OPS535-L2

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Revision as of 04:07, 19 September 2016 by Rchan (talk | contribs) (Completing the Lab)
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Overview

In this lab, you are going to build a primary name server for your assigned DNS domain using the BIND package on your VM1 running CentOS 7,x. Primary name server does not depend upon having access to other name servers in order to function.

Once you have your primary name server running, use command line DNS client tool(s) to test the correctness of your Primary DNS server.

Please check the variable $ROOTDIR in /etc/sysconfig/named file. It sets the "root" directory for the running BIND process. Make sure that you have the bind-chroot package installed. Once you have the bind-chroot package installed, the variable $ROOTDIR will be set to /var/named/chroot after activation. If the variable $ROOTDIR is set to /var/named/chroot, the manin configuration for BIND "named.conf" should be in the "/var/named/chroot/etc" directory and all the other zone files should be in the "/var/named/chroot/var/named" directory.

Reference

Tasks

  • Set up an authoritative primary DNS server for your assigned domain and assigned virtual network (i.e. forward lookup zone and reverse lookup zone).
  • Test the correctness of your DNS server operation.
  • Study the DNS traffic and the DNS query and response packets.

Setup an Authoritative Primary DNS server

  • Use the "rpm" command to check the version of the the following packages installed on your system. If any of the following packages is not installed, install it now:
    • bind-libs-lite
    • bind-chroot
    • bind
    • bind-utils
    • bind-license
    • bind-libs
  • Locate the file called "named.conf", it should either be in /etc or /var/named/chroot/etc directory. If you don't have this file, copy and modify the sample file provided with the bind package (for bind version 9.9.4, the full path of the sample file is at /usr/share/doc/bind-9.9.4/sample/etc/named.conf).
  • Check out your assigned DNS domain name and assigned network number in Blackboard.
  • Create two zone files: forward lookup zone file (for your assigned domain) and reverse lookup zone file (for your assigned network).

Forward lookup zone file

  • File name: my-zone.txt
  • Directory: /var/named (or /var/named/chroot/var/named with "chroot" activated)
  • Sample contents:
 $TTL 86400
 @ IN SOA vm1.mydomain.net. root.mydomain.com. (42 3H 15M 1W 1D)
 @ IN NS vm1.mydomain.net.
 vm1.mydomain.net.  IN  A  192.168.99.2
 vm2.mydomain.net.  IN  A  192.168.99.3
 vm3.mydomain.net.  IN  A  192.168.99.4
 ...

Please note that you must have the SOA record, NS record, and one A record for each of your VM in the forward lookup zone file. and

  • the SOA record should contain the FQDN of your primary DNS server and the email address of the person responsible for managing the DNS domain name space.
  • the NS record(s) should contain the FQDN for your authoritative DNS server(s).
  • each A record (address record) should contain the FQDN (or host name) of each VM and its corresponding IP address.

Reverse lookup zone file

  • File name: rev-zone.txt
  • Directory: /var/named (or /var/named/chroot/var/named with "chroot" activated)
  • Sample contents:
 $TTL 86400
 @ IN SOA vm1.mydomain.net. root.mydomain.com. (42 3H 15M 1W 1D)
 @ IN NS vm1.mydomain.net.
 2.99.168.192.in-addr.arpa.   IN PTR   vm1.mydomain.net.
 3.99.168.192.in-addr.arpa.   IN PTR   vm2.mydomain.net.  
 4.99.168.192.in-addr.arpa.   IN PTR   vm3.mydomain.net.  
 ...
  • echo PTR record should contain the FQDN and the corresponding IP address in reverse dotted-decimal notation format (e.g. use 53.99.168.192.in-addr.arpa. for IP address 192.168.99.53)

BIND configuration file

File name: named.conf Directory: /etc (or in /var/named/chroot/etc with "chroot" activated)

Configure the following major options:

  • listen-on: port 53 and all network interface
  • directory: /var/named
  • allow-query: any
  • recursion: no
  • dnssec-enable: yes
  • dnssec-validation: no
  • dnssec-lookaside: auto

Add two zone statements: one points to the forward lookup zone file "my-zone.txt", and the other points to the reverse lookup zone file "rev-zone.txt".

