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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-08 20:37:50 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-08 20:37:50 +0000 |
commit | c1f743ab2e4a7046d5500875a47d1f62c8624603 (patch) | |
tree | 709946d52f5f3bbaeb38be9e3f1d56d11f058237 /doc/quickstart-config.rst | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | knot-resolver-c1f743ab2e4a7046d5500875a47d1f62c8624603.tar.xz knot-resolver-c1f743ab2e4a7046d5500875a47d1f62c8624603.zip |
Adding upstream version 5.7.1.upstream/5.7.1
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
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-rw-r--r-- | doc/quickstart-config.rst | 209 |
1 files changed, 209 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/quickstart-config.rst b/doc/quickstart-config.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..df0fed4 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/quickstart-config.rst @@ -0,0 +1,209 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later + +.. _quickstart-config: + +************* +Configuration +************* + +.. contents:: + :depth: 1 + :local: + +.. note:: + + When copy&pasting examples from this manual please pay close + attention to brackets and also line ordering - order of lines matters. + + The configuration language is in fact Lua script, so you can use full power + of this programming language. See article + `Learn Lua in 15 minutes`_ for a syntax overview. + +Easiest way to configure Knot Resolver is to paste your configuration into +configuration file ``/etc/knot-resolver/kresd.conf``. +Complete configurations files for examples in this chapter +can be found `here <https://gitlab.nic.cz/knot/knot-resolver/tree/master/etc/config>`_. +The example configuration files are also installed as documentation files, typically in directory ``/usr/share/doc/knot-resolver/examples/`` (their location may be different based on your Linux distribution). +Detailed configuration of daemon and implemented modules can be found in configuration reference: + + +Listening on network interfaces +=============================== + +Network interfaces to listen on and supported protocols are configured using :func:`net.listen()` function. + +The following configuration instructs Knot Resolver to receive standard unencrypted DNS queries on IP addresses `192.0.2.1` and `2001:db8::1`. Encrypted DNS queries are accepted using DNS-over-TLS protocol on all IP addresses configured on network interface `eth0`, TCP port 853. + +.. code-block:: lua + + -- unencrypted DNS on port 53 is default + net.listen('192.0.2.1') + net.listen('2001:db8::1') + net.listen(net.eth0, 853, { kind = 'tls' }) + +.. warning:: + + On machines with multiple IP addresses on the same interface avoid listening on wildcards ``0.0.0.0`` or ``::``. + Knot Resolver could answer from different IP addresses if the network address ranges + overlap, and clients would refuse such a response. + + +Scenario: Internal Resolver +=========================== + +This is an example of typical configuration for company-internal resolver which is not accessible from outside of company network. + +Internal-only domains +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +An internal-only domain is a domain not accessible from the public Internet. +In order to resolve internal-only domains a query policy has to be added to forward queries to a correct internal server. +This configuration will forward two listed domains to a DNS server with IP address ``192.0.2.44``. + +.. code-block:: lua + + -- define list of internal-only domains + internalDomains = policy.todnames({'company.example', 'internal.example'}) + + -- forward all queries belonging to domains in the list above to IP address '192.0.2.44' + policy.add(policy.suffix(policy.FLAGS({'NO_CACHE'}), internalDomains)) + policy.add(policy.suffix(policy.STUB({'192.0.2.44'}), internalDomains)) + +See chapter :ref:`dns-graft` for more details. + + +.. _ispresolver: + +Scenario: ISP Resolver +====================== + +The following configuration is typical for Internet Service Providers who offer DNS resolver +service to their own clients in their own network. Please note that running a *public DNS resolver* +is more complicated and not covered by this quick start guide. + +Limiting client access +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +With exception of public resolvers, a DNS resolver should resolve only queries sent by clients in its own network. This restriction limits attack surface on the resolver itself and also for the rest of the Internet. + +In a situation where access to DNS resolver is not limited using IP firewall, you can implement access restrictions using the :ref:`view module <mod-view>` which combines query source information with :ref:`policy rules <mod-policy>`. +Following configuration allows only queries from clients