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unbound.conf(5)		     local-unbound 1.23.1	       unbound.conf(5)

NAME
       unbound.conf - Local-unbound configuration file.

SYNOPSIS
       unbound.conf

DESCRIPTION
       unbound.conf  is	 used  to configure local-unbound(8).  The file	format
       has attributes and values. Some attributes have attributes inside them.
       The notation is:	attribute: value.

       Comments	start with # and last to the end of line. Empty	lines are  ig-
       nored as	is whitespace at the beginning of a line.

       The  utility  local-unbound-checkconf(8)	 can  be  used	to  check  un-
       bound.conf prior	to usage.

EXAMPLE
       An example config file is shown below. Copy  this  to  /etc/unbound/un-
       bound.conf and start the	server with:

	    $ local-unbound -c /etc/unbound/unbound.conf

       Most settings are the defaults. Stop the	server with:

	    $ kill `cat	/etc/unbound/unbound.pid`

       Below is	a minimal config file. The source distribution contains	an ex-
       tensive example.conf file with all the options.

       # unbound.conf(5) config	file for local-unbound(8).
       server:
	    directory: "/etc/unbound"
	    username: unbound
	    # make sure	local-unbound can access entropy from inside the chroot.
	    # e.g. on linux the	use these commands (on BSD, devfs(8) is	used):
	    #	   mount --bind	-n /dev/urandom	/etc/unbound/dev/urandom
	    # and  mount --bind	-n /dev/log /etc/unbound/dev/log
	    chroot: "/etc/unbound"
	    # logfile: "/etc/unbound/unbound.log"  #uncomment to use logfile.
	    pidfile: "/etc/unbound/unbound.pid"
	    # verbosity: 1	# uncomment and	increase to get	more logging.
	    # listen on	all interfaces,	answer queries from the	local subnet.
	    interface: 0.0.0.0
	    interface: ::0
	    access-control: 10.0.0.0/8 allow
	    access-control: 2001:DB8::/64 allow

FILE FORMAT
       There must be whitespace	between	keywords.  Attribute keywords end with
       a  colon	 ':'.	An attribute is	followed by a value, or	its containing
       attributes in which case	it is referred to as a clause.	Clauses	can be
       repeated	throughout the file (or	included files)	 to  group  attributes
       under the same clause.

       Files  can be included using the	include: directive. It can appear any-
       where, it accepts a single file name as argument.  Processing continues
       as if the text from the included	file was copied	into the  config  file
       at that point.  If also using chroot, using full	path names for the in-
       cluded  files  works, relative pathnames	for the	included names work if
       the directory where the daemon is started equals	its chroot/working di-
       rectory or is specified before the include  statement  with  directory:
       dir.  Wildcards can be used to include multiple files, see glob(7).

       For  a  more structural include option, the include-toplevel: directive
       can be used.  This closes whatever clause is currently active (if  any)
       and  forces  the	 use  of clauses in the	included files and right after
       this directive.

   Server Options
       These options are part of the server: clause.

       verbosity: <number>
	      The verbosity number, level 0 means no verbosity,	 only  errors.
	      Level  1	gives operational information.	Level 2	gives detailed
	      operational information including	short information  per	query.
	      Level  3 gives query level information, output per query.	 Level
	      4	gives algorithm	level information.  Level 5 logs client	 iden-
	      tification for cache misses.  Default is level 1.	 The verbosity
	      can  also	 be  increased	from  the  commandline,	 see local-un-
	      bound(8).

       statistics-interval: <seconds>
	      The number of seconds between printing statistics	to the log for
	      every thread.  Disable with value	0 or "". Default is  disabled.
	      The  histogram  statistics are only printed if replies were sent
	      during  the  statistics  interval,  requestlist  statistics  are
	      printed  for every interval (but can be 0).  This	is because the
	      median calculation requires data to be present.

       statistics-cumulative: <yes or no>
	      If enabled, statistics are cumulative since  starting  Local-un-
	      bound,  without  clearing	 the statistics	counters after logging
	      the statistics. Default is no.

       extended-statistics: <yes or no>
	      If enabled,  extended  statistics	 are  printed  from  local-un-
	      bound-control(8).	 Default is off, because keeping track of more
	      statistics  takes	 time.	 The  counters are listed in local-un-
	      bound-control(8).

       statistics-inhibit-zero:	<yes or	no>
	      If enabled, selected extended statistics with a value of	0  are
	      inhibited	 from  printing	 with local-unbound-control(8).	 These
	      are query	types, query classes,  query  opcodes,	answer	rcodes
	      (except  NOERROR,	FORMERR, SERVFAIL, NXDOMAIN, NOTIMPL, REFUSED)
	      and RPZ actions.	Default	is on.

       num-threads: <number>
	      The number of threads to create to serve clients.	Use 1  for  no
	      threading.

       port: <port number>
	      The  port	 number,  default  53, on which	the server responds to
	      queries.

       interface: <ip address or interface name	[@port]>
	      Interface	to use to connect to the network.  This	 interface  is
	      listened to for queries from clients, and	answers	to clients are
	      given  from  it.	Can be given multiple times to work on several
	      interfaces. If none are given the	default	is to listen to	local-
	      host.  If	an interface name is used instead of  an  ip  address,
	      the list of ip addresses on that interface are used.  The	inter-
	      faces  are  not  changed	on  a  reload  (kill -HUP) but only on
	      restart.	A port number can be  specified	 with  @port  (without
	      spaces  between interface	and port number), if not specified the
	      default port (from port) is used.

       ip-address: <ip address or interface name [@port]>
	      Same as interface: (for ease of compatibility with nsd.conf).

       interface-automatic: <yes or no>
	      Listen on	all addresses on all (current and future)  interfaces,
	      detect  the  source  interface  on  UDP queries and copy them to
	      replies.	This is	a lot like  ip-transparent,  but  this	option
	      services	all  interfaces	whilst with ip-transparent you can se-
	      lect which (future) interfaces  Local-unbound  provides  service
	      on.   This feature is experimental, and needs support in your OS
	      for particular socket options.  Default value is no.

       interface-automatic-ports: <string>
	      List the port numbers that interface-automatic  listens  on.  If
	      empty,  the  default  port  is listened on. The port numbers are
	      separated	by spaces in the string. Default is "".

	      This can be used to have interface automatic to  deal  with  the
	      interface, and listen on the normal port number, by including it
	      in  the  list,  and  also	 https or dns over tls port numbers by
	      putting them in the list as well.

       outgoing-interface: <ip address or ip6 netblock>
	      Interface	to use to connect to the network.  This	 interface  is
	      used  to send queries to authoritative servers and receive their
	      replies. Can be given multiple times to work on  several	inter-
	      faces.  If  none	are  given  the	default	(all) is used. You can
	      specify the same interfaces in  interface:  and  outgoing-inter-
	      face:  lines,  the  interfaces  are then used for	both purposes.
	      Outgoing queries are sent	via a  random  outgoing	 interface  to
	      counter spoofing.

	      If  an  IPv6 netblock is specified instead of an individual IPv6
	      address, outgoing	UDP queries will use a randomised  source  ad-
	      dress  taken from	the netblock to	counter	spoofing. Requires the
	      IPv6 netblock to be routed to the	 host  running	Local-unbound,
	      and  requires  OS	support	for unprivileged non-local binds (cur-
	      rently only supported on Linux). Several netblocks may be	speci-
	      fied with	multiple outgoing-interface: options, but do not spec-
	      ify both an individual IPv6 address and an IPv6 netblock,	or the
	      randomisation will be compromised.  Consider combining with pre-
	      fer-ip6: yes to increase the likelihood of IPv6 nameservers  be-
	      ing  selected for	queries.  On Linux you need these two commands
	      to be able to use	the freebind socket option to receive  traffic
	      for  the ip6 netblock: ip	-6 addr	add mynetblock/64 dev lo && ip
	      -6 route add local mynetblock/64 dev lo

       outgoing-range: <number>
	      Number of	ports to open. This number of file descriptors can  be
	      opened  per  thread. Must	be at least 1. Default depends on com-
	      pile options. Larger numbers need	extra resources	from the oper-
	      ating system.  For performance a very large value	is  best,  use
	      libevent to make this possible.

       outgoing-port-permit: <port number or range>
	      Permit Local-unbound to open this	port or	range of ports for use
	      to  send	queries.   A larger number of permitted	outgoing ports
	      increases	resilience against spoofing attempts. Make sure	 these
	      ports  are  not  needed by other daemons.	 By default only ports
	      above 1024 that have not been assigned by	IANA are used.	Give a
	      port number or a range of	the form "low-high", without spaces.

