I blogged about this topic before. This post shows a slightly different way of using nsupdate remotely against a DNS server running BIND 9 in order to programatically update DNS records. The scenario I am describing here involves an Ubuntu 12.04 DNS server running BIND 9 and an Ubuntu 12.04 client running nsupdate against the DNS server.
1) Run ddns-confgen and specify /dev/urandom as the source of randomness and the name of the zone file you want to dynamically update via nsupdate:
$ ddns-confgen -r /dev/urandom -z myzone.com
# To activate this key, place the following in named.conf, and
# in a separate keyfile on the system or systems from which nsupdate
# will be run:
key "ddns-key.myzone.com" {
algorithm hmac-sha256;
secret "1D1niZqRvT8pNDgyrJcuCiykOQCHUL33k8ZYzmQYe/0=";
};
# Then, in the "zone" definition statement for "myzone.com",
# place an "update-policy" statement like this one, adjusted as
# needed for your preferred permissions:
update-policy {
grant ddns-key.myzone.com zonesub ANY;
};
# After the keyfile has been placed, the following command will
# execute nsupdate using this key:
nsupdate -k <keyfile>
2) Follow the instructions in the output of ddns-keygen (above). I actually named the key just ddns-key, since I was going to use it for all the zones on my DNS server. So I added this stanza to /etc/bind/named.conf on the DNS server:
key "ddns-key" {
algorithm hmac-sha256;
secret "1D1niZqRvT8pNDgyrJcuCiykOQCHUL33k8ZYzmQYe/0=";
};
3) Allow updates when the key ddns-key is used. In my case, I added the allow-update line below to all zones that I wanted to dynamically update, not only to myzone.com:
zone "myzone.com" {
type master;
file "/etc/bind/zones/myzone.com.db";
allow-update { key "ddns-key"; };
};
At this point I also restarted the bind9 service on my DNS server.
4) On the client box, create a text file containing nsupdate commands to be sent to the DNS server. In the example below, I want to dynamically add both an A record and a reverse DNS PTR record:
$ cat update_dns1.txt
server dns1.mycompany.com
debug yes
zone myzone.com
update add testnsupdate1.myzone.com 3600 A 10.10.2.221
show
send
zone 2.10.10.in-addr.arpa
update add 221.2.10.10.in-addr.arpa 3600 PTR testnsupdate1.myzone.com
show
send
Still on the client box, create a file containing the stanza with the DDNS key generated in step 1:
$ cat ddns-key.txt
key "ddns-key" {
algorithm hmac-sha256;
secret "Wxp1uJv3SHT+R9rx96o6342KKNnjW8hjJTyxK2HYufg=";
};
5) Run nsupdate and feed it both the update_dns1.txt file containing the commands, and the ddns-key.txt file:
$ nsupdate -k ddns-key.txt -v update_dns1.txt
You should see some fairly verbose output, since the command file specifies 'debug yes'. At the same time, tail /var/log/syslog on the DNS server and make sure there are no errors.
In my case, there were some hurdles I had to overcome on the DNS server. The first one was that apparmor was installed and it wasn't allowing the creation of the journal files used to keep track of DDNS records. I saw lines like these in /var/log/syslog:
Dec 16 11:22:59 dns1 kernel: [49671335.189689] type=1400 audit(1418757779.712:12): apparmor="DENIED" operation="mknod" parent=1 profile="/usr/sbin/named" name="/etc/bind/zones/myzone.com.db.jnl" pid=31154 comm="named" requested_mask="c" denied_mask="c" fsuid=107 ouid=107
Dec 16 11:22:59 dns1 kernel: [49671335.306304] type=1400 audit(1418757779.828:13): apparmor="DENIED" operation="mknod" parent=1 profile="/usr/sbin/named" name="/etc/bind/zones/rev.2.10.10.in-addr.arpa.jnl" pid=31153 comm="named" requested_mask="c" denied_mask="c" fsuid=107 ouid=107
To get past this issue, I disabled apparmor for named:
# ln -s /etc/apparmor.d/usr.sbin.named /etc/apparmor.d/disable/
# service apparmor restart
The next issue was an OS permission denied (nothing to do with apparmor) when trying to create the journal files in /etc/bind/zones:
Dec 16 11:30:54 dns1 named[32640]: /etc/bind/zones/myzone.com.db.jnl: create: permission denied
Dec 16 11:30:54 dns named[32640]: /etc/bind/zones/rev.2.0.10.in-addr.arpa.jnl: create: permission denied
I got past this issue by running
# chown -R bind:bind /etc/bind/zones
At this point everything worked as expected.
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1 comment:
I just wanted to say thanks. After searching the internet for how to set up ddns and bind, your article captured everything I needed - including fixes for the apparmor and file permission issues.
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