Dynamic DNS Update (RFC 2136)

Starting with the PowerDNS Authoritative Server 3.4.0, DNS update support is available. There are a number of items NOT supported:

  • There is no support for SIG (TSIG and GSS*TSIG are supported);
  • WKS records are specifically mentioned in the RFC, we don’t specifically care about WKS records;
  • Anything we forgot….

The implementation requires the backend to support a number of new operations. Currently, the following backends have been modified to support DNS update:

Configuration options

There are two configuration parameters that can be used within the powerdns configuration file.

dnsupdate

A setting to enable/disable DNS update support completely. The default is no, which means that DNS updates are ignored by PowerDNS (no message is logged about this!). Change the setting to dnsupdate=yes to enable DNS update support. Default is no.

allow-dnsupdate-from

A list of IP ranges that are allowed to perform updates on any domain. The default is 127.0.0.0/8, which means that all loopback addresses are accepted. Multiple entries can be used on this line (allow-dnsupdate-from=198.51.100.0/8 203.0.113.2/32). The option can be left empty to disallow everything, this then should be used in combination with the ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM domain metadata setting per zone. Setting a range here and in ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM enables updates from either address range.

dnsupdate-require-tsig

A setting to require DNS updates to be signed by a valid TSIG signature. The default is no, which means zones without TSIG keys can be updated by unauthenticated agents operating from an allowed address range.

forward-dnsupdate

Tell PowerDNS to forward to the master server if the zone is configured as slave. Masters are determined by the masters field in the domains table. The default behaviour is enabled (yes), which means that it will try to forward. In the processing of the update packet, the allow-dnsupdate-from and TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE are processed first, so those permissions apply before the forward-dnsupdate is used. It will try all masters that you have configured until one is successful.

lua-dnsupdate-policy-script

Use this Lua script containing function updatepolicy to validate each update. This will TURN OFF all other authorization methods, and you are expected to take care of everything yourself. See Update policy for details and examples.

The semantics are that first a dynamic update has to be allowed either by the global allow-dnsupdate-from setting, or by a per-zone ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM metadata setting.

Secondly, if a zone has a TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE metadata setting, that must match too.

So to only allow dynamic DNS updates to a zone based on TSIG key, and regardless of IP address, set allow-dnsupdate-from to empty, set ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM to “0.0.0.0/0” and “::/0” and set the TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE to the proper key name.

Further information can be found below.

Per zone settings

For permissions, a number of per zone settings are available via the domain metadata.

ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM

This setting has the same function as described in the configuration options (See above). This will allow 198.51.100.0/8 and 203.0.113.2/32 to send DNS update messages for the example.org domain:

pdnsutil set-meta example.org ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM 198.51.100.0/8 203.0.113.2/32

TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE

This setting allows you to set the TSIG key required to do an DNS update. If you have GSS-TSIG enabled, you can use Kerberos principals here. Here is an example using pdnsutil to create a key named test:

$ pdnsutil generate-tsig-key test hmac-sha512
Create new TSIG key test hmac-sha512 [base64-encoded key]

$ pdnsutil list-tsig-keys | grep test
test. hmac-sha512. [base64-encoded key]

This adds the key with the name test to the zone’s metadata. Note, the keys need to be added separately with add-meta, not as a comma or space-separated list:

$ pdnsutil add-meta example.org TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE test
Set 'example.org' meta TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE = test

$ pdnsutil get-meta example.org TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE
TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE = test

This is an example of using the new test TSIG key with the nsupdate command (see the manpage for nsupdate for full details):

$ nsupdate <<!
server 127.0.0.1 53
zone example.org
update add test1.example.org 3600 A 1.2.3.4
update add test1.example.org 3600 TXT "this is a test"
key hmac-sha512:test [base64-encoded key]
send
!

$ dig +noall +answer -t any test1.example.org @127.0.0.1
test1.example.org.  3600    IN      A       1.2.3.4
test1.example.org.  3600    IN      TXT     "this is a test"

If any TSIG keys are listed in a zone’s TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE metadata, one of them is required for updates. If ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM is also set, both requirements need to be satisfied before an update will be accepted.

By default, an update can add, update or delete any resource records in the zone. See Update policy for finer-grained control of what an update is allowed to do. Use dnsupdate-require-tsig to disallow unsigned updates.

FORWARD-DNSUPDATE

See Configuration options for what it does, but per domain:

pdnsutil set-meta example.org FORWARD-DNSUPDATE 'yes'

The existence of the entry (even with an empty value) enables the forwarding. This domain-specific setting is only useful when the configuration option forward-dnsupdate is set to ‘no’, as that will disable it globally. Using the domainmetadata setting than allows you to enable it per domain.

NOTIFY-DNSUPDATE

Send a notification to all slave servers after every update. This will speed up the propagation of changes and is very useful for acme verification:

pdnsutil set-meta example.org NOTIFY-DNSUPDATE 1

SOA-EDIT-DNSUPDATE

This configures how the soa serial should be updated. See below.

