| 1 | DNS lab: dig, part 1 |
|---|
| 2 | |
|---|
| 3 | In the following labs, we'll be using "auth1" as your work machine. |
|---|
| 4 | In reality, this is not very important, as we're only going to be using |
|---|
| 5 | the 'dig' command. |
|---|
| 6 | |
|---|
| 7 | DIG |
|---|
| 8 | --- |
|---|
| 9 | |
|---|
| 10 | 1. Issue DNS queries using 'dig': |
|---|
| 11 | |
|---|
| 12 | Note: make sure you explicitly specify the nameserver to query using the |
|---|
| 13 | "@" syntax in dig: |
|---|
| 14 | |
|---|
| 15 | $ dig @server_ip ... |
|---|
| 16 | |
|---|
| 17 | If you do not specify the @server_ip, then dig will use the nameserver(s) |
|---|
| 18 | listed in /etc/resolv.conf |
|---|
| 19 | |
|---|
| 20 | 1a. Run each command, look for the ANSWER section and write down the result. |
|---|
| 21 | Make a note the TTL as well. |
|---|
| 22 | |
|---|
| 23 | Repeat the command. Is the TTL the same? Are the responses Authoritative? |
|---|
| 24 | |
|---|
| 25 | RESULT 1 RESULT 2 |
|---|
| 26 | -------- -------- |
|---|
| 27 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 your-favorite-domain a |
|---|
| 28 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 www.google.com. a |
|---|
| 29 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 afnog.org. mx |
|---|
| 30 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 NonExistentDomain.sometld any |
|---|
| 31 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 tiscali.co.uk. txt |
|---|
| 32 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 www.afrinic.net aaaa |
|---|
| 33 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 ipv6.google.com aaaa |
|---|
| 34 | |
|---|
| 35 | 1b. Now send some queries to another caching server. |
|---|
| 36 | |
|---|
| 37 | (Run each of the following twice, and note the time in ms for each attempt) |
|---|
| 38 | |
|---|
| 39 | RESULT 1 RESULT 2 |
|---|
| 40 | -------- -------- |
|---|
| 41 | $ dig @8.8.8.8 news.bbc.co.uk. a |
|---|
| 42 | $ dig @208.67.222.222 yahoo.com. a |
|---|
| 43 | $ dig @<a server of your choice> <domain of your choice> a |
|---|
| 44 | |
|---|
| 45 | How long did it take each answer to be received? (on the first, and |
|---|
| 46 | on the second lookup) |
|---|
| 47 | |
|---|
| 48 | 2. Reverse DNS lookups |
|---|
| 49 | |
|---|
| 50 | Now try some reverse DNS lookups - note here that we do not explicitly |
|---|
| 51 | specify which nameserver dig should query. Which nameserver will be used ? |
|---|
| 52 | |
|---|
| 53 | $ dig -x 10.20.X.1 |
|---|
| 54 | $ dig -x 10.20.X.2 |
|---|
| 55 | $ dig -x 10.20.X.3 |
|---|
| 56 | |
|---|
| 57 | ... where X is an IP address in the range 1-25 |
|---|
| 58 | |
|---|
| 59 | Repeat for an IP address of your choice, on the Internet. Remember, you'll |
|---|
| 60 | have to use 10.20.0.254 to be able to perform DNS queries on the Internet... |
|---|
| 61 | |
|---|
| 62 | Now try to lookup: |
|---|
| 63 | |
|---|
| 64 | $ dig 1.X.20.10.in-addr.arpa. PTR |
|---|
| 65 | |
|---|
| 66 | ... where X is in the range 1-25. |
|---|
| 67 | |
|---|
| 68 | What do you notice ? |
|---|
| 69 | |
|---|
| 70 | Let's try IPv6 now: |
|---|
| 71 | |
|---|
| 72 | $ dig -x 2001:42d0::200:2:1 |
|---|
| 73 | |
|---|
| 74 | What are the differences you can observe in the results, between reverse |
|---|
| 75 | DNS for IPv6 and IPv4 addresses ? |
|---|
| 76 | |
|---|
| 77 | Note: you may possibly not get an answer for the v6 address - but compare |
|---|
| 78 | the question section for the IPv4 and IPv6 reverse addresses. |
|---|
| 79 | |
|---|
| 80 | 3. DNSSEC & EDNS0 |
|---|
| 81 | |
|---|
| 82 | Try some of the queries above, this time add the "+edns=0" option. |
|---|
| 83 | |
|---|
| 84 | For example: |
|---|
| 85 | |
|---|
| 86 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 www.icann.org +edns=0 |
|---|
| 87 | |
|---|
| 88 | (you may want to use "more" to limit the output of the command to |
|---|
| 89 | one screen at a time) |
|---|
| 90 | |
|---|
| 91 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 www.icann.org +edns=0 | more |
|---|
| 92 | |
|---|
| 93 | Notice the OPT PSEUDOSECTION, at the top of the output ? |
|---|
| 94 | |
|---|
| 95 | What do you notice about the flags: section in the OPT section ? |
|---|
| 96 | |
|---|
| 97 | Let's explicitly enable the BUFSIZE option, but not EDNS0: |
|---|
| 98 | |
|---|
| 99 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 www.icann.org +bufsize=1024 | more |
|---|
| 100 | |
|---|
| 101 | Notice that EDNS is set automatically, and notice the udp: size section |
|---|
| 102 | in the OPT pseudosection. |
|---|
| 103 | |
|---|
| 104 | Now, let's try and retrieve DNSSEC records: |
|---|
| 105 | |
|---|
| 106 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 isoc.org DNSKEY | more |
|---|
| 107 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 www.isoc.org RRSIG | more |
|---|
| 108 | |
|---|
| 109 | And finally, let's tell our DNS server that we support DNSSEC: |
|---|
| 110 | |
|---|
| 111 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 www.isoc.org A +dnssec |
|---|
| 112 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 isoc.org NS +dnssec |
|---|
| 113 | |
|---|
| 114 | Do you notice a new field in the "flags:" section of the answer ? |
|---|
| 115 | |
|---|
| 116 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 www.isoc.org A |
|---|
| 117 | $ dig @10.20.0.254 isoc.org NS |
|---|
| 118 | |
|---|
| 119 | Compare with doing dig WITHOUT the +dnssec option: |
|---|
| 120 | |
|---|
| 121 | If you are alreaady running a nameserver on your local server, |
|---|
| 122 | What happens if you send DNSSEC enabled queries to it ? |
|---|
| 123 | |
|---|
| 124 | $ dig @127.0.0.1 noc.dns.nsrc.org A +dnssec |
|---|
| 125 | $ dig @127.0.0.1 dns.nsrc.org NS +dnssec |
|---|
| 126 | |
|---|