 5353 using the key testkey.

       To generate a random secret with rndc-confgen:

       rndc-confgen

       A complete rndc.conf file, including the randomly generated  key,  will
       be  written  to  the  standard  output.  Commented-out key and controls
       statements for named.conf are also printed.

       To generate a base-64 secret with mmencode:

       echo "known plaintext for a secret" | mmencode

NAME SERVER CONFIGURATION
       The name server must be configured to accept rndc  connections  and  to
       recognize  the  key specified in the rndc.conf file, using the controls
       statement in named.conf. See the sections on the controls statement  in
       the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual for details.

SEE ALSO
       rndc(8),  rndc-confgen(8),  mmencode(1), BIND 9 Administrator Reference
       Manual.

AUTHOR
       Internet Systems Consortium

COPYRIGHT
       2020, Internet Systems Consortium

9.16.8-Debian                     2020-10-13                      RNDC.CONF(5)

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