Tested with Travis CI
- Description
- Setup - The basics of getting started with nsd
- Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality
- Reference - An under-the-hood peek at what the module is doing and how
- Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
- Development - Guide for contributing to the module
This module manages NSD.
RHEL/CentOS and OpenBSD are supported using Puppet 4.6.0 or later.
On RHEL/CentOS platforms you will need to have access to the EPEL repository by using stahnma/epel or by other means.
In the simplest case, configure NSD as a master with a single zone:
include ::nsd
::nsd::zone { 'example.com.':
source => 'puppet:///modules/example/example.com.zone',
}
Configure NSD listening on the primary interface only as a slave for a single zone protected with the given TSIG key:
include ::nsd
::nsd::key { 'example.':
algorithm => 'hmac-sha256',
secret => '6z+8iKRIQrwN43TFfO/Rf2NHzpHIFVi6PsJ7dDESclc=',
}
::nsd::zone { 'example.com.':
allow_notify => [
['192.0.2.1', 'example.'],
],
request_xfr => [
['AXFR', '192.0.2.1', 'example.'],
],
}
The reference documentation is generated with puppet-strings and the latest version of the documentation is hosted at https://bodgit.github.io/puppet-nsd/.
This module has been built on and tested against Puppet 4.6.0 and higher.
The module has been tested on:
- RedHat Enterprise Linux 6/7
- OpenBSD 6.0/6.1
The module has both rspec-puppet and beaker-rspec tests. Run them with:
$ bundle exec rake test
$ PUPPET_INSTALL_TYPE=agent PUPPET_INSTALL_VERSION=x.y.z bundle exec rake beaker:<nodeset>
Please log issues or pull requests at github.