SystemAdministration/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheli694-22Domain
In many of the more relaxed civilizations of Linode, the Hitchhiker's Guide has already supplanted the great Encyclopaedia Galactica as the standard repository of all knowledge and wisdom, for though it has many omissions and contains much that is apocryphal, or at least wildly inaccurate, it scores over the older, more pedestrian work in two important respects.
Common Information
All nodes are present on the Dallas, TX Linode Datacenter, and have static IPs. From within the nodes themselves, we have a local DNS allowing them to refer to each other under the li694-22 TLD (a reference to our original pre-launch URL).
- All nodes support kerberos authetication to allow node-for-node access
- shell access is only allowed from desiginated nodes.
- LDAP and Kerberos is available on all nodes unless noted
- sysops can access all nodes, they are not explicately listed below
Node Name | Public Addresses | Who Can Acces (POSIX groups) | Is Running What |
---|---|---|---|
hydrogen | soylentnews.org | prod_access | slashd, varnish, apache 1.3, nginx |
helium | None | db | mysql (prod master)
ldap (master) Kerberos KDC (master) BIND (master, li694-22 zone) |
beryllium | wiki.soylentnews.org | svcadmin | A lot of stuff, mechanicjay, fill me in?
|
lithium | dev.soylentnews.org | dev_team | slashd, varnish, apache 1.3, nginx, mysql (dev DB) |
boron | {staff,status}.soylentnews.org | firefighters | apache 2.2 (userdir)
KDC slave DNS slave for li694-22 LDAP slave (not fully setup) |
carbon | irc.soylentnews.org | ircops | IRC server, services & httpd |
Naming Scheme
Nodes are named after the periodic table of elements, which should keep us good for a long while. Keep going up in order until we finally run out.
DNS Setup
important: The DNS zones are nicely formatted, please try to keep it that way, also do NOT forget to update the zone file's serial if you've updated a zone.
The master name server is helium and the slave is boron, at the moment they serve two zones, the forward li694-22. TLD zone and our reverse zone 168.192.in-addr.arpa.
Both servers have configuration files in the same location: /etc/bind/
, the master also stores zone files in here, the slave however keeps them in /var/cache/bind/
(but really, you shouldn't be editing the slave's zone file).
The zone files are called: 'db.li694-22
' and 'db.192-rev
'.
Zone Serial
At the top of each zone file, you'll find a line like the following:
2014032314 ; Serial
This is called the 'serial' and it requires to be updated each time you make a modification to the zone file.
If you look closely, you'll see 2014 03 23 and 14 - in other words, a full date (in yyyymmdd format) and the zone file revision for that day, meaning, if you change the zone file on the same date, it would become 2014032315 and so on. If you were to edit the zone file on March 24 2014 it would become: 2014032401
every time you update a zone file, you must update the serial.
/etc/bind/db.li694-22
The li694-22 zone has an A-record for every node name (e.g. Carbon), it also lists public IPs (A and AAAA) for nodes (if any), for instance, carbon:
; Carbon (IRC) carbon IN A [redacted] pub.carbon IN A 50.116.18.95 pub.carbon IN AAAA 2600:3c00::f03c:91ff:fe6e:c4b8
As an addition, most nodes have aliases which are CNAMEs for the node's name, and each alias also has a 'pub.<alias>' which in turn is a CNAME for pub.node_name, for example:
irc IN CNAME carbon pub.irc IN CNAME pub.carbon
You can add new nodes and alias on demand with these examples (be sure to update the zone serial).
/etc/bind/db.192.168-rev
The reverse zone, has entries that look like:
123.123 IN PTR carbon.li694-22.
If you like to add a reverse DNS entry, do the following from the command line (example IP = 192.168.136.231):
[22:21] xlefay@carbon $ host 192.168.136.233 Host 233.136.168.192.in-addr.arpa. not found: 3(NXDOMAIN)
You'll now see the 233.136.168.192.in-addr.arpa.
part, grab the first two segments and add those in the zone file at the bottom like so:
233.136 IN PTR node-name.li694-22.
Update the serial, save the config.
Conclusion of DNS section
To save and distribute your changes to slave nodes, you run rndc reload
[00:03] root@helium $ rndc reload server reload successful [00:03] root@helium $
If you have any questions whatsoever message me (xlefay) on IRC.