1DEADWOOD(1)                   Deadwood reference                   DEADWOOD(1)
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3
4

NAME

6       Deadwood - A fully recursive caching DNS resolver
7

DESCRIPTION

9       Deadwood is a fully recursive DNS cache. This is a DNS server with the
10       following features:
11
12       * Full support for both DNS recursion and DNS forwarding caching
13
14       * Small size and memory footprint suitable for embedded systems
15
16       * Simple and clean codebase
17
18       * Secure design
19
20       * Spoof protection: Strong cryptography used to determine the Query ID
21         and source port
22
23       * Ability to read and write the cache to a file
24
25       * Dynamic cache that deletes entries not recently used
26
27       * Ability to use expired entries in the cache when it is impossible to
28         contact upstream DNS servers.
29
30       * IPv6 support can be compiled in if desired
31
32       * Both DNS-over-UDP and DNS-over-TCP are handled by the same daemon
33
34       * Built-in dnswall functionality
35
36       * The ability to assign names to IPv4 IPs as specified in one's
37         dwood3rc file.
38
39       * The ability to quickly load and use a large blocklist of names to not
40         resolve.
41

COMMAND LINE ARGUMENTS

43       Deadwood has a single optional command line argument: The location of
44       the configuration file that Deadwood uses, specified with the "-f"
45       flag.  If this is not defined, Deadwood uses the file "/etc/dwood3rc"
46       as the configuration file.
47
48       In other words, invoking Deadwood as Deadwood will cause Deadwood to
49       use /etc/dwood3rc as the configuration file; invoking Deadwood as
50       Deadwood -f foobar will cause Deadwood to use the file "foobar" in the
51       current working directory (the directory one is in when starting
52       Deadwood) as the configuration file.
53

CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT

55       The Deadwood configuration file is modeled after Python 2's syntax.
56       However, since Deadwood 2 is no longer supported by the Python Software
57       Foundation, and since Deadwood configuration files can sometimes fail
58       to parse in Python 3, Deadwood does not strictly follow Python 2
59       syntax.
60
61       In particular, leading whitespace is allowed in Deadwood configuration
62       files.
63

PARAMETER TYPES

65       Deadwood has three different parameter types:
66
67       * Numeric parameters. Numeric parameters must not be surrounded by
68         quotes, such as this example:
69
70         filter_rfc1918 = 0
71
72         If a numeric parameter is surrounded by quotes, the error message
73         "Unknown dwood3rc string parameter" will appear.
74
75       * String parameters. String parameters must be surrounded by quotes,
76         such as in this example:
77
78         bind_address = "127.0.0.1"
79
80       * Dictionary parameters. All dictionary parameters must be initialized
81         before use, and dictionary parameters must have both the dictionary
82         index and the value for said index surrounded by quotes, such as in
83         this example:
84
85         upstream_servers = {}
86         upstream_servers["."]="8.8.8.8, 8.8.4.4"
87
88       All dwood3rc parameters except the following are numeric parameters:
89
90       * bind_address (string)
91
92       * cache_file (string)
93
94       * chroot_dir (string)
95
96       * ip_blacklist (string)
97
98       * ip_blocklist (string)
99
100       * ipv4_bind_addresses (string)
101
102       * random_seed_file (string)
103
104       * recursive_acl (string)
105
106       * root_servers (dictionary)
107
108       * upstream_servers (dictionary)
109
110       * ip4 (dictionary)
111
112       * ip6 (dictionary)
113
114       * source_ip4 (string)
115