SOA Serial Updates

After every update, the soa serial is updated as this is required by section 3.7 of RFC 2136. The behaviour is configurable via domainmetadata with the SOA-EDIT-DNSUPDATE option. It has a number of options listed below. If no behaviour is specified, DEFAULT is used.

2136, Section 3.6 defines some specific behaviour for updates of SOA records. Whenever the SOA record is updated via the update message, the logic to change the SOA is not executed.

Note

Powerdns will always use SOA-EDIT when serving SOA records, thus a query for the SOA record of the recently updated domain, might have an unexpected result due to a SOA-EDIT setting.

An example:

pdnsutil set-meta example.org SOA-EDIT-DNSUPDATE INCREASE

This will make the SOA Serial increase by one, for every successful update.

SOA-EDIT-DNSUPDATE settings

These are the settings available for SOA-EDIT-DNSUPDATE.

  • DEFAULT: Generate a soa serial of YYYYMMDD01. If the current serial is lower than the generated serial, use the generated serial. If the current serial is higher or equal to the generated serial, increase the current serial by 1.
  • INCREASE: Increase the current serial by 1.
  • EPOCH: Change the serial to the number of seconds since the EPOCH, aka unixtime.
  • SOA-EDIT: Change the serial to whatever SOA-EDIT would provide. See Domain metadata
  • SOA-EDIT-INCREASE: Change the serial to whatever SOA-EDIT would provide. If what SOA-EDIT provides is lower than the current serial, increase the current serial by 1. Exception: with SOA-EDIT=INCEPTION-EPOCH, the serial is bumped to at least the current EPOCH time.

DNS update How-to: Setup dyndns/rfc2136 with dhcpd

DNS update is often used with DHCP to automatically provide a hostname whenever a new IP-address is assigned by the DHCP server. This section describes how you can setup PowerDNS to receive DNS updates from ISC’s dhcpd (version 4.1.1-P1).

Setting up dhcpd

We’re going to use a TSIG key for security. We’re going to generate a key using the following command:

dnssec-keygen -a hmac-md5 -b 128 -n USER dhcpdupdate

This generates two files (Kdhcpdupdate.*.key and Kdhcpdupdate.*.private). You’re interested in the .key file:

# ls -l Kdhcp*
-rw------- 1 root root  53 Aug 26 19:29 Kdhcpdupdate.+157+20493.key
-rw------- 1 root root 165 Aug 26 19:29 Kdhcpdupdate.+157+20493.private

# cat Kdhcpdupdate.+157+20493.key
dhcpdupdate. IN KEY 0 3 157 FYhvwsW1ZtFZqWzsMpqhbg==

The important bits are the name of the key (dhcpdupdate) and the hash of the key (FYhvwsW1ZtFZqWzsMpqhbg==

Using the details from the key you’ve just generated. Add the following to your dhcpd.conf:

key "dhcpdupdate" {
        algorithm hmac-md5;
        secret "FYhvwsW1ZtFZqWzsMpqhbg==";
};

You must also tell dhcpd that you want dynamic dns to work, add the following section:

ddns-updates on;
ddns-update-style interim;
update-static-leases on;

This tells dhcpd to:

  1. Enable Dynamic DNS
  2. Which style it must use (interim)
  3. Update static leases as well

For more information on this, consult the dhcpd.conf manual.

Per subnet, you also have to tell dhcpd which (reverse-)domain it should update and on which master domain server it is running.

ddns-domainname "example.org";
ddns-rev-domainname "in-addr.arpa.";

zone example.org {
    primary 127.0.0.1;
    key dhcpdupdate;
}

zone 1.168.192.in-addr.arpa. {
    primary 127.0.0.1;
    key dhcpdupdate;
}

This tells dhcpd a number of things:

  1. Which domain to use (ddns-domainname “example.org”;)
  2. Which reverse-domain to use (ddns-rev-domainname “in-addr.arpa.”;)
  3. For the zones, where the primary master is located (primary 127.0.0.1;)
  4. Which TSIG key to use (key dhcpdupdate;). We defined the key earlier.

This concludes the changes that are needed to the dhcpd configuration file.

Setting up PowerDNS

A number of small changes are needed to powerdns to make it accept dynamic updates from dhcpd.

Enabled DNS update (RFC 2136) support functionality in PowerDNS by adding the following to the PowerDNS configuration file (pdns.conf).

dnsupdate=yes
allow-dnsupdate-from=

This tells PowerDNS to:

  1. Enable DNS update support(dnsupdate)
  2. Allow updates from NO ip-address (”allow-dnsupdate-from=”)

We just told powerdns (via the configuration file) that we accept updates from nobody via the allow-dnsupdate-from parameter. That’s not very useful, so we’re going to give permissions per zone (including the appropriate reverse zone), via the domainmetadata table.

pdnsutil set-meta example.org ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM 127.0.0.1
pdnsutil set-meta 1.168.192.in-addr.arpa ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM 127.0.0.1

This gives the ip ‘127.0.0.1’ access to send update messages. Make sure you use the ip address of the machine that runs dhcpd.

