With this you can retreive the raw data that the etcd middleware
used to create the reply. The debug data is put in TXT records
that are stuffed in the CH classs. This is only enabled if you
specify `debug` in the etcd stanza.
You can retrieve it by prefixing your query with 'o-o.debug.'
For instance:
; <<>> DiG 9.10.3-P4-Ubuntu <<>> @localhost -p 1053 SRV o-o.debug.production.*.skydns.local
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 47798
;; flags: qr aa rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 2, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 3
;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 4096
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;o-o.debug.production.*.skydns.local. IN SRV
;; ANSWER SECTION:
production.*.skydns.local. 154 IN SRV 10 50 8080 service1.example.com.
production.*.skydns.local. 154 IN SRV 10 50 8080 service2.example.com.
;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:
skydns.local.skydns.east.production.rails.1. 154 CH TXT "service1.example.com:8080(10,0,,false)[0,]"
skydns.local.skydns.west.production.rails.2. 154 CH TXT "service2.example.com:8080(10,0,,false)[0,]"
This implements stubzones in the same way as SkyDNS. This
also works with multiple configured domains and has tests.
Also add more configuration parameters for TLS and path prefix and
enabling stubzones. Run StubUpdates as a startup command to keep up to
date with the list in etcd.