SUPPORTED PARAMETERS

117       The Deadwood configuration file supports the following parameters:
118
119    bind_address
120
121       This is the IP (or possibly IPv6) address we bind to.
122
123    cache_file
124
125       This is the filename of the file used for reading and writing the cache
126       to disk; this string can have lowercase letters, the '-' symbol, the
127       '_' symbol, and the '/' symbol (for putting the cache in a
128       subdirectory). All other symbols become a '_' symbol.
129
130       This file is read and written as the user Deadwood runs as.
131
132    chroot_dir
133
134       This is the directory the program will run from.
135
136    deliver_all
137
138       This affects behavior in Deadwood 2.3, but has no effect in Deadwood 3.
139       This variable is only here so Deadwood 2 rc files can run in Deadwood
140       3.
141
142    dns_port
143
144       This is the port Deadwood binds to and listens on for incoming
145       connections. The default value for this is the standard DNS port: port
146       53
147
148    filter_rfc1918
149
150       When this has a value of 1, a number of different IP ranges are not
151       allowed to be in DNS A replies:
152
153       * 192.168.x.x
154
155       * 172.[16-31].x.x
156
157       * 10.x.x.x
158
159       * 127.x.x.x
160
161       * 169.254.x.x
162
163       * 224.x.x.x
164
165       * 0.0.x.x
166
167       If one of the above IPs is detected in a DNS reply, and filter_rfc1918
168       has a value of 1, Deadwood will return a synthetic "this host does not
169       reply" response (a SOA record in the NS section) instead of the A
170       record.
171
172       The reason for this is to provide a "dnswall" that protects users for
173       some kinds of attacks, as described at http://crypto.stanford.edu/dns/
174
175       Please note that Deadwood only provides IPv4 "dnswall" functionality
176       and does not help protect against IPv6 answers. If protection against
177       certain IPv6 AAAA records is needed, either disable all AAAA answers by
178       setting reject_aaaa to have a value of 1, or use an external program to
179       filter undesired IPv4 answers (such as the dnswall program).
180
181       The default value for this is 1
182
183    handle_noreply
184
185       When this is set to 0, Deadwood sends no reply back to the client (when
186       the client is a TCP client, Deadwood closes the TCP connection) when a
187       UDP query is sent upstream and the upstream DNS never sends a reply.
188
189       When this is set to 1, Deadwood sends a SERVER FAIL back to the client
190       when a UDP query is sent upstream and the upstream DNS never sends a
191       reply.
192
193       The default value for this is 1
194
195    handle_overload
196
197       When this has a value of 0, Deadwood sends no reply when a UDP query is
198       sent and the server is overloaded (has too many pending connections);
199       when it has a value of 1, Deadwood sends a SERVER FAIL packet back to
200       the sender of the UDP query. The default value for this is 1.
201
202    hash_magic_number
203
204       This used to be used for Deadwood's internal hash generator to keep the
205       hash generator somewhat random and immune to certain types of attacks.
206       In Deadwood 3.0, entropy for the hash function is created by looking at
207       the contents of /dev/urandom (secret.txt on Windows machines) and the
208       current timestamp. This parameter is only here so older configuration
209       files do not break in Deadwood 3.0.
210
211    ip4
212
213       This is a dictionary variable which allows us to have given names
214       resolve to bogus IPv4 addresses. Here, we have the name "maradns.foo"
215       resolve to "10.10.10.10" and "kabah.foo" resolve to "10.11.11.11",
216       regardless of what real values these DNS records may have:
217
218       ip4 = {}
219       ip4["maradns.foo."] = "10.10.10.10"
220       ip4["kabah.foo."] = "10.11.11.11"
221
222       Note that a given name can only resolve to a single IP, and that the
223       records have a fixed TTL of 30 seconds.
224
225       It is also possible to use ip4 to set up a blocklist by using "X" for
226       the IP. When this is done, an IPv4 request for a given hostname results
227       in a synthetic "this name does not exist" response. In addition, the
228       corresponding IPv6 request will also return that "name does not exist"
229       reply. For example:
230
231       ip4 = {}
232       ip4["evil.example.com."] = "X"
233
234       Here, both the IPv4 and the IPv6 query for "evil.example.com" will not
235       resolve in Deadwood.
236
237    ip6
238
239       Like ip4, ip6 uses a similar syntax to have bogus IPv6 addresses.  We
240       don't use standard notation for IPv6 addresses. Instead, we we use
241       32-character hex addresses (case insensitive); to make it easier to
242       count long strings of "0"s, the "_" acts like a 0; we also ignore "-"
243       (dash) and " " (space) in ip6 strings.  Here is an example:
244
245       ip6 = {}
246       ip6["maradns.foo."] = "20010db84d617261444e530000001234"
247       ip6["kabah.foo."] = "2001-0DB8-4D61-7261 444E-5300-__00-2345"
248
249    ip_blocklist
250