	      The outgoing-port-permit and outgoing-port-avoid statements  are
	      processed	 in the	line order of the config file, adding the per-
	      mitted ports and subtracting the avoided ports from the  set  of
	      allowed  ports.	The  processing	starts with the	non IANA allo-
	      cated ports above	1024 in	the set	of allowed ports.

       outgoing-port-avoid: <port number or range>
	      Do not permit Local-unbound to open this port or range of	 ports
	      for  use	to  send  queries. Use this to make sure Local-unbound
	      does not grab a port that	another	 daemon	 needs.	 The  port  is
	      avoided  on  all	outgoing interfaces, both IP4 and IP6.	By de-
	      fault only ports above 1024 that have not	been assigned by  IANA
	      are used.	 Give a	port number or a range of the form "low-high",
	      without spaces.

       outgoing-num-tcp: <number>
	      Number  of  outgoing TCP buffers to allocate per thread. Default
	      is 10. If	set to 0, or if	do-tcp is "no",	no TCP queries to  au-
	      thoritative servers are done.  For larger	installations increas-
	      ing this value is	a good idea.

       incoming-num-tcp: <number>
	      Number  of  incoming TCP buffers to allocate per thread. Default
	      is 10. If	set to 0, or if	do-tcp is "no",	no  TCP	 queries  from
	      clients  are  accepted. For larger installations increasing this
	      value is a good idea.

       edns-buffer-size: <number>
	      Number of	bytes size to advertise	as the EDNS reassembly	buffer
	      size.   This  is	the  value put into datagrams over UDP towards
	      peers.  The actual buffer	size is	determined by  msg-buffer-size
	      (both for	TCP and	UDP).  Do not set higher than that value.  De-
	      fault  is	 1232  which  is the DNS Flag Day 2020 recommendation.
	      Setting to 512 bypasses even the most stringent path  MTU	 prob-
	      lems,  but  is seen as extreme, since the	amount of TCP fallback
	      generated	is excessive (probably also for	 this  resolver,  con-
	      sider tuning the outgoing	tcp number).

       max-udp-size: <number>
	      Maximum  UDP response size (not applied to TCP response).	 65536
	      disables the udp response	size maximum, and uses the choice from
	      the client, always.  Suggested values are	512 to	4096.  Default
	      is  1232.	 The  default  value  is  the  same as the default for
	      edns-buffer-size.

       stream-wait-size: <number>
	      Number of	bytes size maximum to use for waiting stream  buffers.
	      Default is 4 megabytes.  A plain number is in bytes, append 'k',
	      'm'  or  'g'  for	 kilobytes,  megabytes or gigabytes (1024*1024
	      bytes in a megabyte).  As	TCP and	TLS streams queue up  multiple
	      results,	the  amount  of	memory used for	these buffers does not
	      exceed this number, otherwise the	responses are  dropped.	  This
	      manages  the total memory	usage of the server (under heavy use),
	      the number of requests that can be queued	up per	connection  is
	      also limited, with further requests waiting in TCP buffers.

       msg-buffer-size:	<number>
	      Number  of  bytes	 size of the message buffers. Default is 65552
	      bytes, enough for	64 Kb packets, the maximum DNS	message	 size.
	      No  message larger than this can be sent or received. Can	be re-
	      duced to use less	memory,	but some requests for DNS  data,  such
	      as for huge resource records, will result	in a SERVFAIL reply to
	      the client.

       msg-cache-size: <number>
	      Number  of  bytes	 size  of  the	message	 cache.	 Default  is 4
	      megabytes.  A plain number is in bytes, append 'k', 'm'  or  'g'
	      for  kilobytes,  megabytes  or  gigabytes	 (1024*1024 bytes in a
	      megabyte).

       msg-cache-slabs:	<number>
	      Number of	slabs in the message cache.  Slabs  reduce  lock  con-
	      tention  by  threads.   Must  be	set  to	 a power of 2. Setting
	      (close) to the number of cpus is a reasonable guess.

       num-queries-per-thread: <number>
	      The number of queries that every thread will service  simultane-
	      ously.   If  more	 queries  arrive  that	need servicing,	and no
	      queries can  be  jostled	out  (see  jostle-timeout),  then  the
	      queries  are  dropped.  This forces the client to	resend after a
	      timeout; allowing	the  server  time  to  work  on	 the  existing
	      queries. Default depends on compile options, 512 or 1024.

       jostle-timeout: <msec>
	      Timeout  used when the server is very busy.  Set to a value that
	      usually results in one roundtrip to the authority	 servers.   If
	      too  many	queries	arrive,	then 50% of the	queries	are allowed to
	      run to completion, and the other 50% are replaced	with  the  new
	      incoming	query  if  they	have already spent more	than their al-
	      lowed time.  This	protects against denial	 of  service  by  slow
	      queries or high query rates.  Default 200	milliseconds.  The ef-
	      fect  is	that  the  qps for long-lasting	queries	is about (num-
	      queriesperthread / 2) / (average time  for  such	long  queries)
	      qps.   The  qps  for  short  queries  can	 be about (numqueries-
	      perthread	/ 2)  /	 (jostletimeout	 in  whole  seconds)  qps  per
	      thread, about (1024/2)*5 = 2560 qps by default.

       delay-close: <msec>
	      Extra  delay  for	timeouted UDP ports before they	are closed, in
	      msec.  Default is	0, and that disables it.  This	prevents  very
	      delayed  answer  packets	from  the upstream (recursive) servers
	      from bouncing against closed ports and setting off all  sort  of
	      close-port  counters,  with eg. 1500 msec.  When timeouts	happen
	      you need extra sockets, it checks	the ID and remote IP of	 pack-
	      ets,  and	 unwanted  packets  are	 added	to the unwanted	packet
	      counter.

       udp-connect: <yes or no>
	      Perform connect for UDP sockets that mitigates ICMP side channel
	      leakage.	Default	is yes.

       unknown-server-time-limit: <msec>
	      The wait time in msec for	waiting	for an unknown server  to  re-
	      ply.   Increase this if you are behind a slow satellite link, to
	      eg. 1128.	 That would then avoid re-querying every initial query
	      because it times out.  Default is	376 msec.

       discard-timeout:	<msec>
	      The wait time in msec where recursion requests are dropped. This
	      is to stop a large number	of replies from	accumulating. They re-
	      ceive no reply, the work item continues to recurse. It  is  nice
	      to  be a bit larger than serve-expired-client-timeout if that is
	      enabled.	A value	of 1900	msec is	suggested. The	value  0  dis-
	      ables it.	 Default 1900 msec.

       wait-limit: <number>
	      The number of replies that can wait for recursion, for an	IP ad-
	      dress.  This makes a ratelimit per IP address of waiting replies
	      for  recursion.	It stops very large amounts of queries waiting
	      to be returned to	one destination. The  value  0	disables  wait
	      limits. Default is 1000.

       wait-limit-cookie: <number>
	      The number of replies that can wait for recursion, for an	IP ad-
	      dress  that  sent	 the  query with a valid DNS cookie. Since the
	      cookie validates the client address, the limit  can  be  higher.
	      Default is 10000.

       wait-limit-netblock: <netblock> <number>
	      The  wait	 limit	for  the netblock. If not given	the wait-limit
	      value is used. The most specific netblock	is used	 to  determine
	      the  limit.  Useful  for	overriding the default for a specific,
	      group or individual, server.  The	value -1 disables wait	limits
	      for the netblock.	 By default the	loopback has a wait limit net-
	      block of -1, it is not limited, because it is separated from the
	      rest  of	network	 for  spoofed packets.	The loopback addresses
	      127.0.0.0/8 and ::1/128 are default at -1.

       wait-limit-cookie-netblock: <netblock> <number>
	      The wait limit for the  netblock,	 when  the  query  has	a  DNS
	      cookie.  If not given, the wait-limit-cookie value is used.  The
	      value  -1	 disables  wait	limits for the netblock.  The loopback
	      addresses	127.0.0.0/8 and	::1/128	are default at -1.

       so-rcvbuf: <number>
	      If not 0,	then set the  SO_RCVBUF	 socket	 option	 to  get  more
	      buffer  space  on	 UDP  port 53 incoming queries.	 So that short
	      spikes on	busy servers do	not drop packets (see counter in  net-
	      stat  -su).   Default  is	 0 (use	system value).	Otherwise, the
	      number of	bytes to ask for, try "4m" on a	busy server.   The  OS
	      caps  it at a maximum, on	linux Unbound needs root permission to
	      bypass the limit,	or the admin can use sysctl net.core.rmem_max.
	      On  BSD  change  kern.ipc.maxsockbuf  in	/etc/sysctl.conf.   On
	      OpenBSD  change header and recompile kernel. On Solaris ndd -set
	      /dev/udp udp_max_buf 8388608.

       so-sndbuf: <number>
	      If not 0,	then set the  SO_SNDBUF	 socket	 option	 to  get  more
	      buffer  space  on	 UDP  port 53 outgoing queries.	 This for very
	      busy servers handles spikes in answer traffic, otherwise	'send:
	      resource	temporarily  unavailable'  can	get logged, the	buffer
	      overrun is also visible by netstat -su.  Default is 0 (use  sys-
	      tem value).  Specify the number of bytes to ask for, try "4m" on
	      a	 very  busy server.  The OS caps it at a maximum, on linux Lo-
	      cal-unbound needs	root permission	to bypass the  limit,  or  the
	      admin can	use sysctl net.core.wmem_max.  On BSD, Solaris changes
	      are similar to so-rcvbuf.

       so-reuseport: <yes or no>
	      If  yes,	then  open  dedicated  listening  sockets for incoming
	      queries for each thread and try to set the  SO_REUSEPORT	socket
	      option  on  each	socket.	  May  distribute  incoming queries to
	      threads more evenly.  Default is yes.  On	Linux it is  supported
	      in  kernels  >= 3.9.  On other systems, FreeBSD, OSX it may also
	      work.  You can enable it (on any platform	and kernel),  it  then
	      attempts to open the port	and passes the option if it was	avail-
	      able  at compile time, if	that works it is used, if it fails, it
	      continues	silently (unless verbosity 3) without the option.   At
	      extreme load it could be better to turn it off to	distribute the
	      queries evenly, reported for Linux systems (4.4.x).

       ip-transparent: <yes or no>
	      If  yes,	then use IP_TRANSPARENT	socket option on sockets where
	      Unbound is listening for incoming	traffic.  Default no.	Allows
	      you  to bind to non-local	interfaces.  For example for non-exis-
	      tent IP addresses	that are going to exist	later  on,  with  host
	      failover configuration.  This is a lot like interface-automatic,
	      but  that	 one  services all interfaces and with this option you
	      can select which (future)	interfaces  Unbound  provides  service
	      on.   This  option  needs	 Local-unbound to be started with root
	      permissions on some systems.   The  option  uses	IP_BINDANY  on
	      FreeBSD systems and SO_BINDANY on	OpenBSD	systems.

