BIND 9.0.0rc3 (fwd)
Jesus Alejandro Juarez
alex en campus.iztacala.unam.mx
Mie Ago 16 08:52:47 CDT 2000
Saludos --
alex en campus.iztacala.unam.mx
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Campus Iztacala
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 15 Aug 2000 18:21:57 -0700 (PDT)
From: Andreas Gustafsson <Andreas.Gustafsson en nominum.com>
To: bind-announce en isc.org
Subject: BIND 9.0.0rc3
BIND 9.0.0rc3 is now available. This is a release candidate for BIND 9.0.0,
fixing a couple of bugs found in rc2.
BIND 9.0.0rc3 can be downloaded from:
ftp://ftp.isc.org/isc/bind9/9.0.0rc3/bind-9.0.0rc3.tar.gz
The PGP signature of the distribution is at
ftp://ftp.isc.org/isc/bind9/9.0.0rc3/bind-9.0.0rc3.tar.gz.asc
The signature was generated with the ISC public key, which is available
at <http://www.isc.org/ISC/isckey.txt>.
Enclosed is the README file included with the distribution kit.
--------
BIND 9
BIND version 9 is a major rewrite of nearly all aspects of the
underlying BIND architecture. This re-architecting of BIND was
necessitated by the expected demands of:
- Domain name system growth, particularly in very large
zones such as .COM
- Protocol enhancements necessary to securely query and
update zones
- Protocol enhancements necessary to take advantage of
certain architectural features of IP version 6
These demands implied performance requirements that were not
necessarily easy to attain with the BIND version 8
architecture. In particular, BIND must not only be able to
run on multi-processor multi-threaded systems, but must take
full advantage of the performance enhancements these
architectures can provide. In addition, the underlying data
storage architecture of BIND version 8 does not lend itself to
implementing alternative back end databases, such as would be
desirable for the support of multi-gigabyte zones. As such
zones are easily foreseeable in the relatively near future,
the data storage architecture needed revision. The feature
requirements for BIND version 9 included:
- Scalability
Thread safety
Multi-processor scalability
Support for very large zones
- Security
Support for DNSSEC
Support for TSIG
Auditability (code and operation)
Firewall support (split DNS)
- Portability
- Maintainability
- Protocol Enhancements
IXFR, DDNS, Notify, EDNS0
Improved standards conformance
- Operational enhancements
High availability and reliability
Support for alternative back end databases
- IP version 6 support
IPv6 resource records (A6, DNAME, etc.)
Bitstring labels
APIs
BIND version 9 development has been underwritten by the following
organizations:
Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Hewlett Packard
Compaq Computer Corporation
IBM
Process Software Corporation
Silicon Graphics, Inc.
Network Associates, Inc.
U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency
USENIX Association
Stichting NLnet - NLnet Foundation
BIND 9.0.0rc3
BIND 9.0.0rc3 is a release candidate for the upcoming
9.0.0 release. The only changes expected between
rc3 and the final release are bug fixes and documentation
updates.
The 9.0.0 release, and this release candidate, is aimed at
early adopters and those who wish to make use of new 9.0
features, such as IPv6 and DNSSEC secure resolution support.
We are running BIND 9 in production, and it has been used
as a root name server.
The distribution includes a new lightweight resolver library
and associated resolver daemon. These should still be considered
experimental.
The server-side support for DNSSEC secured zones is stable and
complete with the exception of the handling of wildcard records.
The support for secure resolution is still to be considered
experimental. For detailed information about the state of the
DNSSEC implementation, see the file doc/misc/dnssec.
A small number of bugs found in rc2 have been fixed. For a detailed
list of user-visible changes, see the CHANGES file.
There are a few known bugs:
The option "query-source * port 53;" will not work as
expected. Instead of the wildcard address "*", you need
to use an explicit source IP address.
On some systems, IPv6 and IPv4 sockets interact in
unexpected ways. For details, see doc/misc/ipv6.
To reduce the impact of these problems, the server
no longer listens for requests on IPv6 addresses
by default. If you need to accept DNS queries over
IPv6, you must specify "listen-on-v6 { any; };"
in the named.conf options statement.
