DESCRIPTION
named is a Domain Name System (DNS) server, part of the BIND 9 distribution from ISC. For more information on the DNS, see RFCs 1033, 1034, and 1035.
When invoked without arguments, named will read the default configuration file /etc/named.conf, read any initial data, and listen for queries.
OPTIONS
-4
Use IPv4 only even if the host machine is capable of IPv6. -4 and -6 are mutually exclusive.
-6
Use IPv6 only even if the host machine is capable of IPv4. -4 and -6 are mutually exclusive.
-c config-file
Use config-file as the configuration file instead of the default, /etc/named.conf. To ensure that reloading the configuration file continues to work after the server has changed its working directory due to to a possible directory option in the configuration file, config-file should be an absolute pathname.
-d debug-level
Set the daemon's debug level to debug-level. Debugging traces from named become more verbose as the debug level increases.
-E engine-name
Use a crypto hardware (OpenSSL engine) for the crypto operations it supports, for instance re-signing with private keys from a secure key store. When compiled with PKCS#11 support engine-name defaults to pkcs11, the empty name resets it to no engine.
-f
Run the server in the foreground (i.e. do not daemonize).
-g
Run the server in the foreground and force all logging to stderr.
-m flag
Turn on memory usage debugging flags. Possible flags are usage, trace, record, size, and mctx. These correspond to the ISC_MEM_DEBUGXXXX flags described in <isc/mem.h>.
-n #cpus
Create #cpus worker threads to take advantage of multiple CPUs. If not specified, named will try to determine the number of CPUs present and create one thread per CPU. If it is unable to determine the number of CPUs, a single worker thread will be created.
-p port
Listen for queries on port port. If not specified, the default is port 53.
-s
Write memory usage statistics to
stdout on exit.
Note: This option is mainly of interest to BIND 9 developers and may be removed or changed in a future release.
-S #max-socks
Allow
named to use up to
#max-socks sockets.
Warning: This option should be unnecessary for the vast majority of users. The use of this option could even be harmful because the specified value may exceed the limitation of the underlying system API. It is therefore set only when the default configuration causes exhaustion of file descriptors and the operational environment is known to support the specified number of sockets. Note also that the actual maximum number is normally a little fewer than the specified value because named reserves some file descriptors for its internal use.
-t directory
Chroot to
directory after processing the command line arguments, but before reading the configuration file.
Warning: This option should be used in conjunction with the -u option, as chrooting a process running as root doesn't enhance security on most systems; the way chroot(2) is defined allows a process with root privileges to escape a chroot jail.
-U #listeners
Use #listeners worker threads to listen for incoming UDP packets on each address. If not specified, named will use all of the worker threads for this purpose; the -U option allows the number to be decreased but not increased.
-u user
Setuid to
user after completing privileged operations, such as creating sockets that listen on privileged ports.
Note: On Linux, named uses the kernel's capability mechanism to drop all root privileges except the ability to bind(2) to a privileged port and set process resource limits. Unfortunately, this means that the -u option only works when named is run on kernel 2.2.18 or later, or kernel 2.3.99-pre3 or later, since previous kernels did not allow privileges to be retained after setuid(2).
-v
Report the version number and exit.
-V
Report the version number and build options, and exit.
-x cache-file
Load data from
cache-file into the cache of the default view.
Warning: This option must not be used. It is only of interest to BIND 9 developers and may be removed or changed in a future release.