-from zonemaker.zone import *
+from zone import *
# Our IP addresses; we have machine one and machine two.
one4 = A("172.16.254.1") # for each record type, there's a corresponding class with the same name
def HTTPS(key):
return TLSA(Protocol.TCP, 443, TLSA.Usage.EndEntity, TLSA.Selector.Full, TLSA.MatchingType.SHA256, key)
+# setup TTLs by record type
+TTLs = {
+ '': 1*day, # special value: default TTL
+ 'NX': 1*hour, # special value: TTL for NXDOMAIN replies
+ 'A': 1*hour, # for the rest, just use the type of the resource records
+ 'AAAA': 1*hour,
+}
+
# Now to the actual zone: the header part should be fairly self-explanatory.
-__zone__ = Zone('example.com.', serialfile = 'db.example.com.srl', mail = 'root@example.com.',
- NS = ['ns', 'ns.example.org.'],
+__zone__ = Zone('example.com.', serialfile = 'db.example.com.srl',
+ mail = 'root@example.com.', NS = ['ns', 'ns.example.org.'], TTLs = TTLs,
secondary_refresh = 6*hour, secondary_retry = 1*hour, secondary_expire = 7*day,
- NX_TTL = 1*hour, A_TTL = 1*hour, other_TTL = 1*day,
# Here come the actual domains. Each takes records as argument, either individually or as lists.
domains = {
'.': Name(one, mail), # this will all all records from the list "one" and the list "mail" to this name