251       This is a list of IPs that we do not allow to be in the answer to a DNS
252       request. The reason for this is to counteract the practice some ISPs
253       have of converting a "this site does not exist" DNS answer in to a page
254       controlled by the ISP; this results in possible security issues.
255
256       This parameter only accepts individual IPs, and does not use netmasks.
257
258       Note that this parameter used to be called ip_blacklist; while the
259       ip_blacklist name still works as before, ip_blocklist is the current
260       name.
261
262    maradns_uid
263
264       The user-id Deadwood runs as. This can be any number between 10 and
265       16777216; the default value is 707 (a system UID which should be
266       unused). This value is not used on Windows systems.
267
268    maradns_gid
269
270       The group-id Deadwood runs as. This can be any number between 10 and
271       16777216; the default value is 707. This value is not used on Windows
272       systems.
273
274    max_ar_chain
275
276       Whether resource record rotation is enabled. If this has a value of 1,
277       resource record rotation is enabled, otherwise resource record rotation
278       is disabled.
279
280       Resource record rotation is usually desirable, since it allows DNS to
281       act like a crude load balancer. However, on heavily loaded systems it
282       may be desirable to disable it to reduce CPU usage.
283
284       The reason for the unusual name for this variable is to retain
285       compatibility with MaraDNS mararc files.
286
287       The default value is 1: Resource record rotation enabled.
288
289    max_inflights
290
291       The maximum number of simultaneous clients we process at the same time
292       for the same query.
293
294       If, while processing a query for, say, "example.com.", another DNS
295       client sends to Deadwood another query for example.com, instead of
296       creating a new query to process example.com, Deadwood will attach the
297       new client to the same query that is already "in flight", and send a
298       reply to both clients once we have an answer for example.com.
299
300       This is the number of simultaneous clients a given query can have. If
301       this limit is exceeded, subsequents clients with the same query are
302       refused until an answer is found. If this has a value of 1, we do not
303       merge multiple requests for the same query, but give each request its
304       own connection.
305
306       The default value is 8.
307
308    max_ttl
309
310       The maximum amount of time we will keep an entry in the cache, in
311       seconds (also called "Maximum TTL").
312
313       This is the longest we will keep an entry cached. The default value for
314       this parameter is 86400 (one day); the minimum value is 300 (5 minutes)
315       and the maximum value this can have is 7776000 (90 days).
316
317       The reason why this parameter is here is to protect Deadwood from
318       attacks which exploit there being stale data in the cache, such as the
319       "Ghost Domain Names" attack.
320
321    maximum_cache_elements
322
323       The maximum number of elements our cache is allowed to have. This is a
324       number between 32 and 16,777,216; the default value for this is 1024.
325       Note that, if writing the cache to disk or reading the cache from disk,
326       higher values of this will slow down cache reading/writing.
327
328       The amount of memory each cache entry uses is variable depending on the
329       operating system used and the size of memory allocation pages assigned.
330       In Windows XP, for example, each entry uses approximately four
331       kilobytes of memory and Deadwood has an overhead of approximately 512
332       kilobytes.  So, if there are 512 cache elements, Deadwood uses
333       approximately 2.5 megabytes of memory, and if there are 1024 cache
334       elements, Deadwood uses approximately 4.5 megabytes of memory. Again,
335       these numbers are for Windows XP and other operating systems will have
336       different memory allocation numbers.
337
338       Please note that, as of Deadwood 3.5.0004, is is no longer needed to
339       increase maximum_cache_elements to store upstream_server and
340       root_server entries.
341
342    maxprocs
343
344       This is the maximum number of pending remote UDP connections Deadwood
345       can have. The default value for this is 1024.
346
347    max_tcp_procs
348
349       This is the number of allowed open TCP connections. Default value: 8
350
351    min_ttl
352
353       The minimum amount of time we will keep an entry in the cache, in
354       seconds (also called "Minimum TTL").
355
356    num_retries
357
358       The number of times we retry to send a query upstream before giving up.
359       If this is 0, we only try once; if this is 1, we try twice, and so on,
360       up to 32 retries. Note that each retry takes timeout_seconds seconds
361       before we retry again. Default value: 5
362
363    ns_glueless_type
364
365       The RR type we send to resolve glueless records. This should always be
366       1 (A; i.e. IPv4 DNS servers). This should never be ANY, see RFC8482.
367       This should not be any other value, since only A glueless NS referrals
