1 Frequently Asked Questions about BIND 9
3 Copyright © 2004-2010, 2013, 2014 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc.
6 Copyright © 2000-2003 Internet Software Consortium.
8 -----------------------------------------------------------------------
10 1. Compilation and Installation Questions
12 Q: I'm trying to compile BIND 9, and "make" is failing due to files not
15 A: Using a parallel or distributed "make" to build BIND 9 is not
16 supported, and doesn't work. If you are using one of these, use normal
17 make or gmake instead.
19 Q: Isn't "make install" supposed to generate a default named.conf?
23 Long Answer: There really isn't a default configuration which fits any
24 site perfectly. There are lots of decisions that need to be made and
25 there is no consensus on what the defaults should be. For example
26 FreeBSD uses /etc/namedb as the location where the configuration files
27 for named are stored. Others use /var/named.
29 What addresses to listen on? For a laptop on the move a lot you may
30 only want to listen on the loop back interfaces.
32 To whom do you offer recursive service? Is there a firewall to
33 consider? If so, is it stateless or stateful? Are you directly on the
34 Internet? Are you on a private network? Are you on a NAT'd network? The
35 answers to all these questions change how you configure even a caching
38 2. Configuration and Setup Questions
40 Q: Why does named log the warning message "no TTL specified - using SOA
43 A: Your zone file is illegal according to RFC1035. It must either have a
48 at the beginning, or the first record in it must have a TTL field, like
49 the "84600" in this example:
51 example.com. 86400 IN SOA ns hostmaster ( 1 3600 1800 1814400 3600 )
53 Q: Why do I get errors like "dns_zone_load: zone foo/IN: loading master
54 file bar: ran out of space"?
56 A: This is often caused by TXT records with missing close quotes. Check
57 that all TXT records containing quoted strings have both open and close
60 Q: How do I restrict people from looking up the server version?
62 A: Put a "version" option containing something other than the real version
63 in the "options" section of named.conf. Note doing this will not
64 prevent attacks and may impede people trying to diagnose problems with
65 your server. Also it is possible to "fingerprint" nameservers to
66 determine their version.
68 Q: How do I restrict only remote users from looking up the server version?
70 A: The following view statement will intercept lookups as the internal
71 view that holds the version information will be matched last. The
72 caveats of the previous answer still apply, of course.
75 match-clients { <those to be refused>; };
76 allow-query { none; };
79 file "/dev/null"; // or any empty file
83 Q: What do "no source of entropy found" or "could not open entropy source
86 A: The server requires a source of entropy to perform certain operations,
87 mostly DNSSEC related. These messages indicate that you have no source
88 of entropy. On systems with /dev/random or an equivalent, it is used by
89 default. A source of entropy can also be defined using the
90 random-device option in named.conf.
92 Q: I'm trying to use TSIG to authenticate dynamic updates or zone
93 transfers. I'm sure I have the keys set up correctly, but the server is
94 rejecting the TSIG. Why?
96 A: This may be a clock skew problem. Check that the the clocks on the
97 client and server are properly synchronised (e.g., using ntp).
99 Q: I see a log message like the following. Why?
101 couldn't open pid file '/var/run/named.pid': Permission denied
103 A: You are most likely running named as a non-root user, and that user
104 does not have permission to write in /var/run. The common ways of
105 fixing this are to create a /var/run/named directory owned by the named
106 user and set pid-file to "/var/run/named/named.pid", or set pid-file to
107 "named.pid", which will put the file in the directory specified by the
108 directory option (which, in this case, must be writable by the user
109 named is running as).
111 Q: I can query the nameserver from the nameserver but not from other
114 A: This is usually the result of the firewall configuration stopping the
115 queries and / or the replies.
117 Q: How can I make a server a slave for both an internal and an external
118 view at the same time? When I tried, both views on the slave were
119 transferred from the same view on the master.
121 A: You will need to give the master and slave multiple IP addresses and
122 use those to make sure you reach the correct view on the other machine.
