This module can be used to configure both the recursor and authoritative PowerDNS 4 server. It officially supports Puppet 7 and higher.
This will install the authoritative PowerDNS server which includes the MySQL server and the management of the database and its tables. This is the bare minimum.
class { 'powerdns':
db_password => 's0m4r4nd0mp4ssw0rd',
db_root_password => 'v3rys3c4r3',
}
If you want to install both the recursor and the authoritative service on the same server it is recommended to have the services listen on their own IP address. The example below needs to be adjusted to use the ip addresses of your server.
This may fail the first time on Debian-based distro's.
powerdns::config { 'authoritative-local-address':
type => 'authoritative',
setting => 'local-address',
value => '127.0.0.1',
}
powerdns::config { 'recursor-local-address':
type => 'recursor',
setting => 'local-address',
value => '127.0.0.2',
}
class { 'powerdns':
db_password => 's0m4r4nd0mp4ssw0rd',
db_root_password => 'v3rys3c4r3',
recursor => true,
}
Multiple forward zones can be configured using powerdns::forward_zones
.
include powerdns::recursor
The configuration will be serialized into forward-zones-file
config file.
powerdns::forward_zones:
'example.com': 10.0.0.1
'foo': 192.168.1.1
# recurse queries
'+.': 1.1.1.1;8.8.8.8;8.8.4.4
The default backend is MySQL. It also comes with support for PostgreSQL, Bind, LDAP and SQLite.
If you don't specify the backend it assumes you will use MySQL.
class { 'powerdns':
backend => 'mysql',
db_password => 's0m4r4nd0mp4ssw0rd',
}
To use PostgreSQL set backend
to postgresql
.
class { 'powerdns':
backend => 'postgresql',
db_password => 's0m4r4nd0mp4ssw0rd',
}
To use Bind you must set backend_install
and backend_create_tables
to
false. For example:
class { 'powerdns':
backend => 'bind',
backend_install => false,
backend_create_tables => false,
}
To use LDAP you must set backend_install
and backend_create_tables
to
false. For example:
class { 'powerdns':
backend => 'ldap',
backend_install => false,
backend_create_tables => false,
}
To use SQLite you must set backend
to sqlite
. Ensure that the pdns
user
has write permissions to directory holding database file. For example:
class { 'powerdns':
backend => 'sqlite',
db_file => '/opt/powerdns.sqlite3',
}
With this module you can manage zones if you use a backend that is capable of doing so (eg. sqllite, postgres or mysql).
You can add a zone 'example.org' by using:
powerdns_zone{'example.org': }
This will add the zone which is then managed through puppet any records not added through puppet will be deleted additionaly a SOA record is generated. To just ensure the zone is available, but not manage any records use (and do not add any powerdns_record resources with target this domain):
powerdns_zone{'example.org':
manage_records => false,
}
To addjust the SOA record (if add_soa is set to true), use the soa_* parameters documented in the powerdns_record resource.
The zone records can be managed through the powerdns_record resource. As an example we add a NS an A and an AAAA record:
powerdns_record{'nameserver1':
target_zone => 'example.org',
rname => '.', # a dot takes the target_zone only as rname
rtype => 'NS',
rttl => '4242',
rcontent => 'ns1.example.org.' # pay attention to the dot at the end !
}
powerdns_record{'ns1.example.org':
rcontent => '127.0.0.1',
}
powerdns_record{'ipv6-ns1.example.org':
target_zone => 'example.org',
rname => 'ns1', # for the full record, the target_zone will be amended
rtype => 'AAAA',
rcontent => '::1',
}
powerdns_record{'www-server':
target_zone => 'example.org',
rname => 'www',
rcontent => '127.0.0.1'
}
Remark: if the target_zone is not managed with powerdns_zone resource, powerdns_record does not change anything!
Passwords can be passed either as plain-text strings or as Puppet's Sensitive type when appropriate encrypted backend is configured on Puppet server.
It's possible to manage the the 'autoprimaries' with puppet (For a decription of the autoprimary functionality in powerdns see powerdns manual. The autoprimaries are set with the powerdns_autoprimary resource. As an example we add the primary 1.2.3.4 named ns1.example.org whith the account 'test'
powerdns_autoprimary{'1.2.3.4@ns1.example.org':
ensure => 'present',
account => 'test',
}
As an alternative, you can set the autoprimaries parameter of the powerdns class to achive the same (eg. if you use hiera).
For removal of an autoprimary set ensure to 'absent' or set the parameter purge_autoprimaries of the powerdns class to true which willa remove all autoprimaries that are not present in the puppet manifest.