368       have ever been tested with Deadwood.
369
370       The reason why this exists is because, often times in DNS, we get a
371       reply like "The name server for this foo.example.com and no I do not
372       have the IP for foo.example.com" when recursively solving an answer.
373       So, the question is this: Is foo.example.com an IPv4 DNS server, an
374       IPv6 server, or both?
375
376       On today's internet (mid-2020, during the COVID-19 crisis), the answer
377       is that the name server in question is only on the IPv4 Internet. IPv6
378       is now mainstream (e.g. my ISP gives me a /64 and I no longer have to
379       tunnel through he.net to try out IPv6), but most servers are still IPv4
380       only (e.g. my domains are only on IPv4, and amazon.com does not have an
381       IPv6 address).
382
383       The reason this parameter exists is because, when I was writing the
384       recursive code for Deadwood, I was thinking of a future where IPv6 is
385       prevalent enough that we would have DNS servers with only IPv6
386       addresses, and glueless NS referrals (the "foo.example.com" case above)
387       would point to servers with IPv6, but not IPv4, addresses.
388
389       That day may yet come, but preparing Deadwood to still be a viable DNS
390       server when that day comes will require more than changing the RR type
391       sent when it gets a glueless NS referral.
392
393    random_seed_file
394
395       This is a file that contains random numbers, and is used as a seed for
396       the cryptographically strong random number generator.  Deadwood will
397       try to read 256 bytes from this file (the RNG Deadwood uses can accept
398       a stream of any arbitrary length).
399
400       Note that the hash compression function obtains some of its entropy
401       before parsing the mararc file, and is hard-coded to get entropy from
402       /dev/urandom (secret.txt on Windows systems). Most other entropy used
403       by Deadwood comes from the file pointed to by random_seed_file.
404
405    recurse_min_bind_port
406
407       The lowest numbered port Deadwood is allowed to bind to; this is a
408       random port number used for the source port of outgoing queries, and is
409       not 53 (see dns_port above). This is a number between 1025 and 32767,
410       and has a default value of 15000.  This is used to make DNS spoofing
411       attacks more difficult.
412
413    recurse_number_ports
414
415       The number of ports Deadwood binds to for the source port for outgoing
416       connections; this is a power of 2 between 256 and 32768.  This is used
417       to make DNS spoofing attacks more difficult. The default value is 4096.
418
419    recursive_acl
420
421       This is a list of who is allowed to use Deadwood to perform DNS
422       recursion, in "ip/mask" format. Mask must be a number between 0 and 32
423       (for IPv6, between 0 and 128). For example, "127.0.0.1/8" allows local
424       connections.
425
426    reject_aaaa
427
428       If this has a value of 1, a bogus SOA "not there" reply is sent
429       whenever an AAAA query is sent to Deadwood. In other words, every time
430       a program asks Deadwood for an IPv6 IP address, instead of trying to
431       process the request, when this is set to 1, Deadwood pretends the host
432       name in question does not have an IPv6 address.
433
434       This is useful for people who aren't using IPv6 but use applications
435       (usually *NIX command like applications like "telnet") which slow
436       things down trying to find an IPv6 address.
437
438       This has a default value of 0. In other words, AAAA queries are
439       processed normally unless this is set.
440
441    reject_mx
442
443       When this has the default value of 1, MX queries are silently dropped
444       with their IP logged. A MX query is a query that is only done by a
445       machine if it wishes to be its own mail server sending mail to machines
446       on the internet. This is a query an average desktop machine (including
447       one that uses Outlook or another mail user agent to read and send
448       email) will never make.
449
450       Most likely, if a machine is trying to make a MX query, the machine is
451       being controlled by a remote source to send out undesired "spam" email.
452       This in mind, Deadwood will not allow MX queries to be made unless
453       reject_mx is explicitly set with a value of 0.
454
455       Before disabling this, please keep in mind that Deadwood is optimized
456       to be used for web surfing, not as a DNS server for a mail hub.  In
457       particular, the IPs for MX records are removed from Deadwood's replies
458       and Deadwood needs to perform additional DNS queries to get the IPs
459       corresponding to MX records, and Deadwood's testing is more geared for
460       web surfing (almost 100% A record lookup) and not for mail delivery
461       (extensive MX record lookup).
462
463    reject_ptr
464
465       If this has a value of 1, a bogus SOA "not there" reply is sent
466       whenever a PTR query is sent to Deadwood. In other words, every time a
467       program asks Deadwood for "reverse DNS lookup" -- the hostname for a
