Hi,
this happened to me for the second time, that https://dnsviz.net <https://dnsviz.net/> tells me:
| enfer-du-nord.net/CDNSKEY: The CDNSKEY RRset must be signed with a key that is represented in both the
| current DNSKEY and the current DS RRset. See RFC 7344, Sec. 4.1.
| enfer-du-nord.net/CDS: The CDS RRset must be signed with a key that is represented in both the current
| DNSKEY and the current DS RRset. See RFC 7344, Sec. 4.1.
I do not understand what that means.
#) I haven't modified my KSK for some time now
#) I did notify my parent zone about a modified list of nameservers (via registrar's web portal)
I am not absolutely sure if the latter is the cause for these error messages.
I 'fixed' that issue by re-uploading my unmodified KSK DNSKEY (via registrar's web portal).
Hmm, how can I fix that issue the right way?
Any hints are highly welcome,
Michael
Hi,
given the case that a ip6/xy block might be delegated to me by my ISP, I began investigating Knot DNS' functionality with regard to ip6.arpa.
Hereby I stumbled over the module synthrecord and do not really understand what it is used for.
From https://www.knot-dns.cz/docs/3.4/singlehtml/index.html#synthrecord-automati…
"Records are synthesized only if the query can't be satisfied from the zone."
Please excuse my ignorance, but why would/should/must one return something else than the following for hosts not in the zone?
kbn> host 2001:dead:beef::1
Host 1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.f.e.e.b.d.a.e.d.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa not found: 3(NXDOMAIN)
Any feedback is highly appreciated, thanks.
Regards,
Michael
Hi,
This is just a possible feature request. We’re planning on using Knot for user
hosted domains. To do that we’ll have to add and remove zones dynamically,
so we’ve enabled the config db.
What surprised us is that this means that the config file isn’t used at all anymore
(except you can use it to prime the config db).
As it is, we’ll have to embrace the config db, which makes our ansible playbook
more complicated. It’s easy to add a config file template in ansible, it’s more
complicated to issue `knotc conf-begin; knotc conf-set; knotc conf-commit` logic.
I wish knot was more like nsd, where you have the config file nsd.conf, but if
you add zones with `nsd-control addzone ….` it gets added to a seperate zonelist
file, which nsd reads on startup. It means we can have a static config file, but
still be able to add and delete zones dynamically.
nsd doesn’t have automatic DNSSEC key management and catalog zones in knot
are really easy to use, which is why we’re going with knot for this project. I just
wanted to lay it out there as an idea for the future :)
.einar