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docs: document default startup (#266)
Some small additions to the documentation.
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33
README.md
33
README.md
@@ -34,17 +34,16 @@ Each of the middlewares has a README.md of its own.
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## Status
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I'm using CoreDNS is my primary, authoritative, nameserver for my domains (`miek.nl`, `atoom.net`
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and a few others). CoreDNS should be stable enough to provide you with good DNS(SEC) service.
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CoreDNS can be used as a authoritative nameserver for your domains, and should be stable enough to
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provide you with good DNS(SEC) service.
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There are still few [issues](https://github.com/miekg/coredns/issues), and work is ongoing on making
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things fast and to reduce the memory usage.
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All in all, CoreDNS should be able to provide you with enough functionality to replace parts of
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BIND 9, Knot, NSD or PowerDNS and SkyDNS.
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Most documentation is in the source and some blog articles can be [found
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here](https://miek.nl/tags/coredns/). If you do want to use CoreDNS in production, please let us
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know and how we can help.
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All in all, CoreDNS should be able to provide you with enough functionality to replace parts of BIND
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9, Knot, NSD or PowerDNS and SkyDNS. Most documentation is in the source and some blog articles can
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be [found here](https://miek.nl/tags/coredns/). If you do want to use CoreDNS in production, please
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let us know and how we can help.
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<https://caddyserver.com/> is also full of examples on how to structure a Corefile (renamed from
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Caddyfile when I forked it).
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@@ -52,8 +51,7 @@ Caddyfile when I forked it).
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## Compilation
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CoreDNS (as a servertype plugin for Caddy) has a dependency on Caddy, but this is not different than
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any other Go dependency. You have the source of CoreDNS, this should preferably be downloaded under
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your `$GOPATH`. Get all dependencies:
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any other Go dependency. If you have the source of CoreDNS, get all dependencies:
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go get ./...
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@@ -65,6 +63,18 @@ This should yield a `coredns` binary.
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## Examples
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When starting CoreDNS without any configuration, it loads the `whoami` middleware and starts
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listening on port 2053, it should show the following:
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~~~ txt
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.:2053
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2016/09/18 09:20:50 [INFO] CoreDNS-001 starting
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CoreDNS-001 starting
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~~~
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Any query send to port 2053 should return some information; your sending address, port and protocol
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used.
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Start a simple proxy, you'll need to be root to start listening on port 53.
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`Corefile` contains:
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@@ -80,8 +90,9 @@ Just start CoreDNS: `./coredns`.
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And then just query on that port (53). The query should be forwarded to 8.8.8.8 and the response
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will be returned. Each query should also show up in the log.
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Serve the (NSEC) DNSSEC-signed `example.org` on port 1053, with errors and logging sent to stdout. Allow zone
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transfers to everybody, but specically mention 1 IP address so that CoreDNS can send notifies to it.
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Serve the (NSEC) DNSSEC-signed `example.org` on port 1053, with errors and logging sent to stdout.
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Allow zone transfers to everybody, but specically mention 1 IP address so that CoreDNS can send
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notifies to it.
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~~~ txt
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example.org:1053 {
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