From 45d6379135504814ab723b57f0eb8be23393a51d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2024 09:24:22 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 1:9.16.44. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- bin/python/dnssec-keymgr.rst | 223 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 223 insertions(+) create mode 100644 bin/python/dnssec-keymgr.rst (limited to 'bin/python/dnssec-keymgr.rst') diff --git a/bin/python/dnssec-keymgr.rst b/bin/python/dnssec-keymgr.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4320541 --- /dev/null +++ b/bin/python/dnssec-keymgr.rst @@ -0,0 +1,223 @@ +.. Copyright (C) Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") +.. +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: MPL-2.0 +.. +.. This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public +.. License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this +.. file, you can obtain one at https://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. +.. +.. See the COPYRIGHT file distributed with this work for additional +.. information regarding copyright ownership. + +.. highlight: console + +.. _man_dnssec-keymgr: + +dnssec-keymgr - Ensures correct DNSKEY coverage based on a defined policy +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Synopsis +~~~~~~~~ + +:program:`dnssec-keymgr` [**-K**\ *directory*] [**-c**\ *file*] [**-f**] [**-k**] [**-q**] [**-v**] [**-z**] [**-g**\ *path*] [**-s**\ *path*] [zone...] + +Description +~~~~~~~~~~~ + +``dnssec-keymgr`` is a high level Python wrapper to facilitate the key +rollover process for zones handled by BIND. It uses the BIND commands +for manipulating DNSSEC key metadata: ``dnssec-keygen`` and +``dnssec-settime``. + +DNSSEC policy can be read from a configuration file (default +/etc/dnssec-policy.conf), from which the key parameters, publication and +rollover schedule, and desired coverage duration for any given zone can +be determined. This file may be used to define individual DNSSEC +policies on a per-zone basis, or to set a "default" policy used for all +zones. + +When ``dnssec-keymgr`` runs, it examines the DNSSEC keys for one or more +zones, comparing their timing metadata against the policies for those +zones. If key settings do not conform to the DNSSEC policy (for example, +because the policy has been changed), they are automatically corrected. + +A zone policy can specify a duration for which we want to ensure the key +correctness (``coverage``). It can also specify a rollover period +(``roll-period``). If policy indicates that a key should roll over +before the coverage period ends, then a successor key will automatically +be created and added to the end of the key series. + +If zones are specified on the command line, ``dnssec-keymgr`` will +examine only those zones. If a specified zone does not already have keys +in place, then keys will be generated for it according to policy. + +If zones are *not* specified on the command line, then ``dnssec-keymgr`` +will search the key directory (either the current working directory or +the directory set by the ``-K`` option), and check the keys for all the +zones represented in the directory. + +Key times that are in the past will not be updated unless the ``-f`` is +used (see below). Key inactivation and deletion times that are less than +five minutes in the future will be delayed by five minutes. + +It is expected that this tool will be run automatically and unattended +(for example, by ``cron``). + +Options +~~~~~~~ + +**-c** *file* + + If ``-c`` is specified, then the DNSSEC policy is read from ``file``. + (If not specified, then the policy is read from + /etc/dnssec-policy.conf; if that file doesnt exist, a built-in global + default policy is used.) + +**-f** + + Force: allow updating of key events even if they are already in the + past. This is not recommended for use with zones in which keys have + already been published. However, if a set of keys has been generated + all of which have publication and activation dates in the past, but + the keys have not been published in a zone as yet, then this option + can be used to clean them up and turn them into a proper series of + keys with appropriate rollover intervals. + +**-g** *keygen-path* + + Specifies a path to a ``dnssec-keygen`` binary. Used for testing. See + also the ``-s`` option. + +**-h** + + Print the ``dnssec-keymgr`` help summary and exit. + +**-K** *directory* + + Sets the