124 Master: 10.0.1.1 (internal), 10.0.1.2 (external, IP alias)
126 match-clients { !10.0.1.2; !10.0.1.4; 10.0.1/24; };
127 notify-source 10.0.1.1;
128 transfer-source 10.0.1.1;
129 query-source address 10.0.1.1;
131 match-clients { any; };
132 recursion no; // don't offer recursion to the world
133 notify-source 10.0.1.2;
134 transfer-source 10.0.1.2;
135 query-source address 10.0.1.2;
137 Slave: 10.0.1.3 (internal), 10.0.1.4 (external, IP alias)
139 match-clients { !10.0.1.2; !10.0.1.4; 10.0.1/24; };
140 notify-source 10.0.1.3;
141 transfer-source 10.0.1.3;
142 query-source address 10.0.1.3;
144 match-clients { any; };
145 recursion no; // don't offer recursion to the world
146 notify-source 10.0.1.4;
147 transfer-source 10.0.1.4;
148 query-source address 10.0.1.4;
150 You put the external address on the alias so that all the other dns
151 clients on these boxes see the internal view by default.
153 A: BIND 9.3 and later: Use TSIG to select the appropriate view.
157 algorithm hmac-sha256;
158 secret "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx";
161 match-clients { !key external; // reject message ment for the
163 10.0.1/24; }; // accept from these addresses.
167 match-clients { key external; any; };
168 server 10.0.1.2 { keys external; }; // tag messages from the
169 // external view to the
170 // other servers for the
178 algorithm hmac-sha256;
179 secret "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx";
182 match-clients { !key external; 10.0.1/24; };
186 match-clients { key external; any; };
187 server 10.0.1.1 { keys external; };
192 Q: I get error messages like "multiple RRs of singleton type" and "CNAME
193 and other data" when transferring a zone. What does this mean?
195 A: These indicate a malformed master zone. You can identify the exact
196 records involved by transferring the zone using dig then running
197 named-checkzone on it.
199 dig axfr example.com @master-server > tmp
200 named-checkzone example.com tmp
202 A CNAME record cannot exist with the same name as another record except
203 for the DNSSEC records which prove its existence (NSEC).
205 RFC 1034, Section 3.6.2: "If a CNAME RR is present at a node, no other
206 data should be present; this ensures that the data for a canonical name
207 and its aliases cannot be different. This rule also insures that a
208 cached CNAME can be used without checking with an authoritative server
211 Q: I get error messages like "named.conf:99: unexpected end of input"
212 where 99 is the last line of named.conf.
214 A: There are unbalanced quotes in named.conf.
216 A: Some text editors (notepad and wordpad) fail to put a line title
217 indication (e.g. CR/LF) on the last line of a text file. This can be
218 fixed by "adding" a blank line to the end of the file. Named expects to
219 see EOF immediately after EOL and treats text files where this is not
222 Q: How do I share a dynamic zone between multiple views?
224 A: You choose one view to be master and the second a slave and transfer
225 the zone between views.
229 algorithm hmac-sha256;
230 secret "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx";
234 algorithm hmac-sha256;
235 secret "yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy";
239 match-clients { !key external; 10.0.1/24; };
241 /* Deliver notify messages to external view. */
246 file "internal/example.db";
247 allow-update { key mykey; };
248 also-notify { 10.0.1.1; };
253 match-clients { key external; any; };
256 file "external/example.db";
257 masters { 10.0.1.1; };
258 transfer-source 10.0.1.1;
259 // allow-update-forwarding { any; };
260 // allow-notify { ... };
264 Q: I get a error message like "zone wireless.ietf56.ietf.org/IN: loading
265 master file primaries/wireless.ietf56.ietf.org: no owner".
267 A: This error is produced when a line in the master file contains leading
268 white space (tab/space) but there is no current record owner name to
269 inherit the name from. Usually this is the result of putting white
270 space before a comment, forgetting the "@" for the SOA record, or
271 indenting the master file.
273 Q: Why are my logs in GMT (UTC).
275 A: You are running chrooted (-t) and have not supplied local timezone
276 information in the chroot area.