We provide a number of configuration options to change particular settings or to override our defaults when required.
authoritative
Install the PowerDNS authoritative server. Defaults to true.
recursor
Install the PowerDNS recursor. Defaults to false.
backend
Choose a backend for the authoritative server. Valid values are 'mysql', 'postgresql' and 'bind'. Defaults to 'mysql'.
backend_install
If you set this to true it will try to install a database backend for
you. This requires db_root_password
. Defaults to true.
backend_create_tables
If set to true, it will ensure the required powerdns tables exist in your
backend database. If your database is on a separate host or you are using the
the Bind backend, set backend_install
and backend_create_tables
to false.
Defaults to true.
db_root_password
If you set backend_install
to true you are asked to specify a root
password for your database. Accepts either String
or Sensitive
type.
db_username
Set the database username. Defaults to 'powerdns'.
db_password
Set the database password. Accepts either String
or Sensitive
type. Default is empty.
db_name
The database you want to use for PowerDNS. Defaults to 'powerdns'.
db_host
The host where your database should be created. Defaults to 'localhost'.
db_port
The port to use when connecting to your database. Defaults to '3306'. Only supported in the MySQL backend currently.
db_file
The file where database will be stored when using SQLite backend. Defaults to '/var/lib/powerdns/powerdns.sqlite3'
ldap_host
The host where your LDAP server can be found. Defaults to 'ldap://localhost/'.
ldap_basedn
The path to search for in LDAP. Defaults to undef.
ldap_method
Defines how LDAP is queried. Defaults to 'strict'.
ldap_binddn
Path to the object to authenticate against. Defaults to undef.
ldap_secret
Password for simple authentication against ldap_basedn. Accepts either String
or Sensitive
type. Defaults to undef.
custom_repo
Don't manage the PowerDNS repo with this module. Defaults to false.
custom_epel
Don't manage the EPEL repo with this module. Defaults to false.
version
Set the PowerDNS version. Defaults to '4.1'.
mysql_schema_file
Set the PowerDNS MySQL schema file. Defaults to the location provided by PowerDNS.
pgsql_schema_file
Set the PowerDNS PostgreSQL schema file. Defaults to the location provided by PowerDNS.
package_ensure
You can set the package version to be installed. Defaults to 'installed'.
All PowerDNS settings can be managed with powerdns::config
. Depending on the
backend we will set a few configuration settings by default. All other
variables can be changed as follows:
powerdns::config { 'api':
ensure => present,
setting => 'api',
value => 'yes',
type => 'authoritative',
}
setting
The setting you want to change.
value
The value for the above setting.
type
The configuration file you want to change. Valid values are 'authoritative', 'recursor'. Defaults to 'authoritative'.
ensure
Specify whether or not this configuration should be present. Valid values are 'present', 'absent'. Defaults to 'present'.
This module supports Hiera and uses create_resources to configure PowerDNS if you want to. An example can be found below:
powerdns::db_root_password: 's0m4r4nd0mp4ssw0rd'
powerdns::db_username: 'powerdns'
powerdns::db_password: 's0m4r4nd0mp4ssw0rd'
powerdns::recursor: true
powerdns::recursor::package_ensure: 'latest'
powerdns::authoritative::package_ensure: 'latest'
powerdns::auth::config:
gmysql-dnssec:
value: ''
local-address:
value: '127.0.0.1'
api:
value: 'yes'
In this example we configure local-address
to 127.0.0.1
. If you also
run a recursor on the same server and you would like to configure
local-address
via Hiera you need to set setting
and change the name of
the parameter in Hiera to a unique value.
For example:
powerdns::auth::config:
local-address-auth:
setting: 'local-address'
value: '127.0.0.1'
powerdns::recursor::config:
local-address-recursor:
setting: 'local-address'
value: '127.0.0.2'
If you have other settings that share the same name between the recursor and authoritative server you would have to use the same approach to prevent duplicate declaration errors.
This module has been tested on:
We believe it also on other operating systems such as:
Schemas in the packages on EL have the exact PowerDNS hardcoded in the paths, the main class has three parameters where you can adjust it.
mysql_schema_file
pgsql_schema_file
sqlite_schema_file
We strongly believe in the power of open source. This module is our way of saying thanks.
If you want to contribute please:
main
branch.We can only accept pull requests with passing tests.
To install all of its dependencies please run:
bundle install --path vendor/bundle --without development
bundle exec rake test
The unit tests only verify if the code runs, not if it does exactly what we want on a real machine. For this we use Beaker. Beaker will start a new virtual machine (using Vagrant) and runs a series of simple tests.
You can run Beaker tests with:
bundle exec rake spec_prep
BEAKER_destroy=onpass bundle exec rake beaker:centos7
BEAKER_destroy=onpass bundle exec rake beaker:oel7
BEAKER_destroy=onpass bundle exec rake beaker:ubuntu1804
BEAKER_destroy=onpass bundle exec rake beaker:debian10
We recommend specifying BEAKER_destroy=onpass
as it will keep the
Vagrant machine running in case something fails.