There are known problems with thread signal handling
under Solaris 2.6.
The "isc_timer_reset" test sometimes fails on HP-UX 11
for unknown reasons, but the server itself seems to
run fine.
On FreeBSD systems, the server logs error messages
like "fcntl(8, F_SETFL, 4): Inappropriate ioctl for
device". This is due to a bug in the FreeSBD
/dev/random device. The bug has been reported
to the FreeBSD maintainers. A similar problem is
reported to exist on OpenBSD.
If you are upgrading from BIND 8, please read the migration
notes in doc/misc/migration.
Building
BIND 9 currently requires a UNIX system with an ANSI C compiler,
basic POSIX support, and a good pthreads implementation.
We've had successful builds and tests on the following systems:
AIX 4.3
COMPAQ Tru64 UNIX 4.0D
COMPAQ Tru64 UNIX 5 (with IPv6 EAK)
FreeBSD 3.4-STABLE
HP-UX 11
IRIX64 6.5
NetBSD-current (with unproven-pthreads-0.17)
Red Hat Linux 6.0, 6.1, 6.2
Solaris 2.6, 7, 8
To build, just
./configure
make
Several environment variables that can be set before running
configure will affect compilation:
CC
The C compiler to use. configure tries to figure
out the right one for supported systems.
CFLAGS
C compiler flags. Defaults to include -g and/or -O2
as supported by the compiler.
STD_CINCLUDES
System header file directories. Can be used to specify
where add-on thread or IPv6 support is, for example.
Defaults to empty string.
STD_CDEFINES
Any additional preprocessor symbols you want defined.
Defaults to empty string.
To build shared libraries, specify "--with-libtool" on the
configure command line.
If your operating system has integrated support for IPv6, it
will be used automatically. If you have installed KAME IPv6
separately, use "--with-kame[=PATH]" to specify its location.
To see additional configure options, run "configure --help".
"make install" will install "named" and the various BIND 9 libraries.
By default, installation is into /usr/local, but this can be changed
with the "--prefix" option when running "configure".
If you're planning on making changes to the BIND 9 source, you
should also "make depend". If you're using Emacs, you might find
"make tags" helpful.
Building with gcc is not supported, unless gcc is the vendor's usual
compiler (e.g. the various BSD systems, Linux).
Parts of the library can be tested by running "make test" from the
bin/tests subdirectory.
Bug Reports and Mailing Lists
Bugs reports should be sent to
bind9-bugs en isc.org
To join the BIND 9 Users mailing list, send mail to
bind9-users-request en isc.org
If you're planning on making changes to the BIND 9 source
code, you might want to join the BIND 9 Workers mailing list.
Send mail to
bind9-workers-request en isc.org
"named" command line options
-c <config_file>
-d <debug_level>
-f Run in the foreground.
-g Run in the foreground and log
to stderr, ignoring any "logging"
statement in in the config file.
-n <number_of_cpus>
-t <directory> Chroot to <directory> before running.
-u <username> Run as user <username> after binding
to privileged ports.
Use of the "-t" option while still running as "root" doesn't
enhance security on most systems. The way chroot() is defined
allows a process with root privileges to escape the chroot jail.
The "-u" option is not currently useful on Linux kernels older
than 2.3.99-pre3. Linux threads are actually processes sharing a
common address space. An unfortunate side effect of this is that
some system calls, e.g. setuid() that in a typical pthreads
environment would affect all threads only affect the calling
thread/process on Linux. The good news is that BIND 9 uses the
Linux kernel's capability mechanism to drop all root powers except
the ability to bind() to a privileged port. 2.3.99-pre3 and later
kernels allow a process to say that its capabilities should be
retained after setuid(). If BIND 9 is compiled with 2.3.99-pre3 or
later kernel .h files, the "-u" option will cause the server to
run with the specified user id, but it will retain the capability
to bind() to privileged ports.
On systems with more than one CPU, the "-n" option should be used
to indicate how many CPUs there are. If the "-n" option is not
provided, named will attempt to determine the number of available
CPUs and use all of them.
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