278 FreeBSD: /etc/localtime
279 Solaris: /etc/TIMEZONE and /usr/share/lib/zoneinfo
280 OSF: /etc/zoneinfo/localtime
282 See also tzset(3) and zic(8).
284 Q: I get "rndc: connect failed: connection refused" when I try to run
287 A: This is usually a configuration error.
289 First ensure that named is running and no errors are being reported at
290 startup (/var/log/messages or equivalent). Running "named -g <usual
291 arguments>" from a title can help at this point.
293 Secondly ensure that named is configured to use rndc either by
294 "rndc-confgen -a", rndc-confgen or manually. The Administrators
295 Reference manual has details on how to do this.
297 Old versions of rndc-confgen used localhost rather than 127.0.0.1 in /
298 etc/rndc.conf for the default server. Update /etc/rndc.conf if
299 necessary so that the default server listed in /etc/rndc.conf matches
300 the addresses used in named.conf. "localhost" has two address
303 If you use "rndc-confgen -a" and named is running with -t or -u ensure
304 that /etc/rndc.conf has the correct ownership and that a copy is in the
305 chroot area. You can do this by re-running "rndc-confgen -a" with
306 appropriate -t and -u arguments.
308 Q: I get "transfer of 'example.net/IN' from 192.168.4.12#53: failed while
309 receiving responses: permission denied" error messages.
311 A: These indicate a filesystem permission error preventing named creating
312 / renaming the temporary file. These will usually also have other
313 associated error messages like
315 "dumping master file: sl/tmp-XXXX5il3sQ: open: permission denied"
317 Named needs write permission on the directory containing the file.
318 Named writes the new cache file to a temporary file then renames it to
319 the name specified in named.conf to ensure that the contents are always
320 complete. This is to prevent named loading a partial zone in the event
321 of power failure or similar interrupting the write of the master file.
323 Note file names are relative to the directory specified in options and
324 any chroot directory ([<chroot dir>/][<options dir>]).
326 If named is invoked as "named -t /chroot/DNS" with the following
327 named.conf then "/chroot/DNS/var/named/sl" needs to be writable by the
328 user named is running as.
331 directory "/var/named";
336 file "sl/example.net";
337 masters { 192.168.4.12; };
340 Q: I want to forward all DNS queries from my caching nameserver to another
341 server. But there are some domains which have to be served locally, via
344 How do I achieve this ?
348 forwarders { <ip.of.primary.nameserver>; };
351 zone "sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org" {
352 type forward; forward only;
353 forwarders { <ip.of.rbldns.server> port 530; };
356 zone "list.dsbl.org" {
357 type forward; forward only;
358 forwarders { <ip.of.rbldns.server> port 530; };
362 Q: Can you help me understand how BIND 9 uses memory to store DNS zones?
364 Some times it seems to take several times the amount of memory it needs
367 A: When reloading a zone named my have multiple copies of the zone in
368 memory at one time. The zone it is serving and the one it is loading.
369 If reloads are ultra fast it can have more still.
371 e.g. Ones that are transferring out, the one that it is serving and the
374 BIND 8 destroyed the zone before loading and also killed off outgoing
375 transfers of the zone.
377 The new strategy allows slaves to get copies of the new zone regardless
378 of how often the master is loaded compared to the transfer time. The
379 slave might skip some intermediate versions but the transfers will
380 complete and it will keep reasonably in sync with the master.
382 The new strategy also allows the master to recover from syntax and
383 other errors in the master file as it still has an in-core copy of the
386 Q: I want to use IPv6 locally but I don't have a external IPv6 connection.
387 External lookups are slow.
389 A: You can use server clauses to stop named making external lookups over
392 server fd81:ec6c:bd62::/48 { bogus no; }; // site ULA prefix
393 server ::/0 { bogus yes; };
395 3. Operations Questions
397 Q: How to change the nameservers for a zone?
399 A: Step 1: Ensure all nameservers, new and old, are serving the same zone
402 Step 2: Work out the maximum TTL of the NS RRset in the parent and
403 child zones. This is the time it will take caches to be clear of a
404 particular version of the NS RRset. If you are just removing
405 nameservers you can skip to Step 6.