468       given IP address -- instead of trying to process the request, when this
469       is set to 1, Deadwood pretends the IP address in question does not have
470       a hostname.
471
472       This is useful for people who are getting slow DNS timeouts when trying
473       to perform a reverse DNS lookups on IPs.
474
475       This has a default value of 0. In other words, PTR queries are
476       processed normally unless this is set.
477
478    resurrections
479
480       If this is set to 1, Deadwood will try to send an expired record to the
481       user before giving up. If it is 0, we don't. Default value: 1
482
483    root_servers
484
485       This is a list of root servers; its syntax is identical to
486       upstream_servers (see below). This is the type of DNS service ICANN,
487       for example, runs. These are servers used that do not give us complete
488       answers to DNS questions, but merely tell us which DNS servers to
489       connect to to get an answer closer to our desired answer.
490
491       Please note that, as of Deadwood 3.5.0004, it is no longer needed to
492       increase maximum_cache_elements to store root_server entries.
493
494    source_ip4
495
496       With certain complicated networks, it may be desirable to set the
497       source IP of queries sent to upstream or root DNS servers. If so, set
498       this parameter to have the dotted decimal IPv4 address to use when
499       sending IPv4 queries to an upstream DNS server.
500
501       Use this parameter with caution; Deadwood can very well become non-
502       functional if one uses a source IPv4 address which Deadwood is not
503       bound to.
504
505    tcp_listen
506
507       In order to enable DNS-over-TCP, this variable must be set and have a
508       value of 1. Default value: 0
509
510    timeout_seconds
511
512       This is how long Deadwood will wait before giving up and discarding a
513       pending UDP DNS reply.  The default value for this is 1, as in 1
514       second, unless Deadwood was compiled with FALLBACK_TIME enabled.
515
516    timeout_seconds_tcp
517
518       How long to wait on an idle TCP connection before dropping it. The
519       default value for this is 4, as in 4 seconds.
520
521    ttl_age
522
523       Whether TTL aging is enabled; whether entries in the cache have their
524       TTLs set to be the amount of time the entries have left in the cache.
525
526       If this has a value of 1, TTL entries are aged. Otherwise, they are
527       not.  The default value for this is 1.
528
529    upstream_port
530
531       This is the port Deadwood uses to connect or send packets to the
532       upstream servers. The default value for this is 53; the standard DNS
533       port.
534
535    upstream_servers
536
537       This is a list of DNS servers that the load balancer will try to
538       contact.  This is a dictionary variable (array indexed by a string
539       instead of by a number) instead of a simple variable. Since
540       upstream_servers is a dictionary variable, it needs to be initialized
541       before being used.
542
543       Deadwood will look at the name of the host that it is trying to find
544       the upstream server for, and will match against the longest suffix it
545       can find.
546
547       For example, if someone sends a query for "www.foo.example.com" to
548       Deadwood, Deadwood will first see if there is an upstream_servers
549       variable for "www.foo.example.com.", then look for "foo.example.com.",
550       then look for "example.com.", then "com.", and finally ".".
551
552       Here is an example of upstream_servers:
553
554       upstream_servers = {} # Initialize dictionary variable
555       upstream_servers["foo.example.com."] = "192.168.42.1"
556       upstream_servers["example.com."] = "192.168.99.254"
557       upstream_servers["."] = "10.1.2.3, 10.1.2.4"
558
559       In this example, anything ending in "foo.example.com" is resolved by
560       the DNS server at 192.168.42.1; anything else ending in "example.com"
561       is resolved by 192.168.99.254; and anything not ending in "example.com"
562       is resolved by either 10.1.2.3 or 10.1.2.4.
563
564       Important: the domain name upstream_servers points to must end in a "."
565       character. This is OK:
566
567       upstream_servers["example.com."] = "192.168.42.1"
568
569       But this is not OK:
570
571       upstream_servers["example.com"] = "192.168.42.1"
572
573       The reason for this is because BIND engages in unexpected behavior when
574       a host name doesn't end in a dot, and by forcing a dot at the end of a
575       hostname, Deadwood doesn't have to guess whether the user wants BIND's
576       behavior or the "normal" behavior.
577
578       If neither root_servers nor upstream_servers are set, Deadwood sets
579       upstream_servers to use the https://quad9.net servers, as follows:
580
581       9.9.9.9
582       149.112.112.112
583
584       Please note that, as of Deadwood 3.5.0004, is is no longer needed to
585       increase maximum_cache_elements to store upstream_server entries.
586
587    verbose_level
588
589       This determines how many messages are logged on standard output; larger
590       values log more messages. The default value for this is 3.
591