       ip-freebind: <yes or no>
	      If  yes, then use	IP_FREEBIND socket option on sockets where Un-
	      bound is listening to incoming traffic.  Default no.  Allows you
	      to bind to IP addresses that are nonlocal	or do not exist,  like
	      when  the	 network interface or IP address is down.  Exists only
	      on Linux,	where the similar ip-transparent option	is also	avail-
	      able.

       ip-dscp:	<number>
	      The value	of the Differentiated Services Codepoint (DSCP)	in the
	      differentiated services field (DS) of  the  outgoing  IP	packet
	      headers.	 The  field replaces the outdated IPv4 Type-Of-Service
	      field and	the IPv6 traffic class field.

       rrset-cache-size: <number>
	      Number of	bytes size of the RRset	cache. Default is 4 megabytes.
	      A	plain number is	in bytes, append 'k', 'm'  or  'g'  for	 kilo-
	      bytes, megabytes or gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in	a megabyte).

       rrset-cache-slabs: <number>
	      Number of	slabs in the RRset cache. Slabs	reduce lock contention
	      by threads.  Must	be set to a power of 2.

       cache-max-ttl: <seconds>
	      Time  to	live maximum for RRsets	and messages in	the cache. De-
	      fault is 86400 seconds (1	day).  When the	TTL expires, the cache
	      item has expired.	 Can be	set lower to  force  the  resolver  to
	      query  for  data	often,	and not	trust (very large) TTL values.
	      Downstream clients also see the lower TTL.

       cache-min-ttl: <seconds>
	      Time to live minimum for RRsets and messages in the  cache.  De-
	      fault  is	 0.   If  the minimum kicks in,	the data is cached for
	      longer than the domain owner intended, and thus less queries are
	      made to look up the data.	 Zero makes sure the data in the cache
	      is as the	domain owner intended, higher values, especially  more
	      than an hour or so, can lead to trouble as the data in the cache
	      does not match up	with the actual	data any more.

       cache-max-negative-ttl: <seconds>
	      Time to live maximum for negative	responses, these have a	SOA in
	      the authority section that is limited in time.  Default is 3600.
	      This applies to nxdomain and nodata answers.

       cache-min-negative-ttl: <seconds>
	      Time to live minimum for negative	responses, these have a	SOA in
	      the  authority  section  that  is	limited	in time.  Default is 0
	      (disabled).  If this is disabled and  cache-min-ttl  is  config-
	      ured,  it	 will  take  effect instead.  In that case you can set
	      this to 1	to honor the upstream TTL.  This applies  to  nxdomain
	      and nodata answers.

       infra-host-ttl: <seconds>
	      Time  to live for	entries	in the host cache. The host cache con-
	      tains roundtrip timing, lameness and EDNS	 support  information.
	      Default is 900.

       infra-cache-slabs: <number>
	      Number  of  slabs	in the infrastructure cache. Slabs reduce lock
	      contention by threads. Must be set to a power of 2.

       infra-cache-numhosts: <number>
	      Number of	hosts for which	 information  is  cached.  Default  is
	      10000.

       infra-cache-min-rtt: <msec>
	      Lower limit for dynamic retransmit timeout calculation in	infra-
	      structure	cache. Default is 50 milliseconds. Increase this value
	      if using forwarders needing more time to do recursive name reso-
	      lution.

       infra-cache-max-rtt: <msec>
	      Upper limit for dynamic retransmit timeout calculation in	infra-
	      structure	cache. Default is 2 minutes.

       infra-keep-probing: <yes	or no>
	      If  enabled the server keeps probing hosts that are down,	in the
	      one probe	at a time regime.  Default  is	no.   Hosts  that  are
	      down,  eg.  they	did not	respond	during the one probe at	a time
	      period, are marked as down and it	may take  infra-host-ttl  time
	      to get probed again.

       define-tag: <"list of tags">
	      Define the tags that can be used with local-zone and access-con-
	      trol.   Enclose  the list	between	quotes ("") and	put spaces be-
	      tween tags.

       do-ip4: <yes or no>
	      Enable or	disable	whether	ip4 queries are	 answered  or  issued.
	      Default is yes.

       do-ip6: <yes or no>
	      Enable  or  disable  whether ip6 queries are answered or issued.
	      Default is yes.  If disabled, queries are	not answered on	 IPv6,
	      and  queries  are	 not sent on IPv6 to the internet nameservers.
	      With this	option you can disable the IPv6	transport for  sending
	      DNS traffic, it does not impact the contents of the DNS traffic,
	      which may	have ip4 and ip6 addresses in it.

       prefer-ip4: <yes	or no>
	      If enabled, prefer IPv4 transport	for sending DNS	queries	to in-
	      ternet  nameservers. Default is no.  Useful if the IPv6 netblock
	      the server has, the entire /64 of	that is	not owned by one oper-
	      ator and the reputation of the netblock /64 is an	 issue,	 using
	      IPv4 then	uses the IPv4 filters that the upstream	servers	have.

       prefer-ip6: <yes	or no>
	      If enabled, prefer IPv6 transport	for sending DNS	queries	to in-
	      ternet nameservers. Default is no.

       do-udp: <yes or no>
	      Enable  or  disable  whether UDP queries are answered or issued.
	      Default is yes.

       do-tcp: <yes or no>
	      Enable or	disable	whether	TCP queries are	 answered  or  issued.
	      Default is yes.

       tcp-mss:	<number>
	      Maximum segment size (MSS) of TCP	socket on which	the server re-
	      sponds to	queries. Value lower than common MSS on	Ethernet (1220
	      for  example)  will address path MTU problem.  Note that not all
	      platform supports	socket option to set  MSS  (TCP_MAXSEG).   De-
	      fault  is	system default MSS determined by interface MTU and ne-
	      gotiation	between	server and client.

       outgoing-tcp-mss: <number>
	      Maximum segment size (MSS) of TCP	socket	for  outgoing  queries
	      (from  Local-unbound  to other servers). Value lower than	common
	      MSS on Ethernet (1220 for	example) will address path  MTU	 prob-
	      lem.   Note  that	not all	platform supports socket option	to set
	      MSS (TCP_MAXSEG).	 Default is system default MSS	determined  by
	      interface	 MTU  and  negotiation between Local-unbound and other
	      servers.

       tcp-idle-timeout: <msec>
	      The period Local-unbound will wait for a query on	a TCP  connec-
	      tion.   If this timeout expires Local-unbound closes the connec-
	      tion.  This option defaults to  30000  milliseconds.   When  the
	      number of	free incoming TCP buffers falls	below 50% of the total
	      number  configured,  the	option value used is progressively re-
	      duced, first to 1% of the	configured value, then to 0.2% of  the
	      configured  value	 if the	number of free buffers falls below 35%
	      of the total number configured, and finally to 0 if  the	number
	      of  free buffers falls below 20% of the total number configured.
	      A	minimum	timeout	of 200 milliseconds is observed	regardless  of
	      the   option   value   used.    It   will	  be   overridden   by
	      edns-tcp-keepalive-timeout if edns-tcp-keepalive is enabled.

       tcp-reuse-timeout: <msec>
	      The period Local-unbound will keep  TCP  persistent  connections
	      open  to	authority  servers. This option	defaults to 60000 mil-
	      liseconds.

       max-reuse-tcp-queries: <number>
	      The maximum number of queries that can be	sent on	 a  persistent
	      TCP connection.  This option defaults to 200 queries.

       tcp-auth-query-timeout: <number>
	      Timeout  in  milliseconds	for TCP	queries	to auth	servers.  This
	      option defaults to 3000 milliseconds.

       edns-tcp-keepalive: <yes	or no>
	      Enable or	disable	EDNS TCP Keepalive. Default is no.

       edns-tcp-keepalive-timeout: <msec>
	      Overrides	tcp-idle-timeout when edns-tcp-keepalive  is  enabled.
	      If  the client supports the EDNS TCP Keepalive option, Local-un-
	      bound sends the timeout value to the client to encourage	it  to
	      close  the  connection before the	server times out.  This	option
	      defaults to 120000 milliseconds.

       sock-queue-timeout: <sec>
	      UDP queries that have waited in the socket  buffer  for  a  long
	      time  can	be dropped. Default is 0, disabled. The	time is	set in
	      seconds, 3 could be a good value	to  ignore  old	 queries  that
	      likely the client	does not need a	reply for any more. This could
	      happen  if the host has not been able to service the queries for
	      a	while, i.e. Local-unbound is not running, and then is  enabled
	      again. It	uses timestamp socket options.

       tcp-upstream: <yes or no>
	      Enable  or disable whether the upstream queries use TCP only for
	      transport.  Default is no.  Useful in  tunneling	scenarios.  If
	      set  to  no you can specify TCP transport	only for selected for-
	      ward or stub zones using	forward-tcp-upstream  or  stub-tcp-up-
	      stream respectively.

       udp-upstream-without-downstream:	<yes or	no>
	      Enable  udp  upstream  even if do-udp is no.  Default is no, and
	      this  does  not  change  anything.   Useful  for	 TLS   service
	      providers, that want no udp downstream but use udp to fetch data
	      upstream.

       tls-upstream: <yes or no>
	      Enabled or disable whether the upstream queries use TLS only for
	      transport.   Default is no.  Useful in tunneling scenarios.  The
	      TLS contains plain DNS in	TCP wireformat.	 The other server must
	      support this (see	tls-service-key).  If you  enable  this,  also
	      configure	 a  tls-cert-bundle  or	 use  tls-win-cert or tls-sys-
	      tem-cert to load CA certs, otherwise the connections  cannot  be
	      authenticated.  This  option enables TLS for all of them,	but if
	      you do not set this you can configure TLS	specifically for  some
	      forward	zones	with   forward-tls-upstream.   And  also  with
	      stub-tls-upstream.  If the tls-upstream option is	enabled, it is
	      for all the forwards and stubs, where  the  forward-tls-upstream
	      and  stub-tls-upstream  options are ignored, as if they had been
	      set to yes.

