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CoreDNS

CoreDNS is a DNS server that started as a fork of Caddy. It has the same model: it chains middleware. In fact it's so similar that CoreDNS is now a server type plugin for Caddy, i.e., you'll need Caddy to compile CoreDNS.

CoreDNS is the successor to SkyDNS. SkyDNS is a thin layer that exposes services in etcd in the DNS. CoreDNS builds on this idea and is a generic DNS server that can talk to multiple backends (etcd, consul, kubernetes, etc.).

CoreDNS aims to be a fast and flexible DNS server. The keyword here is flexible: with CoreDNS you are able to do what you want with your DNS data. And if not: write some middleware!

Currently CoreDNS is able to:

  • Serve zone data from a file; both DNSSEC (NSEC only) and DNS are supported (middleware/file).
  • Retrieve zone data from primaries, i.e., act as a secondary server (AXFR only) (middleware/secondary).
  • Sign zone data on-the-fly (middleware/dnssec).
  • Load balancing of responses (middleware/loadbalance).
  • Allow for zone transfers, i.e., act as a primary server (middleware/file).
  • Caching (middleware/cache).
  • Health checking (middleware/health).
  • Use etcd as a backend, i.e., a 101.5% replacement for SkyDNS (middleware/etcd).
  • Use k8s (kubernetes) as a backend (middleware/kubernetes).
  • Serve as a proxy to forward queries to some other (recursive) nameserver (middleware/proxy).
  • Rewrite queries (qtype, qclass and qname) (middleware/rewrite).
  • Provide metrics (by using Prometheus) (middleware/metrics).
  • Provide Logging (middleware/log).
  • Support the CH class: version.bind and friends (middleware/chaos).
  • Profiling support (middleware/pprof).

Each of the middlewares has a README.md of its own.

Status

I'm using CoreDNS is my primary, authoritative, nameserver for my domains (miek.nl, atoom.net and a few others). CoreDNS should be stable enough to provide you with good DNS(SEC) service.

There are still few issues, and work is ongoing on making things fast and to reduce the memory usage.

All in all, CoreDNS should be able to provide you with enough functionality to replace parts of BIND 9, Knot, NSD or PowerDNS and SkyDNS. Most documentation is in the source and some blog articles can be found here. If you do want to use CoreDNS in production, please let us know and how we can help.

https://caddyserver.com/ is also full of examples on how to structure a Corefile (renamed from Caddyfile when I forked it).

Compilation

CoreDNS (as a servertype plugin for Caddy) has a dependency on Caddy, but this is not different than any other Go dependency. You have the source of CoreDNS, this should preferably be downloaded under your $GOPATH. Get all dependencies:

go get ./...

Then, execute go generate. This will patch Caddy to add CoreDNS (and remove the HTTP server plugin), and then go build as you would normally do:

go generate
go build

This should yield a coredns binary.

Examples

Start a simple proxy, you'll need to be root to start listening on port 53.

Corefile contains:

.:53 {
    proxy . 8.8.8.8:53
    log stdout
}

Just start CoreDNS: ./coredns. And then just query on that port (53). The query should be forwarded to 8.8.8.8 and the response will be returned. Each query should also show up in the log.

Serve the (NSEC) DNSSEC-signed example.org on port 1053, with errors and logging sent to stdout. Allow zone transfers to everybody, but specically mention 1 IP address so that CoreDNS can send notifies to it.

example.org:1053 {
    file /var/lib/coredns/example.org.signed {
        transfer to *
        transfer to 2001:500:8f::53
    }
    errors stdout
    log stdout
}

Serve example.org on port 1053, but forward everything that does not match example.org to a recursive nameserver and rewrite ANY queries to HINFO.

.:1053 {
    rewrite ANY HINFO
    proxy . 8.8.8.8:53

    file /var/lib/coredns/example.org.signed example.org {
        transfer to *
        transfer to 2001:500:8f::53
    }
    errors stdout
    log stdout
}

What Remains To Be Done

  • Optimizations.
  • Load testing.
  • The issues.

Blog and Contact

Website: https://coredns.io Twitter: @corednsio Docs: https://miek.nl/tags/coredns/ Github: https://github.com/miekg/coredns

Systemd Service File

Use this as a systemd service file. It defaults to a coredns wich a homedir of /home/coredns and the binary lives in /opt/bin and the config in /etc/coredns/Corefile:

[Unit]
Description=CoreDNS DNS server
Documentation=https://coredns.io
After=network.target

[Service]
PermissionsStartOnly=true
PIDFile=/home/coredns/coredns.pid
LimitNOFILE=8192
User=coredns
WorkingDirectory=/home/coredns
ExecStartPre=/sbin/setcap cap_net_bind_service=+ep /opt/bin/coredns
ExecStart=/opt/bin/coredns -pidfile /home/coredns/coredns.pid -conf=/etc/coredns/Corefile
ExecReload=/bin/kill -SIGUSR1 $MAINPID
Restart=on-failure

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

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CoreDNS is a DNS server that runs middleware

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