LaTeX in CI and on ReadTheDocs fails to render a PDF version of ARM if
the Changelog section is included. The running theory is that the
verbatim section of more than twenty thousand lines is too big to meet
LaTeX self-imposed constraints, and it fails with:
! TeX capacity exceeded, sorry [main memory size=5000000].
Or it just hangs if extra_mem_bot=30000000 is set in
/etc/texmf/texmf.d/01main_memory_bump.cnf:
! Dimension too large.
\fb@put@frame ...p \ifdim \dimen@ >\ht \@tempboxa
\fb@putboxa #1\fb@afterfra...
l.56913 \end{sphinxVerbatim}
Make each BIND 9 release a separate code block to work around the issue.
Further split up the sections for some exceptionally large releases, for
the same reason.
implement, document, and test the 'max-query-restarts' option
which specifies the query restart limit - the number of times
we can follow CNAMEs before terminating resolution.
The OpenSSL 1.x Engines support has been deprecated in the OpenSSL 3.x
and is going to be removed. Remove the OpenSSL Engine support in favor
of OpenSSL Providers.
As BIND 9.20 does not support RHEL/CentOS 7 which just reach
end-of-life, we can safely bump the OpenSSL requirements to version
1.1.1, which in turn will allow us to simplify our OpenSSL integration.
A different solution in the future might be adopted depending
on feedback and other new information, so it makes sense to mark
these options as EXPERIMENTAL until we have more data.
In order to protect from a malicious DNS client that sends many
queries with a SIG(0)-signed message, add a quota of simultaneously
running SIG(0) checks.
This protection can only help when named is using more than one worker
threads. For example, if named is running with the '-n 4' option, and
'sig0checks-quota 2;' is used, then named will make sure to not use
more than 2 workers for the SIG(0) signature checks in parallel, thus
leaving the other workers to serve the remaining clients which do not
use SIG(0)-signed messages.
That limitation is going to change when SIG(0) signature checks are
offloaded to "slow" threads in a future commit.
The 'sig0checks-quota-exempt' ACL option can be used to exempt certain
clients from the quota requirements using their IP or network addresses.
The 'sig0checks-quota-maxwait-ms' option is used to define a maximum
amount of time for named to wait for a quota to appear. If during that
time no new quota becomes available, named will answer to the client
with DNS_R_REFUSED.
Previously, the number of RR types for a single owner name was limited
only by the maximum number of the types (64k). As the data structure
that holds the RR types for the database node is just a linked list, and
there are places where we just walk through the whole list (again and
again), adding a large number of RR types for a single owner named with
would slow down processing of such name (database node).
Add a configurable limit to cap the number of the RR types for a single
owner. This is enforced at the database (rbtdb, qpzone, qpcache) level
and configured with new max-types-per-name configuration option that
can be configured globally, per-view and per-zone.
Previously, the number of RRs in the RRSets were internally unlimited.
As the data structure that holds the RRs is just a linked list, and
there are places where we just walk through all of the RRs, adding an
RRSet with huge number of RRs inside would slow down processing of said
RRSets.
Add a configurable limit to cap the number of the RRs in a single RRSet.
This is enforced at the database (rbtdb, qpzone, qpcache) level and
configured with new max-records-per-type configuration option that can
be configured globally, per-view and per-zone.
Changed the default value for 'allow-transfer' to 'none'; zone
transfers now require explicit authorization.
Updated all system tests to specify an allow-transfer ACL when needed.
Revised the ARM to specify that the default is 'none'.
The mechanism was published as RFC 8509. I've briefly looked at diff
between versions -08 and the RFC and did not find significant protocol
change. Quick manual check confirms what we seem to comply with the
published protocol.
Draft was eventually published as RFC 9276 but we did not update our
docs. Also add couple mentions in relevant places in the ARM and
dnssec-signzone man page, mainly around "do not touch" places.