407 Step 3: Add new nameservers to the NS RRset for the zone and wait until
408 all the servers for the zone are answering with this new NS RRset.
410 Step 4: Inform the parent zone of the new NS RRset then wait for all
411 the parent servers to be answering with the new NS RRset.
413 Step 5: Wait for cache to be clear of the old NS RRset. See Step 2 for
414 how long. If you are just adding nameservers you are done.
416 Step 6: Remove any old nameservers from the zones NS RRset and wait for
417 all the servers for the zone to be serving the new NS RRset.
419 Step 7: Inform the parent zone of the new NS RRset then wait for all
420 the parent servers to be answering with the new NS RRset.
422 Step 8: Wait for cache to be clear of the old NS RRset. See Step 2 for
425 Step 9: Turn off the old nameservers or remove the zone entry from the
426 configuration of the old nameservers.
428 Step 10: Increment the serial number and wait for the change to be
429 visible in all nameservers for the zone. This ensures that zone
430 transfers are still working after the old servers are decommissioned.
432 Note: the above procedure is designed to be transparent to dns clients.
433 Decommissioning the old servers too early will result in some clients
434 not being able to look up answers in the zone.
436 Note: while it is possible to run the addition and removal stages
437 together it is not recommended.
441 Q: I keep getting log messages like the following. Why?
443 Dec 4 23:47:59 client 10.0.0.1#1355: updating zone 'example.com/IN':
444 update failed: 'RRset exists (value dependent)' prerequisite not
447 A: DNS updates allow the update request to test to see if certain
448 conditions are met prior to proceeding with the update. The message
449 above is saying that conditions were not met and the update is not
450 proceeding. See doc/rfc/rfc2136.txt for more details on prerequisites.
452 Q: I keep getting log messages like the following. Why?
454 Jun 21 12:00:00.000 client 10.0.0.1#1234: update denied
456 A: Someone is trying to update your DNS data using the RFC2136 Dynamic
457 Update protocol. Windows 2000 machines have a habit of sending dynamic
458 update requests to DNS servers without being specifically configured to
459 do so. If the update requests are coming from a Windows 2000 machine,
460 see <http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q246/8/04.asp>
461 for information about how to turn them off.
463 Q: When I do a "dig . ns", many of the A records for the root servers are
466 A: This is normal and harmless. It is a somewhat confusing side effect of
467 the way BIND 9 does RFC2181 trust ranking and of the efforts BIND 9
468 makes to avoid promoting glue into answers.
470 When BIND 9 first starts up and primes its cache, it receives the root
471 server addresses as additional data in an authoritative response from a
472 root server, and these records are eligible for inclusion as additional
473 data in responses. Subsequently it receives a subset of the root server
474 addresses as additional data in a non-authoritative (referral) response
475 from a root server. This causes the addresses to now be considered
476 non-authoritative (glue) data, which is not eligible for inclusion in
479 The server does have a complete set of root server addresses cached at
480 all times, it just may not include all of them as additional data,
481 depending on whether they were last received as answers or as glue. You
482 can always look up the addresses with explicit queries like "dig
483 a.root-servers.net A".
485 Q: Why don't my zones reload when I do an "rndc reload" or SIGHUP?
487 A: A zone can be updated either by editing zone files and reloading the
488 server or by dynamic update, but not both. If you have enabled dynamic
489 update for a zone using the "allow-update" option, you are not supposed
490 to edit the zone file by hand, and the server will not attempt to
493 Q: Why is named listening on UDP port other than 53?
495 A: Named uses a system selected port to make queries of other nameservers.
496 This behaviour can be overridden by using query-source to lock down the
497 port and/or address. See also notify-source and transfer-source.
499 Q: I get warning messages like "zone example.com/IN: refresh: failure
500 trying master 1.2.3.4#53: timed out".