       ssl-upstream: <yes or no>
	      Alternate	syntax for tls-upstream.  If both are present  in  the
	      config file the last is used.

       tls-service-key:	<file>
	      If  enabled,  the	server provides	DNS-over-TLS or	DNS-over-HTTPS
	      service on the TCP ports marked  implicitly  or  explicitly  for
	      these  services  with tls-port or	https-port. The	file must con-
	      tain the private key for the TLS session,	the public certificate
	      is in the	tls-service-pem	file and it must also be specified  if
	      tls-service-key  is  specified.	The default is "", turned off.
	      Enabling or disabling this service requires a restart (a	reload
	      is  not  enough),	because	the key	is read	while root permissions
	      are held and before chroot (if any).  The	ports enabled  implic-
	      itly  or explicitly via tls-port:	and https-port:	do not provide
	      normal DNS TCP service. Local-unbound needs to be	compiled  with
	      libnghttp2 in order to provide DNS-over-HTTPS.

       ssl-service-key:	<file>
	      Alternate	syntax for tls-service-key.

       tls-service-pem:	<file>
	      The  public  key	certificate pem	file for the tls service.  De-
	      fault is "", turned off.

       ssl-service-pem:	<file>
	      Alternate	syntax for tls-service-pem.

       tls-port: <number>
	      The port number on which to provide  TCP	TLS  service,  default
	      853, only	interfaces configured with that	port number as @number
	      get the TLS service.

       ssl-port: <number>
	      Alternate	syntax for tls-port.

       tls-cert-bundle:	<file>
	      If  null or "", no file is used.	Set it to the certificate bun-
	      dle file,	for example "/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt".	 These
	      certificates are used for	 authenticating	 connections  made  to
	      outside  peers.	For  example auth-zone urls, and also DNS over
	      TLS connections.	It is read at start up before permission  drop
	      and chroot.

       ssl-cert-bundle:	<file>
	      Alternate	syntax for tls-cert-bundle.

       tls-win-cert: <yes or no>
	      Add  the system certificates to the cert bundle certificates for
	      authentication.  If no cert bundle, it uses only these  certifi-
	      cates.  Default is no.  On windows this option uses the certifi-
	      cates  from  the	cert store.  Use the tls-cert-bundle option on
	      other systems. On	other systems, this option enables the	system
	      certificates.

       tls-system-cert:	<yes or	no>
	      This  the	same setting as	the tls-win-cert setting, under	a dif-
	      ferent name.  Because it is not windows specific.

       tls-additional-port: <portnr>
	      List portnumbers as tls-additional-port, and when	interfaces are
	      defined, eg. with	the @port suffix, as this  port	 number,  they
	      provide  dns over	TLS service.  Can list multiple, each on a new
	      statement.

       tls-session-ticket-keys:	<file>
	      If not "", lists files with 80 bytes of random contents that are
	      used to perform TLS session resumption for clients using the Lo-
	      cal-unbound server.  These files contain the secret key for  the
	      TLS  session  tickets.  First key	use to encrypt and decrypt TLS
	      session tickets.	Other keys use to decrypt only.	 With this you
	      can roll over to new keys, by generating a new  first  file  and
	      allowing	decrypt	 of the	old file by listing it after the first
	      file for some time, after	the wait clients are not using the old
	      key any more and the old key can be removed.  One	way to	create
	      the  file	 is  dd	if=/dev/random bs=1 count=80 of=ticket.dat The
	      first 16 bytes should be different from the old one if you  cre-
	      ate  a  second  key,  that is the	name used to identify the key.
	      Then there is 32 bytes random data for an	AES key	 and  then  32
	      bytes random data	for the	HMAC key.

       tls-ciphers: <string with cipher	list>
	      Set  the	list of	ciphers	to allow when serving TLS.  Use	"" for
	      defaults,	and that is the	default.

       tls-ciphersuites: <string with ciphersuites list>
	      Set the list of ciphersuites to allow when serving TLS.  This is
	      for newer	TLS 1.3	connections.  Use "" for defaults, and that is
	      the default.

       pad-responses: <yes or no>
	      If enabled, TLS serviced queries that contained an EDNS  Padding
	      option  will  cause  responses padded to the closest multiple of
	      the size specified in pad-responses-block-size.  Default is yes.

       pad-responses-block-size: <number>
	      The block	size with which	to pad responses  serviced  over  TLS.
	      Only  responses  to  padded  queries will	be padded.  Default is
	      468.

       pad-queries: <yes or no>
	      If enabled, all queries sent over	TLS upstreams will  be	padded
	      to   the	 closest   multiple   of   the	 size	specified   in
	      pad-queries-block-size.  Default is yes.

       pad-queries-block-size: <number>
	      The block	size with which	to  pad	 queries  sent	over  TLS  up-
	      streams.	Default	is 128.

       tls-use-sni: <yes or no>
	      Enable  or disable sending the SNI extension on TLS connections.
	      Default is yes.  Changing	the value requires a reload.

       https-port: <number>
	      The port number on which to provide DNS-over-HTTPS service,  de-
	      fault  443,  only	interfaces configured with that	port number as
	      @number get the HTTPS service.

       http-endpoint: <endpoint	string>
	      The HTTP endpoint	to provide DNS-over-HTTPS service on.  Default
	      "/dns-query".

       http-max-streams: <number of streams>
	      Number  used in the SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS parameter in
	      the HTTP/2 SETTINGS frame	for  DNS-over-HTTPS  connections.  De-
	      fault 100.

       http-query-buffer-size: <size in	bytes>
	      Maximum  number  of bytes	used for all HTTP/2 query buffers com-
	      bined. These buffers contain (partial) DNS queries  waiting  for
	      request  stream completion.  An RST_STREAM frame will be send to
	      streams exceeding	this limit. Default is 4  megabytes.  A	 plain
	      number  is  in  bytes,  append  'k',  'm'	 or 'g'	for kilobytes,
	      megabytes	or gigabytes (1024*1024	bytes in a megabyte).

       http-response-buffer-size: <size	in bytes>
	      Maximum number of	bytes used for	all  HTTP/2  response  buffers
	      combined.	 These	buffers	 contain  DNS  responses waiting to be
	      written back to the clients.  An RST_STREAM frame	will  be  send
	      to streams exceeding this	limit. Default is 4 megabytes. A plain
	      number  is  in  bytes,  append  'k',  'm'	 or 'g'	for kilobytes,
	      megabytes	or gigabytes (1024*1024	bytes in a megabyte).

       http-nodelay: <yes or no>
	      Set TCP_NODELAY socket option on sockets used  to	 provide  DNS-
	      over-HTTPS service.  Ignored if the option is not	available. De-
	      fault is yes.

       http-notls-downstream: <yes or no>
	      Disable use of TLS for the downstream DNS-over-HTTP connections.
	      Useful for local back end	servers.  Default is no.

       proxy-protocol-port: <portnr>
	      List  port  numbers  as proxy-protocol-port, and when interfaces
	      are defined, eg. with the	@port suffix,  as  this	 port  number,
	      they support and expect PROXYv2.	In this	case the proxy address
	      will  only be used for the network communication and initial ACL
	      (check if	the proxy itself is denied/refused by  configuration).
	      The  proxied  address  (if  any)	will  then be used as the true
	      client address and will be used where  applicable	 for  logging,
	      ACL,  DNSTAP, RPZ	and IP ratelimiting.  PROXYv2 is supported for
	      UDP and TCP/TLS listening	interfaces.  There is no  support  for
	      PROXYv2 on a DoH,	DoQ or DNSCrypt	listening interface.  Can list
	      multiple,	each on	a new statement.

       quic-port: <number>
	      The  port	 number	on which to provide DNS-over-QUIC service, de-
	      fault 853, only interfaces configured with that port  number  as
	      @number  get  the	QUIC service.  The interface uses QUIC for the
	      UDP traffic on that port number.

       quic-size: <size	in bytes>
	      Maximum number of	bytes for all QUIC buffers and data  combined.
	      Default  is 8 megabytes. A plain number is in bytes, append 'k',
	      'm' or 'g' for  kilobytes,  megabytes  or	 gigabytes  (1024*1024
	      bytes in a megabyte). New	connections receive connection refused
	      when the limit is	exceeded. New streams are reset	when the limit
	      is exceeded.

       use-systemd: <yes or no>
	      Enable or	disable	systemd	socket activation.  Default is no.

       do-daemonize: <yes or no>
	      Enable  or  disable  whether the Local-unbound server forks into
	      the background as	a daemon.  Set the value to no when  Local-un-
	      bound runs as systemd service.  Default is yes.

       tcp-connection-limit: <IP netblock> <limit>
	      Allow  up	 to  limit simultaneous	TCP connections	from the given
	      netblock.	 When at the limit, further connections	 are  accepted
	      but  closed  immediately.	  This	option is experimental at this
	      time.

       access-control: <IP netblock> <action>
	      Specify treatment	of incoming queries from their originating  IP
	      address.	 Queries  can be allowed to have access	to this	server
	      that gives DNS answers, or refused, with other actions possible.
	      The IP address range can be specified as a netblock, it is  pos-
	      sible  to	 give  the statement several times in order to specify
	      the treatment of different netblocks.

	      The netblock is given as an IP4 or IP6 address  with  /size  ap-
	      pended  for  a  classless	network	block. The action can be deny,
	      refuse,	allow,	 allow_setrd,	 allow_snoop,	 allow_cookie,
	      deny_non_local  or refuse_non_local.  The	most specific netblock
	      match is used, if	none match refuse is used.  The	order  of  the
	      access-control statements	therefore does not matter.

