THIS PAGE IS A DRAFT, NOT A REAL COURSE PAGE
DNS overview
The Domain Name System converts human-friendly domain names to IP addresses. Computers on the internet can only communicate with each other using IP addresses. But people aren't very good at remembering long strings of numbers (up to 12 digits for ipv4) or even longer strings of numbers and characters mixed (24 characters for ipv6).
Therefore DNS is a critical part of the internet infrastructure, and just about everyone who has a website needs to do something with it. Some all-inclusive web hosts offer domain name registration and automatically connect their hosting service to the domain registration, but that comes at the cost of any flexibility. From a technical point of view your domain name registration has nothing to do with the server that your DNS records are pointing to.
DNS records
DNS servers store records of different types. Here are the ones you'll see most often:
- A records (the most common ones) map fully-qualified donain names (FQDNs) to IP addresses.
- CNAME records (also called aliases) map a name to another name.
- MX records store the FQDN of the mail server for that domain.
- TXT records can store almost anything and are often used for various security features.
You can use several command-line tools to query DNS servers. Some are more useful than others. Try the following:
- Notice that ICMP (ping) packets are sent to an IP address, not the FQDN. That means the ping command had to first do a DNS query (for the A record for littlesvr.ca) and therefore this is a simple way to do a DNS query, which is useful if you don't have any better tools. Notice also that this works even if the server won't respond to pings, or even if it's offline.
ping littlesvr.ca
- This is a much more DNS-specific command and has parameters that will let you ask for different record types.
host littlesvr.ca host -a littlesvr.ca
- This is the one we'll use mostly in this course. The output is the most difficult to read, but the details it provides are useful when troubleshooting your DNS setup. The first dig command above asks for the A record (the default). The second asks for the MX record for littlesvr.ca. The third asks for the A record from a specific DNS server (8.8.8.8).
dig littlesvr.ca dig littlesvr.ca MX dig littlesvr.ca @8.8.8.8
- Do your best to construct DNS queries using dig to get all the records set up for littlesvr.ca. Following is a screenshot of the registrar's interface:
If you can't obtain all these records using dig: you either don't understand how DNS works or you need more practice with dig. Keep trying until you figure it out.
Registering a domain name
You can't get a publicly-resolvable domain name just by doing some magic on your server. You need to pay a registrar (usually a yearly fee of around 20$) to connect your records to the global DNS network.
Wikipedia sometimes has useful information, and the Address resolution mechanism section has a reasonably comprehensible diagram and description of a simple query process.
You would typically be interested in controlling somedomain.com (or .ca or .org, etc.) and therefore you would:
- Find a registrar who's authorized to sell domains under that TLD (top-level domain), which is .com in this example.
- Check whether somedomain.com is available.
- If it's available: you pay the registrar and in return you get exclusive control over the DNS records for that domain for the period of time you paid for.
- If it's not available: you're most likely out of luck. It can cost tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars to buy a domain from someone who already bought it.
- You can add whatever DNS records you want for your domain, and you also control all the subdomains of that domain. You won't need to pay extra for one.two.three.four.somedomain.com
- After you add you records - they will be available to the world almost immediately. Except: see next section.
If you're a more advanced user: you can configure your domain records to be stored on and served by your own DNS server(s). You won't be doing that in this course. It's a lot of hard work and requires a cooparative registrar to set up glue records for you.
Caching
Because DNS is used so much (see a typical webpage): there are countless DNS queries done everywhere all the time.
The responses to those queries are cached (stored closer to the questioner) in order to minimize load on the authoritative servers. They are cached for a specific amount of time - typically controlled by the domain owner, though cheaper registries have minimum limits.
That means that if you have an A record linking somedomain.com to 1.2.3.4, and someone does a DNS query for somedomain.com: their next query for somedomain.com will not make it to your DNS server until after the TTL expires.
That means if you change your A record to link somedomain to 2.3.4.5 instead: it may take as long as 48 hours for everyone in the world to be guaranteed to get the new record. You can see the TTL (in seconds) for a record when you use dig to do a query:
There are websites available that can help you figure out whether your records are up to date around the world, for example https://www.whatsmydns.net/
Private DNS
If you only need DNS records inside your organization (e.g. on an LAN/intranet): you can avoid paying a registrar for each domain.
You do that by running a DNS server on your LAN, and making sure all the machines on that network are configured to use your internal DNS server. Curiously: in such a setup the administrator can have control over all DNS records including for domains owned by someone else:
Your DNS records
In this course you'll get to experience something like a real domain registration process with some limitations:
- You'll get full control over a subdomain of ops345.ca (e.g. asmith15.ops345.ca), rather than a second-level domain (like asmith15.ca).
- You can only create A, MX, CNAME, and TXT records.
- You have no control over the TTL.
But you get to do this for free.
You should have received an email about a Bindistrar account that's been created for you. The email will include your username and a random password. Please keep the password secret. You cannot change it. I can change it for you but I'd really rather not.
After you log in: Bindistrar will allow you to create public DNS records for yourusername.ops345.ca
- Set up an A record for yourusername.ops345.ca to point to your elastic IP (the one assigned to router).