in subnet 192.0.2.0/24 and refuses all the rest. + +.. code-block:: lua + + modules.load('view') + + -- whitelist queries identified by subnet + view:addr('192.0.2.0/24', policy.all(policy.PASS)) + + -- drop everything that hasn't matched + view:addr('0.0.0.0/0', policy.all(policy.DROP)) + +TLS server configuration +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +Today clients are demanding secure transport for DNS queries between client machine and DNS resolver. The recommended way to achieve this is to start DNS-over-TLS server and accept also encrypted queries. + +First step is to enable TLS on listening interfaces: + +.. code-block:: lua + + net.listen('192.0.2.1', 853, { kind = 'tls' }) + net.listen('2001::db8:1', 853, { kind = 'tls' }) + +By default a self-signed certificate is generated. +Second step is then obtaining and configuring your own TLS certificates +signed by a trusted CA. Once the certificate was obtained a path to certificate files can be specified using function :func:`net.tls()`: + +.. code-block:: lua + + net.tls("/etc/knot-resolver/server-cert.pem", "/etc/knot-resolver/server-key.pem") + + +Mandatory domain blocking +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Some jurisdictions mandate blocking access to certain domains. This can be achieved using following :ref:`policy rule <mod-policy>`: + +.. code-block:: lua + + policy.add( + policy.suffix(policy.DENY, + policy.todnames({'example.com.', 'blocked.example.net.'}))) + + + +.. _personalresolver: + +Scenario: Personal Resolver +=========================== + +DNS queries can be used to gather data about user behavior. +Knot Resolver can be configured to forward DNS queries elsewhere, +and to protect them from eavesdropping by TLS encryption. + +.. warning:: + + Latest research has proven that encrypting DNS traffic is not sufficient to protect privacy of users. + For this reason we recommend all users to use full VPN instead of encrypting *just* DNS queries. + Following configuration is provided **only for users who cannot encrypt all their traffic**. + For more information please see following articles: + + - Simran Patil and Nikita Borisov. 2019. What can you learn from an IP? (`slides <https://irtf.org/anrw/2019/slides-anrw19-final44.pdf>`_, `the article itself <https://dl.acm.org/authorize?N687437>`_) + - `Bert Hubert. 2019. Centralised DoH is bad for Privacy, in 2019 and beyond <https://labs.ripe.net/Members/bert_hubert/centralised-doh-is-bad-for-privacy-in-2019-and-beyond>`_ + + +Forwarding over TLS protocol (DNS-over-TLS) +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +Forwarding over TLS protocol protects DNS queries sent out by resolver. +It can be configured using :ref:`policy.TLS_FORWARD <tls-forwarding>` function which provides methods for authentication. +See list of `DNS Privacy Test Servers`_ supporting DNS-over-TLS to test your configuration. + +Read more on :ref:`tls-forwarding`. + + +Forwarding to multiple targets +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +With the use of :any:`policy.slice` function, it is possible to split the +entire DNS namespace into distinct "slices". When used in conjunction with +:ref:`policy.TLS_FORWARD <tls-forwarding>`, it's possible to forward different queries to different +remote resolvers. As a result no single remote resolver will get complete list +of all queries performed by this client. + +.. warning:: + + Beware that this method has not been scientifically tested and there might be + types of attacks which will allow remote resolvers to infer more information about the client. + Again: If possible encrypt **all** your traffic and not just DNS queries! + +.. code-block:: lua + + policy.add(policy.slice( + policy.slice_randomize_psl(), + policy.TLS_FORWARD({{'192.0.2.1', hostname='res.example.com'}}), + policy.TLS_FORWARD({ + -- multiple servers can be specified for a single slice + -- the one with lowest round-trip time will be used + {'193.17.47.1', hostname='odvr.nic.cz'}, + {'185.43.135.1', hostname='odvr.nic.cz'}, + }) + )) + +Non-persistent cache +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +Knot Resolver's cache contains data clients queried for. +If you are concerned about attackers who are able to get access to your +computer system in power-off state and your storage device is not secured by +encryption you can move the cache to tmpfs_. +See chapter :ref:`cache_persistence`. + + +.. raw:: html + + <h2>Next steps</h2> + +Congratulations! Your resolver is now up and running and ready for queries. For +serious deployments do not forget to read :ref:`configuration-chapter` and +:ref:`operation-chapter` chapters. + +.. _`Learn Lua in 15 minutes`: http://tylerneylon.com/a/learn-lua/ +.. _`DNS Privacy Test Servers`: https://dnsprivacy.org/wiki/display/DP/DNS+Privacy+Test+Servers +.. _tmpfs: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tmpfs |