	      The deny action stops queries from hosts from that netblock.

	      The  refuse  action stops	queries	too, but sends a DNS rcode RE-
	      FUSED error message back.

	      The allow	action gives access to clients from that netblock.  It
	      gives only access	for recursion clients (which  is  what	almost
	      all clients need).  Nonrecursive queries are refused.

	      The  allow  action does allow nonrecursive queries to access the
	      local-data that is configured.  The reason is that this does not
	      involve the Local-unbound	server recursive lookup	algorithm, and
	      static data is served in the reply.  This	supports normal	opera-
	      tions where nonrecursive queries are made	for the	 authoritative
	      data.   For  nonrecursive	 queries  any replies from the dynamic
	      cache are	refused.

	      The allow_setrd action ignores the recursion  desired  (RD)  bit
	      and  treats all requests as if the recursion desired bit is set.
	      Note that	this behavior violates RFC 1034	which  states  that  a
	      name  server should never	perform	recursive service unless asked
	      via the RD bit since this	interferes with	 trouble  shooting  of
	      name  servers  and their databases. This prohibited behavior may
	      be useful	if another DNS server must forward requests  for  spe-
	      cific zones to a resolver	DNS server, but	only supports stub do-
	      mains  and  sends	queries	to the resolver	DNS server with	the RD
	      bit cleared.

	      The allow_snoop action gives nonrecursive	access too.  This give
	      both recursive and non recursive access.	The  name  allow_snoop
	      refers  to  cache	 snooping,  a  technique  to  use nonrecursive
	      queries to examine the  cache  contents  (for  malicious	acts).
	      However,	nonrecursive  queries can also be a valuable debugging
	      tool (when you want to examine the cache contents). In that case
	      use allow_snoop for your administration host.

	      The allow_cookie action allows access only to UDP	 queries  that
	      contain  a  valid	 DNS  Cookie  as specified in RFC 7873 and RFC
	      9018, when the answer-cookie option  is  enabled.	  UDP  queries
	      containing  only a DNS Client Cookie and no Server Cookie, or an
	      invalid DNS Cookie, will receive a BADCOOKIE response  including
	      a	 newly	generated  DNS	Cookie,	allowing clients to retry with
	      that DNS Cookie.	The allow_cookie action	will also  accept  re-
	      quests  over  stateful transports, regardless of the presence of
	      an DNS Cookie and	regardless of the answer-cookie	setting.   UDP
	      queries  without a DNS Cookie receive REFUSED responses with the
	      TC flag set, that	 may  trigger  fall  back  to  TCP  for	 those
	      clients.

	      By  default only localhost (the 127.0.0.0/8 IP netblock, not the
	      loopback interface) is implicitly	allowed, the rest is  refused.
	      The  default  is refused,	because	that is	protocol-friendly. The
	      DNS protocol is not designed to handle dropped  packets  due  to
	      policy,  and dropping may	result in (possibly excessive) retried
	      queries.

	      The deny_non_local and refuse_non_local settings are  for	 hosts
	      that are only allowed to query for the authoritative local-data,
	      they  are	 not  allowed full recursion but only the static data.
	      With deny_non_local, messages that are disallowed	 are  dropped,
	      with refuse_non_local they receive error code REFUSED.

       access-control-tag: <IP netblock> <"list	of tags">
	      Assign  tags  to access-control elements.	Clients	using this ac-
	      cess control element use localzones that are tagged with one  of
	      these  tags.  Tags must be defined in define-tags.  Enclose list
	      of tags in quotes	("") and  put  spaces  between	tags.  If  ac-
	      cess-control-tag is configured for a netblock that does not have
	      an  access-control,  an access-control element with action allow
	      is configured for	this netblock.

       access-control-tag-action: <IP netblock>	<tag> <action>
	      Set action for particular	tag for	given access control  element.
	      If  you have multiple tag	values,	the tag	used to	lookup the ac-
	      tion is the first	tag match between access-control-tag  and  lo-
	      cal-zone-tag  where  "first" comes from the order	of the define-
	      tag values.

       access-control-tag-data:	<IP netblock> <tag> <"resource record string">
	      Set redirect data	for particular tag for	given  access  control
	      element.

       access-control-view: <IP	netblock> <view	name>
	      Set view for given access	control	element.

       interface-action: <ip address or	interface name [@port]>	<action>
	      Similar to access-control: but for interfaces.

	      The  action  is  the  same as the	ones defined under access-con-
	      trol:.  Interfaces are refused by	default.  By default only  lo-
	      calhost  (the  127.0.0.0/8  IP netblock, not the loopback	inter-
	      face) is implicitly allowed through the default  access-control:
	      behavior.	  This	also  means that any attempt to	use the	inter-
	      face-*: options for the loopback interface will not work as they
	      will be overridden  by  the  implicit  default  "access-control:
	      127.0.0.0/8 allow" option.

	      Note  that  the interface	needs to be already specified with in-
	      terface: and that	any access-control*: setting overrides all in-
	      terface-*: settings for targeted clients.

       interface-tag: <ip address or interface name [@port]> <"list of tags">
	      Similar to access-control-tag: but for interfaces.

	      Note that	the interface needs to be already specified  with  in-
	      terface: and that	any access-control*: setting overrides all in-
	      terface-*: settings for targeted clients.

       interface-tag-action: <ip address or interface name [@port]> <tag> <ac-
       tion>
	      Similar to access-control-tag-action: but	for interfaces.

	      Note  that  the interface	needs to be already specified with in-
	      terface: and that	any access-control*: setting overrides all in-
	      terface-*: settings for targeted clients.

       interface-tag-data: <ip address or interface name [@port]> <tag>	<"re-
       source record string">
	      Similar to access-control-tag-data: but for interfaces.

	      Note that	the interface needs to be already specified  with  in-
	      terface: and that	any access-control*: setting overrides all in-
	      terface-*: settings for targeted clients.

       interface-view: <ip address or interface	name [@port]> <view name>
	      Similar to access-control-view: but for interfaces.

	      Note  that  the interface	needs to be already specified with in-
	      terface: and that	any access-control*: setting overrides all in-
	      terface-*: settings for targeted clients.

       chroot: <directory>
	      If chroot	is enabled, you	should pass the	configfile  (from  the
	      commandline)  as	a  full	path from the original root. After the
	      chroot has been performed	the now	defunct	portion	of the	config
	      file path	is removed to be able to reread	the config after a re-
	      load.

	      All  other  file paths (working dir, logfile, roothints, and key
	      files) can be specified in several ways:	as  an	absolute  path
	      relative	to the new root, as a relative path to the working di-
	      rectory, or as an	absolute path relative to the  original	 root.
	      In  the last case	the path is adjusted to	remove the unused por-
	      tion.

	      The pidfile can be either	a relative path	to the working	direc-
	      tory,  or	 an absolute path relative to the original root. It is
	      written just prior to chroot and dropping	permissions. This  al-
	      lows the pidfile to be /var/run/unbound.pid and the chroot to be
	      /var/unbound,  for  example. Note	that Local-unbound is not able
	      to remove	the pidfile after termination when it is located  out-
	      side of the chroot directory.

	      Additionally, Local-unbound may need to access /dev/urandom (for
	      entropy) from inside the chroot.

	      If  given	a chroot is done to the	given directory. The chroot is
	      by default set to	"/var/unbound".	If you give ""	no  chroot  is
	      performed.

       username: <name>
	      If  given,  after	 binding  the  port  the  user	privileges are
	      dropped. Default is "local-unbound". If you give username: "" no
	      user change is performed.

	      If this user is not capable of binding  the  port,  reloads  (by
	      signal  HUP)  will still retain the opened ports.	 If you	change
	      the port number in the config file, and that new port number re-
	      quires privileges, then a	reload will fail; a restart is needed.

       directory: <directory>
	      Sets the working directory for the program. Default is "/var/un-
	      bound".  On Windows the string "%EXECUTABLE%" tries to change to
	      the directory that  unbound.exe  resides	in.   If  you  give  a
	      server:  directory:  dir	before	include:  file statements then
	      those includes can be relative to	the working directory.

       logfile:	<filename>
	      If "" is given, logging goes to stderr, or nowhere  once	daemo-
	      nized.  The logfile is appended to, in the following format:
	      [seconds since 1970] local-unbound[pid:tid]: type: message.
	      If  this	option	is  given,  the	use-syslog is option is	set to
	      "no".  The logfile is reopened (for append) when the config file
	      is reread, on SIGHUP.

       use-syslog: <yes	or no>
	      Sets Local-unbound to send log messages to  the  syslogd,	 using
	      syslog(3).   The	log facility LOG_DAEMON	is used, with identity
	      "local-unbound".	 The  logfile  setting	is   overridden	  when
	      use-syslog is turned on.	The default is to log to syslog.

       log-identity: <string>
	      If  "" is	given (default), then the name of the executable, usu-
	      ally "local-unbound" is used to report  to  the  log.   Enter  a
	      string to	override it with that, which is	useful on systems that
	      run more than one	instance of Local-unbound, with	different con-
	      figurations,  so	that  the  logs	 can  be  easily distinguished
	      against.

       log-time-ascii: <yes or no>
	      Sets logfile lines to use	a timestamp in UTC ascii.  Default  is
	      no,  which  prints the seconds since 1970	in brackets. No	effect
	      if using syslog, in  that	 case  syslog  formats	the  timestamp
	      printed into the log files.

       log-time-iso: <yes or no>
	      Log  time	in ISO8601 format, if log-time-ascii: yes is also set.
	      Default is no.

