slackware-current/source/n/bind/rc.bind
Patrick J Volkerding 11403357f2 Mon Mar 2 19:05:10 UTC 2020
a/dialog-1.3_20200228-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
l/Mako-1.1.2-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
l/imagemagick-7.0.9_27-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
l/libcap-2.33-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
n/bind-9.16.0-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  rc.bind: ensure /var/run/named exists before starting named. Thanks to MarcT.
  rc.bind: when stopping named, only kill processes in the current namespace.
x/libevdev-1.9.0-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
x/wayland-protocols-1.20-noarch-1.txz:  Upgraded.
xap/seamonkey-2.53.1-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
  This update contains security fixes and improvements.
  For more information, see:
    https://www.seamonkey-project.org/releases/seamonkey2.53.1
  (* Security fix *)
testing/packages/PAM/libcap-2.33-x86_64-1_pam.txz:  Upgraded.
2020-03-03 08:59:49 +01:00

145 lines
4.4 KiB
Bash

#!/bin/sh
# Start/stop/restart the BIND name server daemon (named).
# Start BIND. In the past it was more secure to run BIND as a non-root
# user (for example, with '-u daemon'), but the modern version of BIND
# knows how to use the kernel's capability mechanism to drop all root
# privileges except the ability to bind() to a privileged port and set
# process resource limits, so running as a non-root user is not needed.
# But if you want to run as a non-root user anyway, the command options
# can be set like this in /etc/default/named:
# NAMED_OPTIONS="-u daemon"
# So you will not have to edit this script.
#
# Please note that if you run BIND as a non-root user, your files in
# /var/named may need to be chowned to this user or else named will
# refuse to start.
# You might also consider running BIND in a "chroot jail",
# a discussion of which may be found in
# /usr/doc/Linux-HOWTOs/Chroot-BIND-HOWTO.
# One last note: rndc has a lot of other nice features that it is not
# within the scope of this start/stop/restart script to support.
# For more details, see "man rndc" or just type "rndc" to see the options.
# Load command defaults:
if [ -f /etc/default/named ] ; then . /etc/default/named ; fi
if [ -f /etc/default/rndc ] ; then . /etc/default/rndc ; fi
# Sanity check. If /usr/sbin/named is missing then it
# doesn't make much sense to try to run this script:
if [ ! -x /usr/sbin/named ]; then
echo "/etc/rc.d/rc.bind: no /usr/sbin/named found (or not executable); cannot start."
exit 1
fi
# Function to find the user BIND is running as in $NAMED_OPTIONS:
find_bind_user() {
if echo $NAMED_OPTIONS | grep -wq "\-u" ; then
unset BIND_USER USER_FOUND
echo $NAMED_OPTIONS | tr ' ' '\n' | while read element ; do
if [ "$USER_FOUND" = "true" ]; then
BIND_USER="$element"
echo $BIND_USER
break
elif [ "$element" = "-u" ]; then
USER_FOUND="true"
fi
done
else
echo "root"
fi
}
# Start BIND. As many times as you like. ;-)
# Seriously, don't run "rc.bind start" if BIND is already
# running or you'll get more than one copy running.
bind_start() {
# Make sure /var/run/named exists:
mkdir -p /var/run/named
# If we are running as a non-root user, we'll need to be sure that
# /var/run/named is chowned properly to that user. Your files in
# /var/named may need to be chowned as well, but that will be up to
# the sysadmin to do.
BIND_USER="$(find_bind_user)"
if [ ! "$BIND_USER" = "root" ]; then
chown -R $BIND_USER /var/run/named
else # prevent error if switching back to running as root:
chown -R root /var/run/named
fi
# Start named:
if [ -x /usr/sbin/named ]; then
echo "Starting BIND: /usr/sbin/named $NAMED_OPTIONS"
/usr/sbin/named $NAMED_OPTIONS
sleep 1
fi
# Make sure that named started:
if ! ps axc | grep -q named ; then
echo "WARNING: named did not start."
echo "Attempting to start named again: /usr/sbin/named $NAMED_OPTIONS"
/usr/sbin/named $NAMED_OPTIONS
sleep 1
if ps axc | grep -q named ; then
echo "SUCCESS: named started."
else
echo "FAILED: Sorry, a second attempt to start named has also failed."
echo "There may be a configuration error that needs fixing. Good luck!"
fi
fi
}
# Stop all running copies of BIND (/usr/sbin/named):
bind_stop() {
echo "Stopping BIND: /usr/sbin/rndc $RDNC_OPTIONS stop"
/usr/sbin/rndc $RDNC_OPTIONS stop
# A problem with using "/usr/sbin/rndc stop" is that if you
# managed to get multiple copies of named running it will
# only stop one of them and then can't stop the others even
# if you run it again. So, after doing things the nice way
# we'll do them the old-fashioned way. If you don't like
# it you can comment it out, but unless you have a lot of
# other programs you run called "named" this is unlikely
# to have any ill effects:
sleep 1
if ps axc | grep -q named ; then
echo "Stopping all named processes in this namespace: /bin/killall --ns \$\$ named"
/bin/killall --ns $$ named 2> /dev/null
fi
}
# Reload BIND:
bind_reload() {
/usr/sbin/rndc $RDNC_OPTIONS reload
}
# Restart BIND:
bind_restart() {
bind_stop
bind_start
}
# Get BIND status:
bind_status() {
/usr/sbin/rndc $RDNC_OPTIONS status
}
case "$1" in
'start')
bind_start
;;
'stop')
bind_stop
;;
'reload')
bind_reload
;;
'restart')
bind_restart
;;
'status')
bind_status
;;
*)
echo "usage $0 start|stop|reload|restart|status"
esac