docker-bind/container/configs/example-configs/authoritative/named.conf.options

57 lines
1.8 KiB
Plaintext

// Copy this file to /etc/bind/named.conf.options if you want to run bind as an
// authoritative nameserver. If you want to run a recursive DNS resolver
// instead, see Ventz's "example-configs/recursive-resolver/named.conf.options"
//
// BIND supports using the same daemon as both authoritative nameserver and
// recursive resolver; it supports this because it is the oldest and original
// nameserver and so was designed before it was realized that combining these
// functions is inadvisable.
//
// In actual fact, combining these functions is a very bad idea. It is thus
// recommended that you run a given instance of BIND as either an authoritative
// nameserver or recursive resolver, not both. The example configuration herein
// provides a secure starting point for running an authoritative nameserver.
options {
directory "/var/bind";
// Configure the IPs to listen on here.
listen-on { 127.0.0.1; };
listen-on-v6 { none; };
// If you want to allow only specific hosts to use the DNS server:
//allow-query {
// 127.0.0.1;
//};
// Specify a list of IPs/masks to allow zone transfers to here.
//
// You can override this on a per-zone basis by specifying this inside a zone
// block.
//
// Warning: Removing this block will cause BIND to revert to its default
// behaviour of allowing zone transfers to any host (!).
allow-transfer {
none;
};
// If you have problems and are behind a firewall:
//query-source address * port 53;
pid-file "/var/run/named/named.pid";
// Changing this is NOT RECOMMENDED; see the notes above and in
// named.conf.recursive.
allow-recursion { none; };
recursion no;
};
// Example of how to configure a zone for which this server is the master:
//zone "example.com" IN {
// type master;
// file "/etc/bind/master/example.com";
//};
// You can include files:
//include "/etc/bind/example.conf";