Index of /archives/NetBSD/NetBSD-release-9/src/external/mpl/bind/dist/contrib/dlz/modules/wildcard

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[PARENTDIR] Parent Directory - [DIR] CVS/ 2024-03-02 12:23 - [TXT] Makefile 2024-03-02 12:23 1.7K [TXT] README 2024-03-02 12:23 2.7K [TXT] dlz_wildcard_dynamic.c 2024-03-02 12:23 17K [DIR] testing/ 2024-03-02 12:23 -
The "wildcard" DLZ module provides a "template" zone for domains matching a wildcard name. For example, the following DLZ configuration would match any zone name containing the string "example" and ending with .com, such as "thisexample.com", "exampleofthat.com", or "anexampleoftheotherthing.com". dlz "test" { database "dlopen ../dlz_wildcard_dynamic.so *example*.com 10.53.* 1800 @ 3600 SOA {ns3.example.nil. support.example.nil. 42 14400 7200 2592000 600} @ 3600 NS ns3.example.nil. @ 3600 NS ns4.example.nil. @ 3600 NS ns8.example.nil. @ 3600 MX {5 mail.example.nil.} ftp 86400 A 192.0.0.1 sql 86400 A 192.0.0.2 tmp {} A 192.0.0.3 www 86400 A 192.0.0.3 www 86400 AAAA ::1 txt 300 TXT {\"you requested $record$ in $zone$\"} * 86400 A 192.0.0.100"; }; For any zone name matching the wildcard, it would return the data from the template. "$zone$" is replaced with zone name: i.e., the shortest possible string of labels in the query name that matches the wildcard. "$record$" is replaced with the remainder of the query name. In the example above, a query for "txt.thisexample.com/TXT" would return the string "you requested txt in thisexample.com". Any client whose source address matches the second wildcard ("10.53.*") is allowed to request a zone transfer.