ip/mask format of IPs

593       Deadwood uses a standard ip/netmask formats to specify IPs.  An ip is
594       in dotted-decimal format, e.g. "10.1.2.3" (or in IPv6 format when IPv6
595       support is compiled in).
596
597       The netmask is used to specify a range of IPs.  The netmask is a single
598       number between 1 and 32 (128 when IPv6 support is compiled in), which
599       indicates the number of leading "1" bits in the netmask.
600
601       10.1.1.1/24 indicates that any ip from 10.1.1.0 to 10.1.1.255 will
602       match.
603
604       10.2.3.4/16 indicates that any ip from 10.2.0.0 to 10.2.255.255 will
605       match.
606
607       127.0.0.0/8 indicates that any ip with "127" as the first octet
608       (number) will match.
609
610       The netmask is optional, and, if not present, indicates that only a
611       single IP will match.
612

DNS over TCP

614       DNS-over-TCP needs to be explicitly enabled by setting tcp_listen to 1.
615
616       Deadwood extracts useful information from UDP DNS packets marked
617       truncated which almost always removes the need to have DNS-over-TCP.
618       However, Deadwood does not cache DNS packets larger than 512 bytes in
619       size that need to be sent using TCP. In addition, DNS-over-TCP packets
620       which are "incomplete" DNS replies (replies which a stub resolver can
621       not use, which can be either a NS referral or an incomplete CNAME
622       reply) are not handled correctly by Deadwood.
623
624       Deadwood has support for both DNS-over-UDP and DNS-over-TCP; the same
625       daemon listens on both the UDP and TCP DNS port.
626
627       Only UDP DNS queries are cached. Deadwood does not support caching over
628       TCP; it handles TCP to resolve the rare truncated reply without any
629       useful information or to work with very uncommon non-RFC-compliant TCP-
630       only DNS resolvers. In the real world, DNS-over-TCP is almost never
631       used.
632

