Date: | 2013-09-11 |
---|---|
Author: | Doug Winter <[email protected]> |
Website: | http://github.com/yaybu/callsign |
Callsign is a DNS server for developers. It is intended to serve DNS only for a single machine - your desktop. It will support automated deployment systems that coordinate with DNS services, for example Yaybu.
Desktops vary in their client DNS configuration quite widely, and Callsign supports a number of different modes to enable it to service your DNS effectively.
The DNS service provides recursive queries, so you can continue to use DNS as usual.
You can then set new authoritative domains and A records that are available locally.
For example:
$ callsign start $ host www.example.com www.example.com has address 93.184.216.119 www.example.com has IPv6 address 2606:2800:220:6d:26bf:1447:1097:aa7 $ callsign add example.com $ callsign record example.com a www 192.168.0.10 $ callsign show example.com www 192.168.0.10 $ host www.example.com www.example.com has address 192.168.0.10 $ callsign stop $ host www.example.com www.example.com has address 93.184.216.119 www.example.com has IPv6 address 2606:2800:220:6d:26bf:1447:1097:aa7
Usage:
Usage: callsign [options] command daemon control commands: start start the callsign server and forward localhost:53 to it stop stop the callsign server and remove iptables rules zone commands: add name add a new local authoritative zone "name" del name delete the local authoritative zones "name" list list all authoritative zones show name list records for the zone "name" record commands: record zone a host [data] create A record record zone del host delete record e.g. record example.com a www 192.168.0.1 Options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -c CONFIG, --config=CONFIG path to configuration file
For the standard libc resolver DNS services must be provided on port 53 - there is no option for the resolver to consult other ports.
Note that callsign drops privileges once ports are bound, it does not continue to run as root. configured (which also requires root).
The user that callsign runs as (by default, 'callsign') must already exist on the system. If not installed by the package manager, run something like:
sudo useradd -r -s /bin/false callsign
The standard configuration for the libc resolver is in /etc/resolv.conf. This file will need to have only a single nameserver, 127.0.0.1, configured for Callsign to work. Callsign provides options to overwrite the configuration in resolv.conf as part of starting up. It will then replace the previous configuration when it is stopped.
Finally Callsign requires "forwarders" - other servers that will answer recursive queries for domains for which Callsign is not authoritative.
You can force particular behaviours by setting the "forward" and "rewrite" configuration options:
If this is "true" then the server will not attempt to bind to port 53. If this is "false" then the server will bail if it cannot bind to port 53.
If rewrite is false then the server will not attempt to rewrite resolv.conf, but it will still start even if the resolv.conf file does not refer to 127.0.0.1.
A configuration file is not required. Note that Google's DNS servers are used as fallback forwarders by default, as described above.
If you wish, you can provide a file with the following format (defaults are shown):
[callsign] forwarders = 8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4 udp_port = 53 www_port = 5080 pidfile = /var/run/callsign.pid logfile = /var/log/callsign.log domains = savedir = /var/lib/.callsign forward = true rewrite = true user = callsign
If any domains are listed then only those domains will be allowed:
domains foo.com bar.com baz.com
Callsign is designed primarily to be used by automated deployment systems, and provides a simple REST API for these systems.
In general you should expect the following response codes on a successful request:
- GET requests return 200 on success
- PUT requests return 201 on success
- DELETE requests return 204 on success
The resources available on the web port are:
Return a list of managed zones, one per line, separated by n. For example:
GET / 200 OK example.com foo.com
Possible status code responses are:
- 200 Success
Return the list of records within this domain, one per line, separated by n. For example:
GET /example.com 200 OK A www 192.168.0.1
Possible status code responses are:
- 200 Success
- 404 Domain not found. The domain has not been created as an authoritative zone in callsign.
Create this domain. For example:
PUT /example.com 201 Created
Possible status code responses are:
- 201 Created (success)
- 200 Domain already exists, unchanged
- 403 Domain is forbidden (it is not in the list of allowed domains in the configuration file)
Delete this domain. For example:
DELETE /example.com 204 No Content
Possible status code responses are:
- 204 Success
- 404 Domain not found. The domain has not been created as an authoritative zone in callsign.
Return the value for the record. For example:
GET /example.com/www 200 OK A 192.168.0.1
Possible status code responses are:
- 200 Success
- 404 Record not found
Create the record. the payload should be the type and the data, separated by a space. For example:
PUT /example.com/www A 192.168.0.1 201 Created
Possible status code responses are:
- 201 Created (success)
- 404 Zone not found
- 400 Malformed request. The reason message will provide more details.
Delete the record. For example:
DELETE /example.com/www 204 No Content
Possible status code responses are:
- 204 Success
- 404 Domain or record not found
Copyright 2013 Isotoma Limited
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.