Another thing we want to do, is add TSIG security. This can only be done via the domainmetadata table:

pdnsutil import-tsig-key dhcpdupdate hmac-md5 FYhvwsW1ZtFZqWzsMpqhbg==
pdnsutil set-meta example.org TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE dhcpdupdate
pdnsutil set-meta 1.168.192.in-addr.arpa TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE dhcpdupdate

This will:

  1. Add the ‘dhcpdupdate’ key to our PowerDNS installation
  2. Associate the domains with the given TSIG key

Restart PowerDNS and you should be ready to go!

How it works

This is a short description of how DNS update messages are processed by PowerDNS.

  1. The DNS update message is received. If it is TSIG signed, the TSIG is validated against the tsigkeys table. If it is not valid, Refused is returned to the requestor.
  2. A check is performed on the zone to see if it is a valid zone. ServFail is returned when not valid.
  3. The dnsupdate setting is checked. Refused is returned when the setting is ‘no’.
  4. If update policy Lua script is provided then skip up to 7.
  5. If the ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM has a value (from both domainmetadata and the configuration file), a check on the value is performed. If the requestor (sender of the update message) does not match the values in ALLOW-DNSUPDATE-FROM, Refused is returned.
  6. If the message is TSIG signed, the TSIG keyname is compared with the TSIG keyname in domainmetadata. If they do not match, a Refused is send. The TSIG-ALLOW-DNSUPDATE domainmetadata setting is used to find which key belongs to the domain.
  7. The backends are queried to find the backend for the given domain.
  8. If the domain is a slave domain, the forward-dnsupdate option and domainmetadata settings are checked. If forwarding to a master is enabled, the message is forward to the master. If that fails, the next master is tried until all masters are tried. If all masters fail, ServFail is returned. If a master succeeds, the result from that master is returned.
  9. A check is performed to make sure all updates/prerequisites are for the given zone. NotZone is returned if this is not the case.
  10. The transaction with the backend is started.
  11. The prerequisite checks are performed (section 3.2 of 2136). If a check fails, the corresponding RCode is returned. No further processing will happen.
  12. Per record in the update message, a the prescan checks are performed. If the prescan fails, the corresponding RCode is returned. If the prescan for the record is correct, the actual update/delete/modify of the record is performed. If the update fails (for whatever reason), ServFail is returned. After changes to the records have been applied, the ordername and auth flag are set to make sure DNSSEC remains working. The cache for that record is purged.
  13. If there are records updated and the SOA record was not modified, the SOA serial is updated. See SOA Serial Updates. The cache for this record is purged.
  14. The transaction with the backend is committed. If this fails, ServFail is returned.
  15. NoError is returned.

Update policy

You can define a Lua script to handle DNS UPDATE message authorization. The Lua script is to contain at least function called updatepolicy which accepts one parameter. This parameter is an object, containing all the information for the request. To permit change, return true, otherwise return false. The script is called for each record at a time and you can approve or reject any or all.

The object has following methods available:

  • DNSName getQName() - name to update
  • DNSName getZoneName() - zone name
  • int getQType() - record type, it can be 255(ANY) for delete.
  • ComboAddress getLocal() - local socket address
  • ComboAddress getRemote() - remote socket address
  • Netmask getRealRemote() - real remote address (or netmask if EDNS Subnet is used)
  • DNSName getTsigName() - TSIG key name (you can assume it is validated here)
  • string getPeerPrincipal() - Return peer principal name (user@DOMAIN, service/machine.name@DOMAIN, host/MACHINE$@DOMAIN)

There are many same things available as in recursor Lua scripts, but there is also resolve(qname, qtype) which returns array of records. Example:

resolve("www.google.com", pdns.A)

You can use this to perform DNS lookups. If your resolver cannot find your local records, then this will not find them either. In other words, resolve does not perform local lookup.

Simple example script:

--- This script is not suitable for production use

function strpos (haystack, needle, offset)
  local pattern = string.format("(%s)", needle)
  local i       = string.find (haystack, pattern, (offset or 0))
  return (i ~= nil and i or false)
end

function updatepolicy(input)
  princ = input:getPeerPrincipal()

  if princ == ""
  then
    return false
  end

  if princ == "admin@DOMAIN" or input:getRemote():toString() == "192.168.1.1"
  then
    return true
  end

  if (input:getQType() == pdns.A or input:getQType() == pdns.AAAA) and princ:sub(5,5) == '/' and strpos(princ, "@", 0) ~= false
  then
    i = strpos(princ, "@", 0)
    if princ:sub(i) ~= "@DOMAIN"
    then
      return false
    end
    hostname = princ:sub(6, i-1)
    if input:getQName():toString() == hostname .. "." or input:getQName():toString() == hostname .. "." .. input:getZoneName():toString()
    then
      return true
    end
  end

  return false
end

Additional updatepolicy example scripts can be found in our Wiki.