I've been using powerdns for quite a while and I've found it to be solid and stable. It'll use quite a few different backends includeing BIND zone files, but its claim to fame is that it uses mysql. a list of different backends can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PowerDNS#Backends I saw bind and bind2, db2, geo, gmysql, gpgsql, goracle, gsqlite, ldap, odbc, opendbx, pipe and xdb. Pipe is interesting because you can write a backend in anything that talks to anything. There is documentation and examples on the website. The "g" stands for generic. I've been using poweradmin for management. register.com and tucows both use it. Cheers, Curtis Ben Matthew wrote:
Thanks very much for the various responses to my question; both on and off-list.
I'm very much liking the idea of only letting the outside world see bind and then AXFR'ing the data from an easier-to-manage internal database backed solution. Whether that be myDNS, Microsoft or whatever. Bit of initial config work and then, in theory, an easy job to administer.
Actually feel a bit dumb for not considering that in the first place.
Cheers again,
Ben
-----Original Message----- From: Peter Hicks [mailto:peter.hicks@poggs.co.uk] Sent: 01 June 2009 12:42 To: Ben Matthew Cc: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Re: In a bit of bind...
Ben,
Ben Matthew wrote:
I have six servers in total, two multi-homed servers for ordinary DNS and four servers running an Anycast network (2 x master and slave).
For DNS, you may find it easier to outsource hosting to another provider who has geographically diverse DNS services. This doesn't necessarily mean loss of control. It also separates your nameserver hosting from your servers - suppose your network were to be under attack, or a configuration error dropped you offline. If DNS were somewhere else, you could log in, change A records, point somewhere else.
Anyway I've recently been investigating other options for DNS as, like many companies currently, we've laid off a bunch of staff and the overhead for maintaining BIND is quite high if done, like us, unassisted and you are editing zone files in a text editor.
Revision control systems - CVS, Subversion - are your friend here. What about wrapping up your DNS change procedure through perl or shell scripts which automatically roll back if bind doesn't reload, or some critical hosts suddenly disappear from the file.
Also, ask yourself what the cost of operating the service without changes is, and what the cost of each change is. How often are you making changes? How often do you need to make a change in an absolute emergency? If changes are being done frequently, a technical or semi-technical member of staff will get to know the procedure. If changes are being made rarely, can the changes wait for you to apply them if you don't feel comfortable with others doing it?
Ultimately for our simple zones (non-Anycast, basic web forwarders) I want to create a web-app to do this for me, probably in PHP. I could create something that...
Herein lies a problem - you want to create a web front-end to a DNS server. You're going to have to do a lot of testing to make this play nicely, and you could introduce your own security holes or gotchas. What is the cost of creating something yourself?
How about one of the following?
* Outsource DNS hosting, use another provider's interface to manage * BIND9 slaves, Windows-based master (hidden) which already has a GUI and it isn't difficult to change zones * Stick to what you have and document it, wrapping the 'apply' process in some simple shell or perl
Peter
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