directory in which keys can be found. Defaults to the + current working directory. + +**-k** + + Only apply policies to KSK keys. See also the ``-z`` option. + +**-q** + + Quiet: suppress printing of ``dnssec-keygen`` and ``dnssec-settime``. + +**-s** *settime-path* + + Specifies a path to a ``dnssec-settime`` binary. Used for testing. + See also the ``-g`` option. + +**-v** + + Print the ``dnssec-keymgr`` version and exit. + +**-z** + + Only apply policies to ZSK keys. See also the ``-k`` option. + +Policy Configuration +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The dnssec-policy.conf file can specify three kinds of policies: + + · *Policy classes* (``policy``\ *name*\ ``{ ... };``) can be + inherited by zone policies or other policy classes; these can be used + to create sets of different security profiles. For example, a policy + class ``normal`` might specify 1024-bit key sizes, but a class + ``extra`` might specify 2048 bits instead; ``extra`` would be used + for zones that had unusually high security needs. + +.. + + · *Algorithm policies:* (``algorithm-policy``\ *algorithm*\ ``{ ... + };`` ) override default per-algorithm settings. For example, by + default, RSASHA256 keys use 2048-bit key sizes for both KSK and ZSK. + This can be modified using ``algorithm-policy``, and the new key + sizes would then be used for any key of type RSASHA256. + + · *Zone policies:* (``zone``\ *name*\ ``{ ... };`` ) set policy for a + single zone by name. A zone policy can inherit a policy class by + including a ``policy`` option. Zone names beginning with digits + (i.e., 0-9) must be quoted. If a zone does not have its own policy + then the "default" policy applies. + +Options that can be specified in policies: + +``algorithm`` *name*; + + The key algorithm. If no policy is defined, the default is RSASHA256. + +``coverage`` *duration*; + + The length of time to ensure that keys will be correct; no action + will be taken to create new keys to be activated after this time. + This can be represented as a number of seconds, or as a duration + using human-readable units (examples: "1y" or "6 months"). A default + value for this option can be set in algorithm policies as well as in + policy classes or zone policies. If no policy is configured, the + default is six months. + +``directory`` *path*; + + Specifies the directory in which keys should be stored. + +``key-size`` *keytype* *size*; + + Specifies the number of bits to use in creating keys. The keytype is + either "zsk" or "ksk". A default value for this option can be set in + algorithm policies as well as in policy classes or zone policies. If + no policy is configured, the default is 2048 bits for RSA keys. + +``keyttl`` *duration*; + + The key TTL. If no policy is defined, the default is one hour. + +``post-publish`` *keytype* *duration*; + + How long after inactivation a key should be deleted from the zone. + Note: If ``roll-period`` is not set, this value is ignored. The + keytype is either "zsk" or "ksk". A default duration for this option + can be set in algorithm policies as well as in policy classes or zone + policies. The default is one month. + +``pre-publish`` *keytype* *duration*; + + How long before activation a key should be published. Note: If + ``roll-period`` is not set, this value is ignored. The keytype is + either "zsk" or "ksk". A default duration for this option can be set + in algorithm policies as well as in policy classes or zone policies. + The default is one month. + +``roll-period`` *keytype* *duration*; + + How frequently keys should be rolled over. The keytype is either + "zsk" or "ksk". A default duration for this option can be set in + algorithm policies as well as in policy classes or zone policies. If + no policy is configured, the default is one year for ZSKs. KSKs do + not roll over by default. + +``standby`` *keytype* *number*; + + Not yet implemented. + +Remaining Work +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + + · Enable scheduling of KSK rollovers using the ``-P sync`` and ``-D + sync`` options to ``dnssec-keygen`` and ``dnssec-settime``. Check the + parent zone (as in ``dnssec-checkds``) to determine when its safe for + the key to roll. + +.. + + · Allow configuration of standby keys and use of the REVOKE bit, for + keys that use RFC 5011 semantics. + +See Also +~~~~~~~~ + +``dnssec-coverage``\ (8), ``dnssec-keygen``\ (8), +``dnssec-settime``\ (8), ``dnssec-checkds``\ (8) -- cgit v1.2.3