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systemd/docs/WRITING_NETWORK_CONFIGURATION_MANAGERS.md

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Writing Network Configuration Managers Documentation for Developers default LGPL-2.1-or-later

Writing Network Configuration Managers

Or: How to hook up your favourite network configuration manager's DNS logic with systemd-resolved

(This is a longer explanation how to use some parts of systemd-resolved bus API. If you are just looking for an API reference, consult the bus API documentation instead.)

Since systemd 229 systemd-resolved offers a powerful bus API that may be used by network configuration managers (e.g. NetworkManager, connman, …, but also lower level DHCP, VPN or PPP daemons managing specific interfaces) to pass DNS server and DNSSEC configuration directly to systemd-resolved. Note that systemd-resolved also reads the DNS configuration data in /etc/resolv.conf, for compatibility. However, by passing the DNS configuration directly to systemd-resolved via the bus a couple of benefits are available:

  1. systemd-resolved maintains DNS configuration per-interface, instead of simply system-wide, and is capable of sending DNS requests to servers on multiple different network interfaces simultaneously, returning the first positive response (or if all fail, the last negative one). This allows effective "merging" of DNS views on different interfaces, which makes private DNS zones on multi-homed hosts a lot nicer to use. For example, if you are connected to a LAN and a VPN, and both have private DNS zones, then you will be able to resolve both, as long as they don't clash in names. By using the bus API to configure DNS settings, the per-interface configuration is opened up.
  2. Per-link configuration of DNSSEC is available. This is particularly interesting for network configuration managers that implement captive portal detection: as long as a verified connection to the Internet is not found DNSSEC should be turned off (as some captive portal systems alter the DNS in order to redirect clients to their internal pages).
  3. Per-link configuration of LLMNR and MulticastDNS is available.
  4. In contrast to changes to /etc/resolv.conf all changes made via the bus take effect immediately for all future lookups.
  5. Statistical data about executed DNS transactions is available, as well as information about whether DNSSEC is supported on the chosen DNS server.

Note that systemd-networkd is already hooked up with systemd-resolved, exposing this functionality in full.

Suggested Mode of Operation

Whenever a network configuration manager sets up an interface for operation, it should pass the DNS configuration information for the interface to systemd-resolved. It's recommended to do that after the Linux network interface index ("ifindex") has been allocated, but before the interface has been upped (i.e. IFF_UP turned on). That way, systemd-resolved will be able to use the configuration the moment the network interface is available. (Note that systemd-resolved watches the kernel interfaces come and go, and will make use of them as soon as they are suitable to be used, which among other factors requires IFF_UP to be set). That said it is OK to change DNS configuration dynamically any time: simply pass the new data to resolved, and it is happy to use it.

In order to pass the DNS configuration information to resolved, use the following methods of the org.freedesktop.resolve1.Manager interface of the /org/freedesktop/resolve1 object, on the org.freedesktop.resolve1 service:

  1. To set the DNS server IP addresses for a network interface, use SetLinkDNS()
  2. To set DNS search and routing domains for a network interface, use SetLinkDomains()
  3. To configure the DNSSEC mode for a network interface, use SetLinkDNSSEC()
  4. To configure DNSSEC Negative Trust Anchors (NTAs, i.e. domains for which not to do DNSSEC validation), use SetLinkDNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors()
  5. To configure the LLMNR and MulticastDNS mode, use SetLinkLLMNR() and SetLinkMulticastDNS()

For details about these calls see the full resolved bus API documentation.

The calls should be pretty obvious to use: they simply take an interface index and the parameters to set. IP addresses are encoded as an address family specifier (an integer, that takes the usual AF_INET and AF_INET6 constants), followed by a 4 or 16 byte array with the address in network byte order.

systemd-resolved distinguishes between "search" and "routing" domains. Routing domains are used to route DNS requests of specific domains to particular interfaces. i.e. requests for a hostname foo.bar.com will be routed to any interface that has bar.com as routing domain. The same routing domain may be defined on multiple interfaces, in which case the request is routed to all of them in parallel. Resolver requests for hostnames that do not end in any defined routing domain of any interface will be routed to all suitable interfaces. Search domains work like routing domain, but are also used to qualify single-label domain names. They hence are identical to the traditional search domain logic on UNIX. The SetLinkDomains() call may used to define both search and routing domains.

The most basic support of systemd-resolved in a network configuration manager would be to simply invoke SetLinkDNS() and SetLinkDomains() for the specific interface index with the data traditionally written to /etc/resolv.conf. More advanced integration could mean the network configuration manager also makes the DNSSEC mode, the DNSSEC NTAs and the LLMNR/MulticastDNS modes available for configuration.

It is strongly recommended for network configuration managers that implement captive portal detection to turn off DNSSEC validation during the detection phase, so that captive portals that modify DNS do not result in all DNSSEC look-ups to fail.

If a network configuration manager wants to reset specific settings to the defaults (such as the DNSSEC, LLMNR or MulticastDNS mode), it may simply call the function with an empty argument. To reset all per-link changes it made it may call RevertLink().

To read back the various settings made, use GetLink() to get a org.freedesktop.resolve1.Link object for a specific network interface. It exposes the current settings in its bus properties. See the full bus API documentation for details on this.

In order to translate a network interface name to an interface index, use the usual glibc if_nametoindex() call.

If the network configuration UI shall expose information about whether the selected DNS server supports DNSSEC, check the DNSSECSupported on the link object.

Note that it is fully OK if multiple different daemons push DNS configuration data into systemd-resolved as long as they do this only for the network interfaces they own and manage.

Handling of /etc/resolv.conf

systemd-resolved receives DNS configuration from a number of sources, via the bus, as well as directly from systemd-networkd or user configuration. It uses this data to write a file that is compatible with the traditional Linux /etc/resolv.conf file. This file is stored in /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf. It is recommended to symlink /etc/resolv.conf to this file, in order to provide compatibility with programs reading the file directly and not going via the NSS and thus systemd-resolved.

For network configuration managers it is recommended to rely on this resolved-provided mechanism to update resolv.conf. Specifically, the network configuration manager should stop modifying /etc/resolv.conf directly if it notices it being a symlink to /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf.

If a system configuration manager desires to be compatible both with systems that use systemd-resolved and those which do not, it is recommended to first push any discovered DNS configuration into systemd-resolved, and deal gracefully with systemd-resolved not being available on the bus. If /etc/resolv.conf is a not a symlink to /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf the manager may then proceed and also update /etc/resolv.conf. With this mode of operation optimal compatibility is provided, as systemd-resolved is used for /etc/resolv.conf management when this is configured, but transparent compatibility with non-systemd-resolved systems is maintained. Note that systemd-resolved is part of systemd, and hence likely to be pretty universally available on Linux systems soon.

By allowing systemd-resolved to manage /etc/resolv.conf ownership issues regarding different programs overwriting each other's DNS configuration are effectively removed.