systemd-resolved.service
systemd
Developer
Tom
Gundersen
teg@jklm.no
systemd-resolved.service
8
systemd-resolved.service
systemd-resolved
Network Name Resolution manager
systemd-resolved.service
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-resolved
Description
systemd-resolved is a system service that provides network name resolution to local
applications. It implements a caching and validating DNS/DNSSEC stub resolver, as well as an LLMNR resolver and
responder. Local applications may submit network name resolution requests via three interfaces:
The native, fully-featured API systemd-resolved exposes on the bus. See the
API Documentation for
details. Usage of this API is generally recommended to clients as it is asynchronous and fully featured (for
example, properly returns DNSSEC validation status and interface scope for addresses as necessary for supporting
link-local networking).
The glibc
getaddrinfo3 API as defined
by RFC3493 and its related resolver functions,
including gethostbyname3. This
API is widely supported, including beyond the Linux platform. In its current form it does not expose DNSSEC
validation status information however, and is synchronous only. This API is backed by the glibc Name Service
Switch (nss5). Usage of the
glibc NSS module nss-resolve8
is required in order to allow glibc's NSS resolver functions to resolve host names via
systemd-resolved.
Additionally, systemd-resolved provides a local DNS stub listener on IP
address 127.0.0.53 on the local loopback interface. Programs issuing DNS requests directly, bypassing any local
API may be directed to this stub, in order to connect them to systemd-resolved. Note however
that it is strongly recommended that local programs use the glibc NSS or bus APIs instead (as described above),
as various network resolution concepts (such as link-local addressing, or LLMNR Unicode domains) cannot be mapped
to the unicast DNS protocol.
The DNS servers contacted are determined from the global settings in
/etc/systemd/resolved.conf, the per-link static settings in
/etc/systemd/network/*.network files, the per-link dynamic settings received over DHCP and any
DNS server information made available by other system services. See
resolved.conf5 and
systemd.network5 for details
about systemd's own configuration files for DNS servers. To improve compatibility,
/etc/resolv.conf is read in order to discover configured system DNS servers, but only if it is
not a symlink to /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf (see below).
systemd-resolved synthesizes DNS resource records (RRs) for the following cases:
The local, configured hostname is resolved to
all locally configured IP addresses ordered by their scope, or
— if none are configured — the IPv4 address 127.0.0.2 (which
is on the local loopback) and the IPv6 address ::1 (which is the
local host).
The hostnames localhost and
localhost.localdomain (as well as any hostname
ending in .localhost or .localhost.localdomain)
are resolved to the IP addresses 127.0.0.1 and ::1.
The hostname gateway is
resolved to all current default routing gateway addresses,
ordered by their metric. This assigns a stable hostname to the
current gateway, useful for referencing it independently of the
current network configuration state.
The mappings defined in /etc/hosts are resolved
to their configured addresses and back, but they will not affect lookups for
non-address types (like MX).
Lookup requests are routed to the available DNS servers
and LLMNR interfaces according to the following rules:
Lookups for the special hostname
localhost are never routed to the
network. (A few other, special domains are handled the same way.)
Single-label names are routed to all local
interfaces capable of IP multicasting, using the LLMNR
protocol. Lookups for IPv4 addresses are only sent via LLMNR on
IPv4, and lookups for IPv6 addresses are only sent via LLMNR on
IPv6. Lookups for the locally configured host name and the
gateway host name are never routed to
LLMNR.
Multi-label names are routed to all local
interfaces that have a DNS sever configured, plus the globally
configured DNS server if there is one. Address lookups from the
link-local address range are never routed to
DNS.
If lookups are routed to multiple interfaces, the first
successful response is returned (thus effectively merging the
lookup zones on all matching interfaces). If the lookup failed on
all interfaces, the last failing response is returned.
Routing of lookups may be influenced by configuring
per-interface domain names. See
systemd.network5
for details. Lookups for a hostname ending in one of the
per-interface domains are exclusively routed to the matching
interfaces.
See the resolved D-Bus API
Documentation for information about the APIs systemd-resolved provides.
/etc/resolv.conf
Three modes of handling /etc/resolv.conf (see
resolv.conf5) are
supported:
A static file /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf is provided that lists
the 127.0.0.53 DNS stub (see above) as only DNS server. This file may be symlinked from
/etc/resolv.conf in order to connect all local clients that bypass local DNS APIs to
systemd-resolved. This mode of operation is recommended.
systemd-resolved maintains the
/run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf file for compatibility with traditional Linux
programs. This file may be symlinked from /etc/resolv.conf and is always kept up-to-date,
containing information about all known DNS servers. Note the file format's limitations: it does not know a
concept of per-interface DNS servers and hence only contains system-wide DNS server definitions. Note that
/run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf should not be used directly by applications, but only
through a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf. If this mode of operation is used local clients
that bypass any local DNS API will also bypass systemd-resolved and will talk directly to the
known DNS servers.
Alternatively, /etc/resolv.conf may be managed by other packages, in which
case systemd-resolved will read it for DNS configuration data. In this mode of operation
systemd-resolved is consumer rather than provider of this configuration
file.
Note that the selected mode of operation for this file is detected fully automatically, depending on whether
/etc/resolv.conf is a symlink to /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf or
lists 127.0.0.53 as DNS server.
Signals
SIGUSR1
Upon reception of the SIGUSR1 process signal systemd-resolved will dump the
contents of all DNS resource record caches it maintains into the system logs.
SIGUSR2
Upon reception of the SIGUSR2 process signal systemd-resolved will flush all
caches it maintains. Note that it should normally not be necessary to request this explicitly – except for
debugging purposes – as systemd-resolved flushes the caches automatically anyway any time
the host's network configuration changes.
See Also
systemd1,
resolved.conf5,
dnssec-trust-anchors.d5,
nss-resolve8,
systemd-resolve1,
resolv.conf5,
hosts5,
systemd.network5,
systemd-networkd.service8