502 A: Check that you can make UDP queries from the slave to the master
504 dig +norec example.com soa @1.2.3.4
506 You could be generating queries faster than the slave can cope with.
507 Lower the serial query rate.
509 serial-query-rate 5; // default 20
511 Q: I don't get RRSIG's returned when I use "dig +dnssec".
513 A: You need to ensure DNSSEC is enabled (dnssec-enable yes;).
515 Q: Can a NS record refer to a CNAME.
517 A: No. The rules for glue (copies of the *address* records in the parent
518 zones) and additional section processing do not allow it to work.
520 You would have to add both the CNAME and address records (A/AAAA) as
521 glue to the parent zone and have CNAMEs be followed when doing
522 additional section processing to make it work. No nameserver
523 implementation supports either of these requirements.
525 Q: What does "RFC 1918 response from Internet for 0.0.0.10.IN-ADDR.ARPA"
528 A: If the IN-ADDR.ARPA name covered refers to a internal address space you
529 are using then you have failed to follow RFC 1918 usage rules and are
530 leaking queries to the Internet. You should establish your own zones
531 for these addresses to prevent you querying the Internet's name servers
532 for these addresses. Please see <http://as112.net/> for details of the
533 problems you are causing and the counter measures that have had to be
536 If you are not using these private addresses then a client has queried
537 for them. You can just ignore the messages, get the offending client to
538 stop sending you these messages as they are most probably leaking them
539 or setup your own zones empty zones to serve answers to these queries.
541 zone "10.IN-ADDR.ARPA" {
546 zone "16.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA" {
553 zone "31.172.IN-ADDR.ARPA" {
558 zone "168.192.IN-ADDR.ARPA" {
564 @ 10800 IN SOA <name-of-server>. <contact-email>. (
565 1 3600 1200 604800 10800 )
566 @ 10800 IN NS <name-of-server>.
570 Future versions of named are likely to do this automatically.
572 Q: Will named be affected by the 2007 changes to daylight savings rules in
575 A: No, so long as the machines internal clock (as reported by "date -u")
576 remains at UTC. The only visible change if you fail to upgrade your OS,
577 if you are in a affected area, will be that log messages will be a hour
578 out during the period where the old rules do not match the new rules.
580 For most OS's this change just means that you need to update the
581 conversion rules from UTC to local time. Normally this involves
582 updating a file in /etc (which sets the default timezone for the
583 machine) and possibly a directory which has all the conversion rules
584 for the world (e.g. /usr/share/zoneinfo). When updating the OS do not
585 forget to update any chroot areas as well. See your OS's documentation
588 The local timezone conversion rules can also be done on a individual
589 basis by setting the TZ environment variable appropriately. See your
590 OS's documentation for more details.
592 Q: Is there a bugzilla (or other tool) database that mere mortals can have
593 (read-only) access to for bind?
595 A: No. The BIND 9 bug database is kept closed for a number of reasons.
596 These include, but are not limited to, that the database contains
597 proprietory information from people reporting bugs. The database has in
598 the past and may in future contain unfixed bugs which are capable of
599 bringing down most of the Internet's DNS infrastructure.
601 The release pages for each version contain up to date lists of bugs
602 that have been fixed post release. That is as close as we can get to
603 providing a bug database.
605 Q: Why do queries for NSEC3 records fail to return the NSEC3 record?
607 A: NSEC3 records are strictly meta data and can only be returned in the
608 authority section. This is done so that signing the zone using NSEC3
609 records does not bring names into existence that do not exist in the
610 unsigned version of the zone.
612 5. Operating-System Specific Questions
616 Q: I get the following error trying to configure BIND:
618 checking if unistd.h or sys/types.h defines fd_set... no
619 configure: error: need either working unistd.h or sys/select.h
621 A: You have attempted to configure BIND with the bundled C compiler. This
622 compiler does not meet the minimum compiler requirements to for
623 building BIND. You need to install a ANSI C compiler and / or teach
624 configure how to find the ANSI C compiler. The later can be done by
625 adjusting the PATH environment variable and / or specifying the
628 ./configure CC=<compiler> ...
