The Corefile parser now fully populates typed fields on RFC2136 instead of just recognising directives. Validation happens at parse-time so configuration errors fail loud at CoreDNS startup rather than silent at request time. Added: - config.go: tsigKey type, TSIG algorithm allowlist (rejects HMAC-MD5 deliberately), base64 secret decoder with 8-byte minimum length check, canonical-key-name normalisation (lowercase + trailing dot). - plugin.go: RFC2136 struct now carries TSIGKeys map, TTL uint32, PersistPath string. DefaultTTL=60. - setup.go: parse() validates and stores tsig-key/ttl/persist directives. Duplicate key names rejected. Multiple TSIG keys allowed (for rotation). At-least-one-zone is enforced. - setup_test.go: 13 table-driven cases (5 happy + 8 error paths) using caddy.NewTestController. All pass. ServeDNS still passes through — UPDATE handling lands in Phase 1.4. Module path: git.supported.systems/rsp2k/coredns-rfc2136
2.2 KiB
coredns-rfc2136
A CoreDNS plugin that accepts RFC 2136 dynamic DNS updates (TSIG-authenticated), filling a gap in the official plugin set.
CoreDNS as-shipped has no plugin for accepting dynamic updates — its
plugin model treats authoritative data as read-only (loaded from auto,
file, secondary, etc.). This plugin adds the missing piece.
Primary use case: self-hosted ACME DNS-01
The motivating problem: automate Let's Encrypt cert issuance for many domains without depending on registrar APIs (Vultr/Route53/Cloudflare). The architecture:
_acme-challenge.example.com CNAME <uuid>.auth.supported.systems
│
│ delegated NS to your CoreDNS host
▼
CoreDNS + rfc2136 plugin
│
│ accepts TSIG UPDATEs from Caddy
│ (caddy-dns/rfc2136) or any other
│ ACME client
▼
Let's Encrypt validates
One-time per protected domain: add a CNAME glue line in your static
zones. After that, all cert issuance + renewal happens via UPDATE
messages — zero static zone-file churn.
Status
Phase 1 (skeleton): compiles, registers with CoreDNS, parses the
Corefile directive. Does not yet handle UPDATE messages or serve any
records. ServeDNS is a pass-through. See phases.md for the roadmap.
Configuration
rfc2136 <zone> [<zone>...] {
tsig-key <key-name> <algorithm> <base64-secret>
ttl <seconds>
persist <path>
}
Example:
.:53 auth.example.com {
rfc2136 auth.example.com {
tsig-key acme-key. hmac-sha256 BASE64SECRET==
ttl 60
}
errors
log
}
Building
This plugin is consumed by a custom CoreDNS build via plugin.cfg:
# In CoreDNS source's plugin.cfg, BEFORE the `cache` plugin:
rfc2136:git.supported.systems/rsp2k/coredns-rfc2136
Then go get git.supported.systems/rsp2k/coredns-rfc2136 && make.
License
MIT (TODO: add LICENSE file).