DNSSEC sign DNS zones in one command. DNSSEC-ninja!

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README.md

dnssec-signer

DNSSEC sign DNS zone(s) in one command. DNSSEC-ninja!

Requirements

  • dnssec
  • haveged (optional, but absolutely a must have to speed up things!)

This script follows a special kind of structure, to more easily understand where to look up and read DNS zones, e.g:

/path/to/zones/<domain.tld>/

The zone file, without any DNSSEC entries, must be called db and be placed in the root of the folder <domain.tld>/.

Personally this is an easier folder-structure to look-up and read when I'm working on a server, and the reason why I decided to have it like this.

Installation

  1. Clone this repository ```bash git clone giaever@git.giaever.org:joachimmg/dnssec-signer.git && cd "dnssec-signer"

    
    2. Make `dnssec-signer` executable ```bash
    chmod +x dnssec-signer
    
  2. Edit dnssec-signer and alter the configuration section:

    1. NAMEDZONES (default: /etc/bind/named.conf.local): The named-file with the zones you're authoritative for. This file is used to only sign active zones when arguments aren't given when executing the script. Typically used when running the script as a deamon.
    2. ZONESDIR (default: /etc/bind/zones): The zones-folder (see: Requirements) where you store your zones.
    3. CHECKZONE (default: /usr/sbin/named-checkzone): Where the application named-checkzone is located on in your OS.
    4. CHECKCONF (default: /usr/sbin/named-checkconf): Where the application named-checkconf is located on in your OS.
    5. KEYGEN (default: /usr/sbin/dnssec-keygen): Where the application dnssec-keygen is located on in your OS.
    6. SIGNZONE (default: /usr/sbin/dnssec-signzone): Where the application dnssec-signzone is located on in your OS.
    7. SYSCTL (default: /bin/systemctl): Where the application systemctl is located on in your OS.
    8. DNSSERVICE (default: bind.service): Which DNS service you're using and that systemctl will have to restart.
    9. LOGGER (default: /usr/bin/logger): Which logger application you will use and where it reside in your OS.
    10. LOGGERFLAGN (default: -t "<username>" -p daemon.info): Flags you want to pass to the logger when logging successful messages.
    11. LOGGERFLAGE (default: -t "<username>" -p daemon.err): Flags you want to pass to the logger when logging error messages.

If you like, you can link the file to a bin-directory, to globally access the script from any working directory.

ln -s /not/a/relative/path/to/dnssec-signer /usr/bin/

Usage

A signed zone will be stored in a file called db.signed and is the one you have to refer to (or change) in the named-file. This is something you only need to do once, after you signed the zone.

Please dont delete the db-file!

  1. You will do changes to a zone in this file (and not db.signed) and sign the zone again afterwards, which will generate a new db.signed-file for you. It's more or less impossible to do changes in the signed file.
  2. If you're re-signing a zone it will always read the db-file and generate a new db.signed-file.

Please don't delete the KEYS! They are stored in the <domain.tld>/-directory, and they should be kept there for resigning.

The first time a zone is signed there is generated a file called dsset-<domain.tld>. To gain the chain of trust you must add these keys, in the dsset-file, with your registrar.

Sign a single zone:

./dnssec-signer <zone>

Sign several zones:

./dnssec-signer <zone> <zone> ... <zone>

Note: This won't require the zone(s) to be in the named-file

Sign every "active" zone:

./dnssec-signer

Note: This will check that that zones is in your named-file before processing it, as this is typically used in a cron-job to update the hash for the zone.

Create crontab?

Edit crontab for the root

sudo crontab -e

and add the following

0 0 */3 * * /path/to/dnssec-signer

This updates active zones every 3'rd day. Append > /var/log/dnssec-signer to store the last output log. Then you can open this and read the last result. There's also a timestamp produced at the start if you're wondering what time it updated the zone.

Note

This is only tested under Bind9 on Ubuntu 16.04.03