Parsing other files

634       It is possible to have Deadwood, while parsing the dwood3rc file, read
635       other files and parse them as if they were dwood3rc files.
636
637       This is done using execfile.  To use execfile, place a line like this
638       in the dwood3rc file:
639
640       execfile("path/to/filename")
641
642       Where path/to/filename is the path to the file to be parsed like a
643       dwood3rc file.
644
645       All files must be in or under the directory /etc/deadwood/execfile.
646       Filenames can only have lower-case letters and the underscore character
647       ("_"). Absolute paths are not allowed as the argument to execfile; the
648       filename can not start with a slash ("/") character.
649
650       If there is a parse error in the file pointed to by execfile, Deadwood
651       will report the error as being on the line with the execfile command in
652       the main dwood3rc file. To find where a parse error is in the sub-file,
653       use something like "Deadwood -f /etc/deadwood/execfile/filename" to
654       find the parse error in the offending file, where "filename" is the
655       file to to parsed via execfile.
656

IPV6 support

658       This server can also be optionally compiled to have IPv6 support. In
659       order to enable IPv6 support, add '-DIPV6' to the compile-time flags.
660       For example, to compile this to make a small binary, and to have IPv6
661       support:
662
663            export FLAGS='-Os -DIPV6'
664            make
665
666

SECURITY

668       Deadwood is a program written with security in mind.
669
670       In addition to use a buffer-overflow resistant string library and a
671       coding style and SQA process that checks for buffer overflows and
672       memory leaks, Deadwood uses a strong pseudo-random number generator
673       (The 32-bit version of RadioGatun) to generate both the query ID and
674       source port. For the random number generator to be secure, Deadwood
675       needs a good source of entropy; by default Deadwood will use
676       /dev/urandom to get this entropy.  If you are on a system without
677       /dev/urandom support, it is important to make sure that Deadwood has a
678       good source of entropy so that the query ID and source port are hard to
679       guess (otherwise it is possible to forge DNS packets).
680
681       The Windows port of Deadwood includes a program called
682       "mkSecretTxt.exe" that creates a 64-byte (512 bit) random file called
683       "secret.txt" that can be used by Deadwood (via the "random_seed_file"
684       parameter); Deadwood also gets entropy from the timestamp when Deadwood
685       is started and Deadwood's process ID number, so it is same to use the
686       same static secret.txt file as the random_seed_file for multiple
687       invocations of Deadwood.
688
689       Note that Deadwood is not protected from someone on the same network
690       viewing packets sent by Deadwood and sending forged packets as a reply.
691
692       To protect Deadwood from certain possible denial-of-service attacks, it
693       is best if Deadwood's prime number used for hashing elements in the
694       cache is a random 31-bit prime number. The program RandomPrime.c
695       generates a random prime that is placed in the file DwRandPrime.h that
696       is regenerated whenever either the program is compiled or things are
697       cleaned up with make clean. This program uses /dev/urandom for its
698       entropy; the file DwRandPrime.h will not be regenerated on systems
699       without /dev/urandom.
700
701       On systems without direct /dev/urandom support, it is suggested to see
702       if there is a possible way to give the system a working /dev/urandom.
703       This way, when Deadwood is compiled, the hash magic number will be
704       suitably random.
705
706       If using a precompiled binary of Deadwood, please ensure that the
707       system has /dev/urandom support (on Windows system, please ensure that
708       the file with the name secret.txt is generated by the included
709       mkSecretTxt.exe program); Deadwood, at runtime, uses /dev/urandom
710       (secret.txt in Windows) as a hardcoded path to get entropy (along with
711       the timestamp) for the hash algorithm.
712

DAEMONIZATION

714       Deadwood does not have any built-in daemonization facilities; this is
715       handled by the external program Duende or any other daemonizer.
716