zone "mydomain.net" IN {
      type master;
      file "my-zone.txt";
      allow-update { none; };
};

zone "99.168.192.in-addr.arpa" {
      type master;
      file "rev-zone.txt";
      allow-update { none; };
};

Running and testing the DNS server

  • Make sure that you have "named.service" enable.
  • Start the "named" service: systemctl start named.service
  • Check the status of the "named" service: systemctl status named.service. Make sure the "named" service is active and running. If the "named" service failed to start, check for typo or syntax error in the BIND configuration file /etc/named.conf and your forward and reverse lookup zone files. There are two utilities provided by the "bind" package. They are called "named-checkconf" and "named-checkzone", and both are in the /usr/sbin directory.
    • named-checkconf can be used to check for typo or syntax errors in named.conf.
    • named-checkzone can be used to check for type or syntax errors in your zone files.

Please check out the man page for details.

Verify that your DNS server is running

  • use the "ss" command or the netstat command - what information should you look for?

Test the correctness of your DNS server's responses

  • Create the directory "/root/lab2" for storing lab2 files.
  • use the nslookup DNS client command line utility to query your DNS server for SOA, NS, A, and PTR resource records. Capture the DNS query commands and their corresponding outputs to a file named "/root/lab2/[student-id]-lab2-test-output.txt"

For example, if an authoritative DNS server with IP address 192.168.99,53 has the cp.net zone file:

$TTL 300
@ IN SOA pri.cp.net.	root.cp.net. (
 				20151111 ; serial
 				1h	 ; refresh
				15m	 ; retry
				3d	 ; expire
				10m)	 ; minimum
	IN NS	pri.cp.net.
pri	IN A	192.168.99.53
www	IN A	192.168.99.80
mail	IN A 	192.168.99.25
co	IN A	192.168.99.153
rns	IN A	192.168.99.253
  • To query the SOA record using the nslookup command "nslookup -query=SOA cp.net 192.168.99.53" will yield the following result:
[root@pri named]# nslookup -query=SOA cp.net 192.168.99.53
Server:		192.168.99.53
Address:	192.168.99.53#53

cp.net
	origin = pri.cp.net
	mail addr = root.cp.net
	serial = 20151111
 	refresh = 3600
	retry = 900
	expire = 259200
	minimum = 600

  • To query the NS record using the nslookup command "nslookup -query=NS cp.net 192.168.99.53" will yield the following result:
[root@pri named]# nslookup -query=NS cp.net 192.168.99.53
Server:		192.168.99.53
Address:	192.168.99.53#53

cp.net	nameserver = pri.cp.net.
  • To query the A record for mail.cp.net using the nslookup command "nslookup -query=A mail.cp.net. 192.168.99.53" will yeild the following result:
[root@pri named]# nslookup -query=A mail.cp.net 192.168.99.53
Server:		192.168.99.53
Address:	192.168.99.53#53

Name:	mail.cp.net
Address: 192.168.99.25

Capture and study the DNS query traffic

  • Run the appropriate "tcpdump" command on your DNS server to capture all DNS query and response packets to a file and name the tcpdump capture file as [student-id]-lab2-dns-packet. While tcpdump is running on your DNS server, repeat all the DNS queries (SOA, NS, A, PTR) on your host. If you have firewall (iptables or firewalld) running on your DNS server, make sure that the port for DNS are opened on the firewall.

Completing the Lab

  • You should have the directory /root/lab2 on your DNS server.
  • Make a copy of the DNS server configuration file "named.conf" in the /root/lab2 directory and named it as "named.conf.txt"
  • Copy your forward lookup zone file "my-zone.txt" to the /root/lab2 directory.
  • Copy your reverse lookup zone file "rev-zone.txt" to the /root/lab2 directory.
  • Upload the following files in the "/root/lab2" directory to blackboard by the due date:
    • /root/lab2/named.conf.txt
    • /root/lab2/my-zone.txt
    • /root/lab2/rev-zone.txt
    • /root/lab2/[student-id]-lab2-test.txt
    • /root/lab2/[student-id]-lab2-dns-packet