       log-queries: <yes or no>
	      Prints one line per query	to the log, with the log timestamp and
	      IP address, name,	type and class.	 Default is no.	 Note that  it
	      takes time to print these	lines which makes the server (signifi-
	      cantly)  slower.	 Odd  (nonprintable)  characters  in names are
	      printed as '?'.

       log-replies: <yes or no>
	      Prints one line per reply	to the log, with the log timestamp and
	      IP address, name,	type, class, return  code,  time  to  resolve,
	      from  cache  and	response  size.	  Default is no.  Note that it
	      takes time to print these	lines which makes the server (signifi-
	      cantly) slower.  Odd  (nonprintable)  characters	in  names  are
	      printed as '?'.

       log-tag-queryreply: <yes	or no>
	      Prints  the  word	 'query'  and  'reply'	with  log-queries  and
	      log-replies.  This makes filtering logs easier.  The default  is
	      off (for backwards compatibility).

       log-destaddr: <yes or no>
	      Prints the destination address, port and type in the log-replies
	      output.	This  disambiguates  what  type	of traffic, eg.	udp or
	      tcp, and to what local port the traffic was sent to.

       log-local-actions: <yes or no>
	      Print log	lines to inform	about local zone actions.  These lines
	      are like the local-zone type inform prints  out,	but  they  are
	      also printed for the other types of local	zones.

       log-servfail: <yes or no>
	      Print log	lines that say why queries return SERVFAIL to clients.
	      This  is	separate  from the verbosity debug logs, much smaller,
	      and printed at the error level, not the info level of debug info
	      from verbosity.

       pidfile:	<filename>
	      The process id is	written	to  the	 file.	Default	 is  "/var/un-
	      bound/unbound.pid".  So,
	      kill -HUP	`cat /var/unbound/unbound.pid`
	      triggers a reload,
	      kill -TERM `cat /var/unbound/unbound.pid`
	      gracefully terminates.

       root-hints: <filename>
	      Read  the	 root  hints from this file. Default is	nothing, using
	      builtin hints for	the IN class. The file has the format of  zone
	      files,  with  root  nameserver names and addresses only. The de-
	      fault may	become outdated, when servers change, therefore	it  is
	      good practice to use a root-hints	file.

       hide-identity: <yes or no>
	      If enabled id.server and hostname.bind queries are refused.

       identity: <string>
	      Set  the identity	to report. If set to "", the default, then the
	      hostname of the server is	returned.

       hide-version: <yes or no>
	      If enabled version.server	and version.bind queries are refused.

       version:	<string>
	      Set the version to report. If set	to "", the default,  then  the
	      package version is returned.

       hide-http-user-agent: <yes or no>
	      If  enabled the HTTP header User-Agent is	not set. Use with cau-
	      tion as some webserver configurations may	reject	HTTP  requests
	      lacking  this header.  If	needed,	it is better to	explicitly set
	      the http-user-agent below.

       http-user-agent:	<string>
	      Set the HTTP User-Agent header for outgoing  HTTP	 requests.  If
	      set  to  "",  the	default, then the package name and version are
	      used.

       nsid: <string>
	      Add the specified	nsid to	the EDNS section of  the  answer  when
	      queried  with an NSID EDNS enabled packet.  As a sequence	of hex
	      characters or with ascii_	prefix and then	an ascii string.

       hide-trustanchor: <yes or no>
	      If enabled trustanchor.local-unbound queries are refused.

       target-fetch-policy: <"list of numbers">
	      Set the target fetch policy used by Local-unbound	 to  determine
	      if  it  should  fetch  nameserver	target addresses opportunisti-
	      cally. The policy	is described per dependency depth.

	      The number of values determines  the  maximum  dependency	 depth
	      that Local-unbound will pursue in	answering a query.  A value of
	      -1  means	to fetch all targets opportunistically for that	depen-
	      dency depth. A value of 0	means to fetch on demand only. A posi-
	      tive value fetches that many targets opportunistically.

	      Enclose the list between quotes ("") and put spaces between num-
	      bers.  The default is "3 2 1 0 0". Setting all zeroes, "0	0 0  0
	      0"  gives	 behaviour closer to that of BIND 9, while setting "-1
	      -1 -1 -1 -1" gives behaviour rumoured to be closer  to  that  of
	      BIND 8.

       harden-short-bufsize: <yes or no>
	      Very  small  EDNS	buffer sizes from queries are ignored. Default
	      is yes, as described in the standard.

       harden-large-queries: <yes or no>
	      Very large queries are ignored. Default is no, since it is legal
	      protocol wise to send these, and could be	necessary  for	opera-
	      tion if TSIG or EDNS payload is very large.

       harden-glue: <yes or no>
	      Will  trust glue only if it is within the	servers	authority. De-
	      fault is yes.

       harden-unverified-glue: <yes or no>
	      Will trust only in-zone glue. Will try to	 resolve  all  out  of
	      zone  (<unverfied>)  glue. Will fallback to the original glue if
	      unable to	resolve.  Default is no.

       harden-dnssec-stripped: <yes or no>
	      Require DNSSEC data for trust-anchored zones, if	such  data  is
	      absent,  the  zone  becomes  bogus. If turned off, and no	DNSSEC
	      data is received (or the DNSKEY data fails  to  validate),  then
	      the  zone	 is made insecure, this	behaves	like there is no trust
	      anchor. You could	turn this off if you are sometimes  behind  an
	      intrusive	 firewall (of some sort) that removes DNSSEC data from
	      packets, or a zone changes from  signed  to  unsigned  to	 badly
	      signed  often. If	turned off you run the risk of a downgrade at-
	      tack that	disables security for a	zone. Default is yes.

       harden-below-nxdomain: <yes or no>
	      From RFC 8020 (with title	"NXDOMAIN: There Really	Is Nothing Un-
	      derneath"), returns nxdomain to queries for a name below another
	      name that	is already known to be nxdomain.  DNSSEC mandates  no-
	      error  for empty nonterminals, hence this	is possible.  Very old
	      software might return nxdomain for empty nonterminals (that usu-
	      ally happen for reverse IP address lookups), and thus may	be in-
	      compatible with this.  To	try to avoid this  only	 DNSSEC-secure
	      nxdomains	 are  used,  because  the  old	software does not have
	      DNSSEC.  Default is yes.	The  nxdomain  must  be	 secure,  this
	      means nsec3 with optout is insufficient.

       harden-referral-path: <yes or no>
	      Harden  the  referral  path by performing	additional queries for
	      infrastructure data.  Validates the replies if trust anchors are
	      configured and the zones are signed.  This enforces DNSSEC vali-
	      dation on	nameserver NS sets and the nameserver  addresses  that
	      are encountered on the referral path to the answer.  Default no,
	      because  it  burdens  the	 authority  servers, and it is not RFC
	      standard,	and could lead to performance problems because of  the
	      extra  query  load  that is generated.  Experimental option.  If
	      you enable it  consider  adding  more  numbers  after  the  tar-
	      get-fetch-policy to increase the max depth that is checked to.

       harden-algo-downgrade: <yes or no>
	      Harden  against algorithm	downgrade when multiple	algorithms are
	      advertised in the	DS record.  This works by first	choosing  only
	      the  strongest  DS  digest  type	as per RFC 4509	(Local-unbound
	      treats the highest algorithm as the strongest) and then  expect-
	      ing  signatures  from all	the advertised signing algorithms from
	      the chosen DS(es)	to be present.	If no,	allows	any  one  sup-
	      ported  algorithm	to validate the	zone, even if other advertised
	      algorithms are broken.  Default is no.  RFC 6840	mandates  that
	      zone signers must	produce	zones signed with all advertised algo-
	      rithms, but sometimes they do not.  RFC 6840 also	clarifies that
	      this requirement is not for validators and validators should ac-
	      cept  any	single valid path.  It should thus be explicitly noted
	      that this	option violates	RFC 6840  for  DNSSEC  validation  and
	      should  only be used to perform a	signature completeness test to
	      support troubleshooting.	Using this  option  may	 break	DNSSEC
	      resolution  with non-RFC6840-conforming signers and/or in	multi-
	      signer configurations that don't send all	the advertised	signa-
	      tures.

       harden-unknown-additional: <yes or no>
	      Harden  against unknown records in the authority section and ad-
	      ditional section.	Default	is no. If no, such records are	copied
	      from  the	upstream and presented to the client together with the
	      answer. If yes, it could	hamper	future	protocol  developments
	      that want	to add records.

       use-caps-for-id:	<yes or	no>
	      Use  0x20-encoded	 random	 bits  in  the query to	foil spoof at-
	      tempts.  This perturbs the  lowercase  and  uppercase  of	 query
	      names  sent  to  authority servers and checks if the reply still
	      has the correct casing.  Disabled	by default.  This  feature  is
	      an experimental implementation of	draft dns-0x20.

       caps-exempt: <domain>
	      Exempt  the  domain so that it does not receive caps-for-id per-
	      turbed queries.  For domains that	do not support 0x20  and  also
	      fail  with fallback because they keep sending different answers,
	      like some	load balancers.	 Can be	given multiple times, for dif-
	      ferent domains.

       caps-whitelist: <domain>
	      Alternate	syntax for caps-exempt.

       qname-minimisation: <yes	or no>
	      Send minimum amount of information to upstream  servers  to  en-
	      hance  privacy.	Only send minimum required labels of the QNAME
	      and set QTYPE to A when possible.	 Best  effort  approach;  full
	      QNAME and	original QTYPE will be sent when upstream replies with
	      a	 RCODE other than NOERROR, except when receiving NXDOMAIN from
	      a	DNSSEC signed zone. Default is yes.

       qname-minimisation-strict: <yes or no>
	      QNAME minimisation in strict mode. Do not	fall-back  to  sending
	      full  QNAME  to potentially broken nameservers. A	lot of domains
	      will not be resolvable when this option in enabled. Only use  if
	      you  know	 what you are doing.  This option only has effect when
	      qname-minimisation is enabled. Default is	no.

