The Lightweight Resolver Library
Traditionally applications have been linked with a stub resolver
library that sends recursive DNS queries to a local caching name
server.
IPv6 once introduced new complexity into the resolution process,
such as following A6 chains and DNAME records, and simultaneous
lookup of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. Though most of the complexity was
then removed, these are hard or impossible
to implement in a traditional stub resolver.
Instead, BIND 9 provides resolution services to local clients
using a combination of a lightweight resolver library and a resolver
daemon process running on the local host. These communicate using
a simple UDP-based protocol, the "lightweight resolver protocol"
that is distinct from and simpler than the full DNS protocol.
Running a Resolver Daemon
To use the lightweight resolver interface, the system must
run the resolver daemon lwresd or a local
name server configured with a lwres statement.
By default, applications using the lightweight resolver library will make
UDP requests to the IPv4 loopback address (127.0.0.1) on port 921. The
address can be overridden by lwserver lines in
/etc/resolv.conf
.
The daemon currently only looks in the DNS, but in the future
it may use other sources such as /etc/hosts
,
NIS, etc.
The lwresd daemon is essentially a
caching-only name server that responds to requests using the lightweight
resolver protocol rather than the DNS protocol. Because it needs
to run on each host, it is designed to require no or minimal configuration.
Unless configured otherwise, it uses the name servers listed on
nameserver lines in /etc/resolv.conf
as forwarders, but is also capable of doing the resolution autonomously if
none are specified.
The lwresd daemon may also be configured with a
named.conf
style configuration file, in
/etc/lwresd.conf
by default. A name server may also
be configured to act as a lightweight resolver daemon using the
lwres statement in named.conf
.