- Set up a CNAME record for www, so that it points to yourusername.ops345.ca
- Test your two new records you just created using dig. If you're not sure whether the problem is with caching: you can query the authoritative DNS server directly, e.g.:
dig asmith15.ops345.ca @littlesvr.ca
- You should also be able to go to www.yourusername.ops345.ca in a web browser:
Access your Nextcloud via FQDN
- Try to go to www.yourusername.ops345.ca/nextcloud in a web browser. You should see an error like this:
- Since you are the administrator: there's noone for you to contact. Good thing you've had a little bit of practice with PHP. Fix the error so that you can log in to your Nextcloud installation. This Nextcloud help page might help too.
Encryption, Certificates, etc.
- certificates, CAs, relationship with DNS
- CA-signed certs cost money. we have to use let's encrypt which is lame because it expires quickly unless you run their software on your server. but it's free
- follow this except the deploy part: https://help.datica.com/hc/en-us/articles/360044373551-Creating-and-Deploying-a-LetsEncrypt-Certificate-Manually
- install certbot in your workstation using apt or the software manager
$ sudo su
root@p51:/home/andrew# certbot certonly --manual --preferred-challenges dns
Saving debug log to /var/log/letsencrypt/letsencrypt.log
Plugins selected: Authenticator manual, Installer None
Enter email address (used for urgent renewal and security notices) (Enter 'c' to
cancel): asmith15@myseneca.ca
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Please read the Terms of Service at
https://letsencrypt.org/documents/LE-SA-v1.2-November-15-2017.pdf. You must
agree in order to register with the ACME server at
https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
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(A)gree/(C)ancel: a
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Would you be willing to share your email address with the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, a founding partner of the Let's Encrypt project and the non-profit
organization that develops Certbot? We'd like to send you email about our work
encrypting the web, EFF news, campaigns, and ways to support digital freedom.
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(Y)es/(N)o: n
Please enter in your domain name(s) (comma and/or space separated) (Enter 'c'
to cancel): asmith15.ops345.ca
Obtaining a new certificate
Performing the following challenges:
dns-01 challenge for asmith15.ops345.ca
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NOTE: The IP of this machine will be publicly logged as having requested this
certificate. If you're running certbot in manual mode on a machine that is not
your server, please ensure you're okay with that.
Are you OK with your IP being logged?
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(Y)es/(N)o: y
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Please deploy a DNS TXT record under the name
_acme-challenge.asmith15.ops345.ca with the following value:
SUobA6iJARuujmCDhb-4I0m61Zdtqe_uBgyX1ExrCPg
Before continuing, verify the record is deployed.
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Press Enter to Continue
Waiting for verification...
Cleaning up challenges
IMPORTANT NOTES:
- Congratulations! Your certificate and chain have been saved at:
/etc/letsencrypt/live/asmith15.ops345.ca/fullchain.pem
Your key file has been saved at:
/etc/letsencrypt/live/asmith15.ops345.ca/privkey.pem
Your cert will expire on 2022-02-16. To obtain a new or tweaked
version of this certificate in the future, simply run certbot
again. To non-interactively renew *all* of your certificates, run
"certbot renew"
- Your account credentials have been saved in your Certbot
configuration directory at /etc/letsencrypt. You should make a
secure backup of this folder now. This configuration directory will
also contain certificates and private keys obtained by Certbot so
making regular backups of this folder is ideal.
- If you like Certbot, please consider supporting our work by:
Donating to ISRG / Let's Encrypt: https://letsencrypt.org/donate
Donating to EFF: https://eff.org/donate-le
You have new mail in /var/mail/root
root@p51:/home/andrew# cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/asmith15.ops345.ca/cert.pem ~andrew/prog/seneca/ops345/new/keys/asmith15.ops345.ca.cert.pem
root@p51:/home/andrew# cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/asmith15.ops345.ca/privkey.pem ~andrew/prog/seneca/ops345/new/keys/asmith15.ops345.ca.key.pem
root@p51:/home/andrew# chown andrew ~andrew/prog/seneca/ops345/new/keys/asmith15.ops345.ca.*
root@p51:/home/andrew# exit
- The file in /etc/letsencrypt/live/asmith15.ops345.ca/cert.pem is what a CA would send you after you paid them. This one is free but it expires in 90 days, which is good enough for this course.
- Get Apache to use the key:
- /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf ServerName asmith15.ops345.ca:80
- yum install mod_ssl
- scp -P 2211 -i keys/ssh/ops345-all-aws-machines.pem keys/asmith15.ops345.ca.* andrew@34.202.103.43:~
- [root@www andrew]# cp asmith15.ops345.ca.cert.pem /etc/pki/tls/certs/
- [root@www andrew]# cp asmith15.ops345.ca.key.pem /etc/pki/tls/private/
- /etc/httpd/conf.d/ssl.conf
- SSLCertificateFile /etc/pki/tls/certs/asmith15.ops345.ca.cert.pem
- SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/pki/tls/private/asmith15.ops345.ca.key.pem
- restart apache, confirm no errors
- Edit ops345sgprivate, add https
- Edit ops345sg, add https
- On router: iptables -t nat -I PREROUTING 2 -p tcp --dport 443 -j DNAT --to 10.3.45.11:443
- On www: iptables -I INPUT 4 -p tcp --dport 443 -j ACCEPT
- Test with firefox https. www gives a warning because the certificate is not for that FQDN. fix it for homework.