Example configuration file

718       Here is an example dwood3rc configuration file:
719
720       # This is an example deadwood rc file
721       # Note that comments are started by the hash symbol
722
723       bind_address="127.0.0.1" # IP we bind to
724
725       # The following line is disabled by being commented out
726       #bind_address="::1" # We have optional IPv6 support
727
728       # Directory we run program from (not used in Win32)
729       chroot_dir = "/etc/deadwood"
730
731       # The following upstream DNS servers are Google's
732       # (as of December 2009) public DNS servers.  For
733       # more information, see the page at
734       # http://code.google.com/speed/public-dns/
735       #
736       # If neither root_servers nor upstream_servers are set,
737       # Deadwood will use the default ICANN root servers.
738       #upstream_servers = {}
739       #upstream_servers["."]="8.8.8.8, 8.8.4.4"
740
741       # Who is allowed to use the cache.  This line
742       # allows anyone with "127.0" as the first two
743       # digits of their IP to use Deadwood
744       recursive_acl = "127.0.0.1/16"
745
746       # Maximum number of pending requests
747       maxprocs = 2048
748
749       # Send SERVER FAIL when overloaded
750       handle_overload = 1
751
752       maradns_uid = 99 # UID Deadwood runs as
753       maradns_gid = 99 # GID Deadwood runs as
754
755       maximum_cache_elements = 60000
756
757       # If you want to read and write the cache from disk,
758       # make sure chroot_dir above is readable and writable
759       # by the maradns_uid/gid above, and uncomment the
760       # following line.
761       #cache_file = "dw_cache"
762
763       # If your upstream DNS server converts "not there" DNS replies
764       # in to IPs, this parameter allows Deadwood to convert any reply
765       # with a given IP back in to a "not there" IP.  If any of the IPs
766       # listed below are in a DNS answer, Deadwood converts the answer
767       # in to a "not there"
768       #ip_blocklist = "10.222.33.44, 10.222.3.55"
769
770       # By default, for security reasons, Deadwood does not allow IPs in
771       # the 192.168.x.x, 172.[16-31].x.x, 10.x.x.x, 127.x.x.x,
772       # 169.254.x.x, 224.x.x.x, or 0.0.x.x range.  If using Deadwood
773       # to resolve names on an internal network, uncomment the
774       # following line:
775       #filter_rfc1918 = 0
776
777

BUGS

779       Deadwood does not follow RFC2181's advice to ignore DNS responses with
780       the TC (truncated) bit set, but instead extracts the first RR. If this
781       is not desired, set the undocumented parameter truncation_hack to 0
782       (but read the DNS over TCP section of this man page).
783
784       Deadwood can not process DNS resource record types with numbers between
785       65392 and 65407. These RR types are marked by the IANA for "private
786       use"; Deadwood reserves these record types for internal use. This is
787       only 16 record types out of the 65536 possible DNS record types (only
788       71 have actually been assigned by IANA, so this is a non-issue in the
789       real world).
790
791       It is not clear whether the DNS RFCs allow ASCII control characters in
792       DNS names. Even if they were, Deadwood does not allow ASCII control
793       characters (bytes with a value less then 32) in DNS names.  Other
794       characters (UTF-8, etc.) are allowed.
795
796       Combining a CNAME record with other records is prohibited in RFC1034
797       section 3.6.2 and RFC1912 section 2.4; it makes an answer ambiguous.
798       Deadwood handles this ambiguity differently than some other DNS
799       servers.
800
802       THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHORS ''AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
803       IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
804       WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
805       DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR
806       ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
807       DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
808       OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
809       HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
810       STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
811       IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
812       POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
813

AUTHORS

815       Sam Trenholme (http://www.samiam.org) is responsible for this program
816       and man page. He appreciates all of Jean-Jacques Sarton's help giving
817       this program IPv6 support.
818
819
820
821
822DEADWOOD                          August 2009                      DEADWOOD(1)
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