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19.3.3. Example Zone File
Seen individually, directives and resource records can be difficult to grasp. However, when placed together in a single file, they become easier to understand.
The following example shows a very basic zone file.
$ORIGIN example.com.
$TTL 86400
@ IN SOA dns1.example.com. hostmaster.example.com. (
2001062501 ; serial
21600 ; refresh after 6 hours
3600 ; retry after 1 hour
604800 ; expire after 1 week
86400 ) ; minimum TTL of 1 day
;
;
IN NS dns1.example.com.
IN NS dns2.example.com.
dns1 IN A 10.0.1.1
IN AAAA aaaa:bbbb::1
dns2 IN A 10.0.1.2
IN AAAA aaaa:bbbb::2
;
;
@ IN MX 10 mail.example.com.
IN MX 20 mail2.example.com.
mail IN A 10.0.1.5
IN AAAA aaaa:bbbb::5
mail2 IN A 10.0.1.6
IN AAAA aaaa:bbbb::6
;
;
; This sample zone file illustrates sharing the same IP addresses
; for multiple services:
;
services IN A 10.0.1.10
IN AAAA aaaa:bbbb::10
IN A 10.0.1.11
IN AAAA aaaa:bbbb::11
ftp IN CNAME services.example.com.
www IN CNAME services.example.com.
;
;
In this example, standard directives and
SOA values are used. The authoritative nameservers are set as dns1.example.com and dns2.example.com, which have A records that tie them to 10.0.1.1 and 10.0.1.2, respectively.
The email servers configured with the
MX records point to mail and mail2 via A records. Since the mail and mail2 names do not end in a trailing period (.), the $ORIGIN domain is placed after them, expanding them to mail.example.com and mail2.example.com. Through the related A resource records, their IP addresses can be determined.
Services available at the standard names, such as
www.example.com (WWW), are pointed at the appropriate servers using a CNAME record.
This zone file would be called into service with a
zone statement in the named.conf similar to the following:
zone "example.com" IN {
type master;
file "example.com.zone";
allow-update { none; };
};