       aggressive-nsec:	<yes or	no>
	      Aggressive NSEC uses the DNSSEC NSEC chain to  synthesize	 NXDO-
	      MAIN  and	 other	denials, using information from	previous NXDO-
	      MAINs answers.  Default is yes.  It helps	to  reduce  the	 query
	      rate  towards  targets  that  get	 a  very high nonexistent name
	      lookup rate.

       private-address:	<IP address or subnet>
	      Give IPv4	of IPv6	addresses or classless subnets.	These are  ad-
	      dresses  on  your	private	network, and are not allowed to	be re-
	      turned for public	internet names.	 Any occurrence	 of  such  ad-
	      dresses  are  removed from DNS answers. Additionally, the	DNSSEC
	      validator	may mark the  answers  bogus.  This  protects  against
	      so-called	 DNS  Rebinding, where a user browser is turned	into a
	      network proxy, allowing remote access  through  the  browser  to
	      other  parts of your private network.  Some names	can be allowed
	      to contain your private addresses, by default all	the local-data
	      that you configured is allowed to, and  you  can	specify	 addi-
	      tional names using private-domain.  No private addresses are en-
	      abled  by	 default.   We consider	to enable this for the RFC1918
	      private IP address space by  default  in	later  releases.  That
	      would  enable  private  addresses	 for  10.0.0.0/8 172.16.0.0/12
	      192.168.0.0/16 169.254.0.0/16 fd00::/8 and fe80::/10, since  the
	      RFC  standards  say these	addresses should not be	visible	on the
	      public internet.	Turning	on 127.0.0.0/8 would hinder many spam-
	      blocklists  as  they  use	 that.	 Adding	 ::ffff:0:0/96	 stops
	      IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses from bypassing	the filter.

       private-domain: <domain name>
	      Allow this domain, and all its subdomains	to contain private ad-
	      dresses.	 Give multiple times to	allow multiple domain names to
	      contain private addresses. Default is none.

       unwanted-reply-threshold: <number>
	      If set, a	total number of	unwanted replies is kept track	of  in
	      every thread.  When it reaches the threshold, a defensive	action
	      is taken and a warning is	printed	to the log.  The defensive ac-
	      tion  is to clear	the rrset and message caches, hopefully	flush-
	      ing away any poison.  A value of 10 million is  suggested.   De-
	      fault is 0 (turned off).

       do-not-query-address: <IP address>
	      Do  not  query  the  given IP address. Can be IP4	or IP6.	Append
	      /num to indicate a classless delegation  netblock,  for  example
	      like 10.2.3.4/24 or 2001::11/64.

       do-not-query-localhost: <yes or no>
	      If  yes, localhost is added to the do-not-query-address entries,
	      both IP6 ::1 and IP4 127.0.0.1/8.	If no, then localhost  can  be
	      used to send queries to. Default is yes.

       prefetch: <yes or no>
	      If  yes,	cache hits on message cache elements that are on their
	      last 10 percent of their TTL value trigger a  prefetch  to  keep
	      the cache	up to date.  Default is	no.  Turning it	on gives about
	      10  percent  more	 traffic  and load on the machine, but popular
	      items do not expire from the cache.

       prefetch-key: <yes or no>
	      If yes, fetch the	DNSKEYs	earlier	 in  the  validation  process,
	      when a DS	record is encountered.	This lowers the	latency	of re-
	      quests.	It  does  use a	little more CPU.  Also if the cache is
	      set to 0,	it is no use. Default is no.

       deny-any: <yes or no>
	      If yes, deny queries of type ANY with an	empty  response.   De-
	      fault  is	 no.  If disabled, Local-unbound responds with a short
	      list of resource records if some can be found in the  cache  and
	      makes the	upstream type ANY query	if there are none.

       rrset-roundrobin: <yes or no>
	      If  yes, Local-unbound rotates RRSet order in response (the ran-
	      dom number is taken from the query  ID,  for  speed  and	thread
	      safety).	Default	is yes.

       minimal-responses: <yes or no>
	      If  yes, Local-unbound does not insert authority/additional sec-
	      tions into response messages when	those  sections	 are  not  re-
	      quired.  This reduces response size significantly, and may avoid
	      TCP  fallback  for  some	responses  which  may  cause  a	slight
	      speedup.	The default is yes, even though	the DNS	protocol  RFCs
	      mandate  these  sections,	 and the additional content could save
	      roundtrips for clients that use the additional content.  However
	      these sections are hardly	used by	 clients.   Enabling  prefetch
	      can  benefit  clients that need the additional content by	trying
	      to keep that content fresh in the	cache.

       disable-dnssec-lame-check: <yes or no>
	      If true, disables	the DNSSEC lameness  check  in	the  iterator.
	      This check sees if RRSIGs	are present in the answer, when	dnssec
	      is  expected,  and retries another authority if RRSIGs are unex-
	      pectedly missing.	 The  validator	 will  insist  in  RRSIGs  for
	      DNSSEC signed domains regardless of this setting,	if a trust an-
	      chor is loaded.

       module-config: <"module names">
	      Module  configuration,  a	 list  of  module  names  separated by
	      spaces, surround the string with quotes (""). The	modules	can be
	      respip, validator, or iterator (and possibly more,  see  below).
	      Setting  this to just "iterator" will result in a	non-validating
	      server.  Setting this  to	 "validator  iterator"	will  turn  on
	      DNSSEC  validation.  The ordering	of the modules is significant,
	      the order	decides	the order of processing.  You  must  also  set
	      trust-anchors for	validation to be useful.  Adding respip	to the
	      front  will cause	RPZ processing to be done on all queries.  The
	      default is "validator iterator".

	      Most modules that	need to	be listed here have to	be  listed  at
	      the  beginning  of the line.  The	subnetcachedb module has to be
	      listed just before the  iterator.	  The  python  module  can  be
	      listed  in different places, it then processes the output	of the
	      module it	is just	before.	The dynlib module can be listed	pretty
	      much anywhere, it	is only	a very thin wrapper  that  allows  dy-
	      namic libraries to run in	its place.

       trust-anchor-file: <filename>
	      File  with  trusted  keys	for validation.	Both DS	and DNSKEY en-
	      tries can	appear in the file. The	format	of  the	 file  is  the
	      standard	DNS  Zone file format.	Default	is "", or no trust an-
	      chor file.

       auto-trust-anchor-file: <filename>
	      File with	trust anchor for  one  zone,  which  is	 tracked  with
	      RFC5011  probes.	 The  probes  are run several times per	month,
	      thus the machine must be online frequently.   The	 initial  file
	      can be one with contents as described in trust-anchor-file.  The
	      file  is written to when the anchor is updated, so the Local-un-
	      bound user must have write permission.  Write permission to  the
	      file,  but also to the directory it is in	(to create a temporary
	      file, which is necessary to deal with filesystem	full  events),
	      it must also be inside the chroot	(if that is used).

       trust-anchor: <"Resource	Record">
	      A	 DS or DNSKEY RR for a key to use for validation. Multiple en-
	      tries can	be given to specify multiple trusted keys, in addition
	      to the trust-anchor-files.  The resource record  is  entered  in
	      the same format as 'dig' or 'drill' prints them, the same	format
	      as  in the zone file. Has	to be on a single line,	with ""	around
	      it. A TTL	can be specified for ease of cut and paste, but	is ig-
	      nored.  A	class can be specified,	but class IN is	default.

       trusted-keys-file: <filename>
	      File with	trusted	keys for validation.  Specify  more  than  one
	      file  with  several  entries, one	file per entry.	Like trust-an-
	      chor-file	but has	a different  file  format.  Format  is	BIND-9
	      style  format, the trusted-keys {	name flag proto	algo "key"; };
	      clauses are read.	 It is possible	to  use	 wildcards  with  this
	      statement, the wildcard is expanded on start and on reload.

       trust-anchor-signaling: <yes or no>
	      Send  RFC8145  key tag query after trust anchor priming. Default
	      is yes.

       root-key-sentinel: <yes or no>
	      Root key trust anchor sentinel. Default is yes.

       domain-insecure:	<domain	name>
	      Sets domain name to be insecure, DNSSEC chain of	trust  is  ig-
	      nored  towards the domain	name.  So a trust anchor above the do-
	      main name	can not	make the domain	secure with a DS record,  such
	      a	 DS  record  is	 then ignored.	Can be given multiple times to
	      specify multiple domains that are	treated	as  if	unsigned.   If
	      you  set trust anchors for the domain they override this setting
	      (and the domain is secured).

