On 6/15/21 11:54 PM, G.W. Haywood via bind-users wrote:
Hi there,
On Wed, 16 Jun 2021, ToddAndMargo wrote:
Re: My FC33->FC34 bind-chroot upgrade notes
I hope this is the last time I have to revise this!
...
Unfortunately perhaps not.
:'(
...
# means root
$ means user
...
Sometimes, i
Am 16.06.21 um 09:31 schrieb ToddAndMargo via bind-users:
...
# means root
$ means user
...
Sometimes, in your configuration file extracts, you use '#' meaning
'this line is a comment'. I guess this is a write-up for a novice.
The non-novices here have overlooked it, but I'm much closer to t
PGNet Dev wrote:
>
> With a NOTIFY, something like _your_ old listener
>
> nsnotifyd: handle DNS NOTIFY messages by running a command
> https://dotat.at/prog/nsnotifyd/
>
> Don't know yet how dusty that is, or relevant to current bind 9.16+, etc. --
> -- but the general 'respond immediately to
On 6/16/21 7:04 AM, Tony Finch wrote:
Maaybe. Bare NOTIFY can say which zone's keys have changed, but not
what the state transition is, so it isn't what I would consider to be a
complete solution.
Pulling the thread a bit more, Jan-Piet Mens @
"Alert, backup, whatever on DNS NOTIFY with n
@jpmens was kind enough to share the original basis for the simple perl script
referenced above,
which to recollection was 'mainly an example taken from the Net::DNS
documentation.'
Logging of CDS/CDNSKEY generation for workflow
https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9/-/issues/1748
-
On 6/16/21 2:16 AM, Reindl Harald wrote:
Am 16.06.21 um 09:31 schrieb ToddAndMargo via bind-users:
...
# means root
$ means user
...
Sometimes, in your configuration file extracts, you use '#' meaning
'this line is a comment'. I guess this is a write-up for a novice.
The non-novices here ha
Hi All,
In my named.conf
logging {
channel update_debug {
# file
"/var/named/chroot/var/named/slaves/named-update-debug.log";
file "slaves/named-update-debug.log";
severity debug 3;
print-category yes;
print-severity yes;
On 16 June 2021 7:31 pm, ToddAndMargo wrote:
>
> Does this alteration at the top make it any clearer?
>
> Note: at the command prompt, I use the following terminology:
># means run as root
>$ means run as user
> Inside a file, "#" mean it is a comment
Others might have be
On 6/16/21 12:45 PM, Richard T.A. Neal wrote:
On 16 June 2021 7:31 pm, ToddAndMargo wrote:
Does this alteration at the top make it any clearer?
Note: at the command prompt, I use the following terminology:
# means run as root
$ means run as user
Inside a file, "#"
Am 16.06.21 um 20:31 schrieb ToddAndMargo via bind-users:
On 6/16/21 2:16 AM, Reindl Harald wrote:
Am 16.06.21 um 09:31 schrieb ToddAndMargo via bind-users:
...
# means root
$ means user
...
Sometimes, in your configuration file extracts, you use '#' meaning
'this line is a comment'. I g
On 16/06/2021 20:36, ToddAndMargo via bind-users wrote:
Hi Todd,
> Questions:
>
> 1) is there some pruning of old stuff mechanism to
> keep my drive from being over run with logging
> data?
Yes, see section 4.2.9 of the BIND manual:
https://bind9.readthedocs.io/
> 2) If I want to commen
Also…
Logging is the topic most often searched on in our knowledge base. We have one
article on logging that is read more often than any other, that we are planning
to migrate to the ARM.
https://kb.isc.org/docs/aa-01526
That article also references a webinar Carsten Strotmann presented earlie
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Hash: SHA512
https://www.five-ten-sg.com/mapper/bind contains links to the source
rpm, and build instructions. This .src.rpm contains a .tar.gz file with
the ARM documentation, so the rpm rebuild process does not need sphinx-
build and associated dependencies.
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Hi Team,
I have BIND 9.16.17-Ubuntu on ubuntu and have 4 cores. I have configured
more /etc/default/bind9
OPTIONS="-n 4"
And then restarted the services. How do I verify if bind9 has spawned 4
processes and distributed among those?
TIA
Manish R
___
P
Does this mean and I can assume that bind has started with 4 cores?
CGroup: /system.slice/named.service
`-3150 /usr/sbin/named -f -u bind -n 4
--
Thanks and Regards,
Manish R
On Thu, Jun 17, 2021 at 9:02 AM Mani
On 6/16/21 2:52 PM, Reindl Harald wrote:
Does this alteration at the top make it any clearer?
Note: at the command prompt, I use the following terminology:
# means run as root
$ means run as user
Inside a file, "#" mean it is a comment
not really - either use the
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