632 Q: Why do I get the following errors:
634 general: errno2result.c:109: unexpected error:
635 general: unable to convert errno to isc_result: 14: Bad address
636 client: UDP client handler shutting down due to fatal receive error: unexpected error
638 A: This is the result of a Linux kernel bug.
640 See: <http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-netdev&m=113081708031466&w=
643 Q: Why does named lock up when it attempts to connect over IPSEC tunnels?
645 A: This is due to a kernel bug where the fact that a socket is marked
646 non-blocking is ignored. It is reported that setting xfrm_larval_drop
647 to 1 helps but this may have negative side effects. See: <https://
648 bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=427629> and <http://lkml.org/lkml/
651 xfrm_larval_drop can be set to 1 by the following procedure:
653 echo "1" > proc/sys/net/core/xfrm_larval_drop
655 Q: Why do I see 5 (or more) copies of named on Linux?
657 A: Linux threads each show up as a process under ps. The approximate
658 number of threads running is n+4, where n is the number of CPUs. Note
659 that the amount of memory used is not cumulative; if each process is
660 using 10M of memory, only a total of 10M is used.
662 Newer versions of Linux's ps command hide the individual threads and
663 require -L to display them.
665 Q: Why does BIND 9 log "permission denied" errors accessing its
666 configuration files or zones on my Linux system even though it is
669 A: On Linux, BIND 9 drops most of its root privileges on startup. This
670 including the privilege to open files owned by other users. Therefore,
671 if the server is running as root, the configuration files and zone
672 files should also be owned by root.
674 Q: I get the error message "named: capset failed: Operation not permitted"
677 A: The capability module, part of "Linux Security Modules/LSM", has not
678 been loaded into the kernel. See insmod(8), modprobe(8).
680 The relevant modules can be loaded by running:
685 Q: I'm running BIND on Red Hat Enterprise Linux or Fedora Core -
687 Why can't named update slave zone database files?
689 Why can't named create DDNS journal files or update the master zones
692 Why can't named create custom log files?
694 A: Red Hat Security Enhanced Linux (SELinux) policy security protections :
696 Red Hat have adopted the National Security Agency's SELinux security
697 policy (see <http://www.nsa.gov/selinux>) and recommendations for BIND
698 security , which are more secure than running named in a chroot and
699 make use of the bind-chroot environment unnecessary .
701 By default, named is not allowed by the SELinux policy to write, create
702 or delete any files EXCEPT in these directories:
704 $ROOTDIR/var/named/slaves
705 $ROOTDIR/var/named/data
709 where $ROOTDIR may be set in /etc/sysconfig/named if bind-chroot is
712 The SELinux policy particularly does NOT allow named to modify the
713 $ROOTDIR/var/named directory, the default location for master zone
716 SELinux policy overrules file access permissions - so even if all the
717 files under /var/named have ownership named:named and mode rw-rw-r--,
718 named will still not be able to write or create files except in the
719 directories above, with SELinux in Enforcing mode.
721 So, to allow named to update slave or DDNS zone files, it is best to
722 locate them in $ROOTDIR/var/named/slaves, with named.conf zone
725 zone "slave.zone." IN {
727 file "slaves/slave.zone.db";
730 zone "ddns.zone." IN {
733 file "slaves/ddns.zone.db";
737 To allow named to create its cache dump and statistics files, for
738 example, you could use named.conf options statements such as:
742 dump-file "/var/named/data/cache_dump.db";
743 statistics-file "/var/named/data/named_stats.txt";
748 You can also tell SELinux to allow named to update any zone database
749 files, by setting the SELinux tunable boolean parameter
750 'named_write_master_zones=1', using the system-config-securitylevel
751 GUI, using the 'setsebool' command, or in /etc/selinux/targeted/
754 You can disable SELinux protection for named entirely by setting the
755 'named_disable_trans=1' SELinux tunable boolean parameter.
