Difference between revisions of "How to install Bind9"

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=Bind9 configuration=
 
=Bind9 configuration=
 +
All the configuration files we need are under /etc/bind/. The fist configuration file we will work on is named.conf.local. In this file we are going to define all the zones we need and the path to the zones file. The default file looks like the one below.
 +
 +
//
 +
// Do any local configuration here
 +
//
 +
// Consider adding the 1918 zones here, if they are not used in your
 +
// organization
 +
//include "/etc/bind/zones.rfc1918";
 +
 +
To this file we are going to define our first zone  tx.labnet and the reverse zone 0.64.10.in-addr.arpa. so the file will look like the one below.
 +
 +
//
 +
// Do any local configuration here
 +
//
 +
// Consider adding the 1918 zones here, if they are not used in your
 +
// organization
 +
//include "/etc/bind/zones.rfc1918";
 +
zone "tx.labnet" {
 +
        type master;
 +
        file "/etc/bind/zones/labnet";
 +
        notify yes;
 +
    };
 +
zone "0.64.10.in-addr.arpa" {
 +
        type master;
 +
        file "/etc/bind/zones/10.in-addr.arpa";
 +
        notify yes;
 +
        };
  
 
=Testing=
 
=Testing=
 
=Conclusion=
 
=Conclusion=
 
=References=
 
=References=

Revision as of 17:05, 1 February 2019

Prerequisites

BIND is an open source software that allows you to setup and Domain Name Server (DNS) to resolve IP addresses to hostnames and vice versa To complete this tutorial, we will need:

  • 1 node for the Bind9 server
  • 1 or 2 nodes for testing

All 3 nodes in this tutorial have Ubuntu 16.04, but this will work as well on Debian Stretch. So make sure first all your nodes have Ubuntu or Debian installed and have all updates.

Bind9 installation

The installation is very simple just two commands

sudo apt-get install bind9 
sudo apt-get install bind9utils

If you are using puppet in your environment, you can also create a class and use it to install bind9.

Example of class:

#The class will install a DNS server using the bind9 package
class server::bind_server {
#Execute -apt-get update'
        exec { 'apt-update':
                command => '/usr/bin/apt-get update'
        }
#installation of Bind
        package { 'bind9':
                require => Exec['apt-update'],
                ensure => installed,
       }
#installation of Bind  utils
        package { 'bind9utils':
               require => Exec['apt-update'],
               ensure => installed,
       }
service { 'bind9':
                       ensure => running,
       }
}

Bind9 configuration

All the configuration files we need are under /etc/bind/. The fist configuration file we will work on is named.conf.local. In this file we are going to define all the zones we need and the path to the zones file. The default file looks like the one below.

//
// Do any local configuration here
//
// Consider adding the 1918 zones here, if they are not used in your
// organization
//include "/etc/bind/zones.rfc1918";

To this file we are going to define our first zone tx.labnet and the reverse zone 0.64.10.in-addr.arpa. so the file will look like the one below.

//
// Do any local configuration here
//
// Consider adding the 1918 zones here, if they are not used in your
// organization
//include "/etc/bind/zones.rfc1918";
zone "tx.labnet" {
       type master;
       file "/etc/bind/zones/labnet";
       notify yes;
    };
zone "0.64.10.in-addr.arpa" {
       type master;
       file "/etc/bind/zones/10.in-addr.arpa";
       notify yes;
       };

Testing

Conclusion

References