757 The SELinux named policy defines these SELinux contexts for named:
759 named_zone_t : for zone database files - $ROOTDIR/var/named/*
760 named_conf_t : for named configuration files - $ROOTDIR/etc/{named,rndc}.*
761 named_cache_t: for files modifiable by named - $ROOTDIR/var/{tmp,named/{slaves,data}}
764 If you want to retain use of the SELinux policy for named, and put
765 named files in different locations, you can do so by changing the
766 context of the custom file locations .
768 To create a custom configuration file location, e.g. '/root/
769 named.conf', to use with the 'named -c' option, do:
771 # chcon system_u:object_r:named_conf_t /root/named.conf
774 To create a custom modifiable named data location, e.g. '/var/log/
775 named' for a log file, do:
777 # chcon system_u:object_r:named_cache_t /var/log/named
780 To create a custom zone file location, e.g. /root/zones/, do:
782 # chcon system_u:object_r:named_zone_t /root/zones/{.,*}
785 See these man-pages for more information : selinux(8), named_selinux
786 (8), chcon(1), setsebool(8)
788 Q: I'm running BIND on Ubuntu -
790 Why can't named update slave zone database files?
792 Why can't named create DDNS journal files or update the master zones
795 Why can't named create custom log files?
797 A: Ubuntu uses AppArmor <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AppArmor> in
798 addition to normal file system permissions to protect the system.
800 Adjust the paths to use those specified in /etc/apparmor.d/
801 usr.sbin.named or adjust /etc/apparmor.d/usr.sbin.named to allow named
802 to write at the location specified in named.conf.
804 Q: Listening on individual IPv6 interfaces does not work.
806 A: This is usually due to "/proc/net/if_inet6" not being available in the
807 chroot file system. Mount another instance of "proc" in the chroot file
810 This can be be made permanent by adding a second instance to /etc/
813 proc /proc proc defaults 0 0
814 proc /var/named/proc proc defaults 0 0
818 Q: Zone transfers from my BIND 9 master to my Windows 2000 slave fail.
821 A: This may be caused by a bug in the Windows 2000 DNS server where DNS
822 messages larger than 16K are not handled properly. This can be worked
823 around by setting the option "transfer-format one-answer;". Also check
824 whether your zone contains domain names with embedded spaces or other
825 special characters, like "John\032Doe\213s\032Computer", since such
826 names have been known to cause Windows 2000 slaves to incorrectly
829 Q: I get "Error 1067" when starting named under Windows.
831 A: This is the service manager saying that named exited. You need to
832 examine the Application log in the EventViewer to find out why.
834 Common causes are that you failed to create "named.conf" (usually "C:\
835 windows\dns\etc\named.conf") or failed to specify the directory in
839 Directory "C:\windows\dns\etc";
844 Q: I have FreeBSD 4.x and "rndc-confgen -a" just sits there.
846 A: /dev/random is not configured. Use rndcontrol(8) to tell the kernel to
847 use certain interrupts as a source of random events. You can make this
848 permanent by setting rand_irqs in /etc/rc.conf.
852 See also <http://people.freebsd.org/~dougb/randomness.html>.
856 Q: How do I integrate BIND 9 and Solaris SMF
858 A: Sun has a blog entry describing how to do this.
860 <http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/anay/Weblog?catname=%2FSolaris>
864 Q: How do I run BIND 9 on Apple Mac OS X?
866 A: If you run Tiger(Mac OS 10.4) or later then this is all you need to do:
868 % sudo rndc-confgen > /etc/rndc.conf
870 Copy the key statement from /etc/rndc.conf into /etc/rndc.key, e.g.:
873 algorithm hmac-sha256;
874 secret "uvceheVuqf17ZwIcTydddw==";
877 Then start the relevant service:
879 % sudo service org.isc.named start
881 This is persistent upon a reboot, so you will have to do it only once.
883 A: Alternatively you can just generate /etc/rndc.key by running:
885 % sudo rndc-confgen -a
887 Then start the relevant service:
889 % sudo service org.isc.named start
891 Named will look for /etc/rndc.key when it starts if it doesn't have a
892 controls section or the existing controls are missing keys sub-clauses.
893 This is persistent upon a reboot, so you will have to do it only once.