	      This can be useful if you	want to	make sure a trust  anchor  for
	      external	lookups	does not affect	an (unsigned) internal domain.
	      A	DS record externally can create	validation failures  for  that
	      internal domain.

       val-override-date: <rrsig-style date spec>
	      Default  is "" or	"0", which disables this debugging feature. If
	      enabled by giving	a RRSIG	style date, that date is used for ver-
	      ifying RRSIG inception and expiration dates, instead of the cur-
	      rent date. Do not	set this unless	you  are  debugging  signature
	      inception	 and  expiration.  The value -1	ignores	the date alto-
	      gether, useful for some special applications.

       val-sig-skew-min: <seconds>
	      Minimum number of	seconds	of clock skew to  apply	 to  validated
	      signatures.   A  value of	10% of the signature lifetime (expira-
	      tion - inception)	is used, capped	by this	setting.   Default  is
	      3600  (1	hour)  which  allows for daylight savings differences.
	      Lower this value for more	strict checking	of short lived	signa-
	      tures.

       val-sig-skew-max: <seconds>
	      Maximum  number  of  seconds of clock skew to apply to validated
	      signatures.  A value of 10% of the signature  lifetime  (expira-
	      tion  -  inception) is used, capped by this setting.  Default is
	      86400 (24	hours) which allows for	timezone setting  problems  in
	      stable  domains.	Setting	both min and max very low disables the
	      clock skew allowances.  Setting both min and max very high makes
	      the validator check the signature	timestamps less	strictly.

       val-max-restart:	<number>
	      The maximum number the validator should restart validation  with
	      another authority	in case	of failed validation. Default is 5.

       val-bogus-ttl: <number>
	      The  time	 to  live for bogus data. This is data that has	failed
	      validation; due to invalid signatures or other checks.  The  TTL
	      from  that  data	cannot	be trusted, and	this value is used in-
	      stead. The value is in seconds, default 60.  The	time  interval
	      prevents repeated	revalidation of	bogus data.

       val-clean-additional: <yes or no>
	      Instruct	the  validator to remove data from the additional sec-
	      tion of secure messages that are not signed  properly.  Messages
	      that are insecure, bogus,	indeterminate or unchecked are not af-
	      fected.  Default	is  yes. Use this setting to protect the users
	      that rely	on this	validator for authentication from  potentially
	      bad data in the additional section.

       val-log-level: <number>
	      Have  the	 validator  print validation failures to the log.  Re-
	      gardless of the verbosity	setting.  Default is 0,	 off.	At  1,
	      for  every  user query that fails	a line is printed to the logs.
	      This way you can monitor what happens with  validation.	Use  a
	      diagnosis	tool, such as dig or drill, to find out	why validation
	      is  failing  for	these  queries.	 At 2, not only	the query that
	      failed is	printed	but also the reason why	Local-unbound  thought
	      it was wrong and which server sent the faulty data.

       val-permissive-mode: <yes or no>
	      Instruct	the validator to mark bogus messages as	indeterminate.
	      The security checks are performed, but if	the  result  is	 bogus
	      (failed  security),  the	reply  is not withheld from the	client
	      with SERVFAIL as usual. The client receives the bogus data.  For
	      messages	that  are  found  to  be  secure  the AD bit is	set in
	      replies. Also logging is performed as for	full validation.   The
	      default value is "no".

       ignore-cd-flag: <yes or no>
	      Instruct	Local-unbound  to  ignore the CD flag from clients and
	      refuse to	return bogus answers to	them.  Thus, the CD  (Checking
	      Disabled)	flag does not disable checking any more.  This is use-
	      ful  if  legacy  (w2008) servers that set	the CD flag but	cannot
	      validate DNSSEC themselves are the clients, and  then  Local-un-
	      bound  provides  them with DNSSEC	protection.  The default value
	      is "no".

       disable-edns-do:	<yes or	no>
	      Disable the EDNS DO flag in upstream requests.  It breaks	DNSSEC
	      validation for Local-unbound's clients.  This results in the up-
	      stream name servers to  not  include  DNSSEC  records  in	 their
	      replies  and  could  be  helpful	for devices that cannot	handle
	      DNSSEC information.  When	the option is  enabled,	 clients  that
	      set  the DO flag receive no EDNS record in the response to indi-
	      cate the lack of support to them.	 If this option	is enabled but
	      Local-unbound is already configured for DNSSEC validation	(i.e.,
	      the validator module is enabled; default)	this option is implic-
	      itly turned off with a warning as	to not break DNSSEC validation
	      in Unbound.  Default is no.

       serve-expired: <yes or no>
	      If enabled, Local-unbound	attempts to serve old  responses  from
	      cache with a TTL of serve-expired-reply-ttl in the response.  By
	      default  the  expired answer will	be used	after a	resolution at-
	      tempt  errored  out   or	 is   taking   more   than   serve-ex-
	      pired-client-timeout to resolve.	Default	is "no".

       serve-expired-ttl: <seconds>
	      Limit  serving  of expired responses to configured seconds after
	      expiration.  0 disables the limit.   This	 option	 only  applies
	      when  serve-expired  is enabled.	A suggested value per RFC 8767
	      is between 86400 (1 day) and 259200 (3 days).   The  default  is
	      86400.

       serve-expired-ttl-reset:	<yes or	no>
	      Set  the	TTL  of	expired	records	to the serve-expired-ttl value
	      after a failed attempt to	retrieve  the  record  from  upstream.
	      This  makes sure that the	expired	records	will be	served as long
	      as there are queries for it.  Default is "no".

       serve-expired-reply-ttl:	<seconds>
	      TTL value	to use when replying with expired data.	 If  serve-ex-
	      pired-client-timeout  is also used then it is RECOMMENDED	to use
	      30 as the	value (RFC 8767).  The default is 30.

       serve-expired-client-timeout: <msec>
	      Time in milliseconds before replying to the client with  expired
	      data.   This  essentially	 enables  the  serve-stale behavior as
	      specified	in RFC 8767 that first tries to	resolve	before immedi-
	      ately responding with expired data.  Setting this	to 0 will dis-
	      able this	behavior and instead serve the expired record  immedi-
	      ately from the cache before attempting to	refresh	it via resolu-
	      tion.  Default is	1800.

       serve-original-ttl: <yes	or no>
	      If enabled, Local-unbound	will always return the original	TTL as
	      received	from  the  upstream name server	rather than the	decre-
	      menting TTL as stored in the cache.  This	feature	may be	useful
	      if Local-unbound serves as a front-end to	a hidden authoritative
	      name server. Enabling this feature does not impact cache expiry,
	      it  only	changes	 the  TTL Local-unbound	embeds in responses to
	      queries. Note that enabling this feature implicitly disables en-
	      forcement	of the configured minimum and maximum TTL,  as	it  is
	      assumed  users who enable	this feature do	not want Local-unbound
	      to change	the TTL	obtained from an upstream server.   Thus,  the
	      values  set  using  cache-min-ttl	and cache-max-ttl are ignored.
	      Default is "no".

       val-nsec3-keysize-iterations: <"list of values">
	      List of keysize and iteration count values, separated by spaces,
	      surrounded by quotes. Default is "1024 150 2048 150  4096	 150".
	      This determines the maximum allowed NSEC3	iteration count	before
	      a	 message  is  simply marked insecure instead of	performing the
	      many hashing iterations. The list	must be	in ascending order and
	      have at least one	entry. If you set it to	"1024 65535" there  is
	      no  restriction  to  NSEC3 iteration values.  This table must be
	      kept short; a very long list could cause slower operation.

       zonemd-permissive-mode: <yes or no>
	      If enabled the ZONEMD verification failures are only logged  and
	      do  not  cause  the zone to be blocked and only return servfail.
	      Useful for testing out if	it works,  or  if  the	operator  only
	      wants  to	 be  notified of a problem without disrupting service.
	      Default is no.

       add-holddown: <seconds>
	      Instruct the auto-trust-anchor-file probe	mechanism for  RFC5011
	      autotrust	 updates to add	new trust anchors only after they have
	      been visible for this time.  Default is 30 days as per the RFC.

       del-holddown: <seconds>
	      Instruct the auto-trust-anchor-file probe	mechanism for  RFC5011
	      autotrust	 updates  to  remove  revoked trust anchors after they
	      have been	kept in	the revoked list for this long.	 Default is 30
	      days as per the RFC.

       keep-missing: <seconds>
	      Instruct the auto-trust-anchor-file probe	mechanism for  RFC5011
	      autotrust	 updates  to  remove  missing trust anchors after they
	      have been	unseen for this	long.  This cleans up the  state  file
	      if  the target zone does not perform trust anchor	revocation, so
	      this makes the auto probe	mechanism work with zones that perform
	      regular (non-5011) rollovers.  The default  is  366  days.   The
	      value 0 does not remove missing anchors, as per the RFC.

       permit-small-holddown: <yes or no>
	      Debug  option  that allows the autotrust 5011 rollover timers to
	      assume very small	values.	 Default is no.

       key-cache-size: <number>
	      Number of	bytes size of the key cache. Default is	 4  megabytes.
	      A	 plain	number	is  in bytes, append 'k', 'm' or 'g' for kilo-
	      bytes, megabytes or gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in	a megabyte).

       key-cache-slabs:	<number>
	      Number of	slabs in the key cache.	Slabs reduce  lock  contention
	      by threads.  Must	be set to a power of 2.	Setting	(close)	to the
	      number of	cpus is	a reasonable guess.

       neg-cache-size: <number>
	      Number  of  bytes	size of	the aggressive negative	cache. Default
	      is 1 megabyte.  A	plain number is	in bytes, append 'k',  'm'  or
	      'g'  for kilobytes, megabytes or gigabytes (1024*1024 bytes in a
	      megabyte).

       unblock-lan-zones: <yes or no>
	      Default is disabled.   If	 enabled,  then	 for  private  address
	      space,  the reverse lookups are no longer	filtered.  This	allows
	      Local-unbound when running as dns	service	on  a  host  where  it
	      provides	service	 for  that host, to put	out all	of the queries
	      for the 'lan' upstream.  When enabled, only localhost, 127.0.0.1
	      reverse and ::1 reverse zones are	configured with	default	 local
	      zones.   Disable	the  option when Local-unbound is running as a
	      (DHCP-) DNS network resolver for a group of machines, where such
	      lookups should be	filtered (RFC compliance), this	also stops po-
	      tential data leakage about the local network to the upstream DNS
	      servers.

       insecure-lan-zones: <yes	or no>
	      Default is disabled.  If enabled,	then reverse lookups  in  pri-
	      vate  address space are not validated.  This is usually required
	      whenever unblock-lan-zones is used.

       local-zone: <zone> <type>
	      Configure	a local	zone. The type determines the answer  to  give
	      if  there	 is  no	 match	from  local-data.  The types are deny,
	      refuse, static, transparent, redirect, nodefault,	 typetranspar-
	      ent,  inform,  inform_deny, inform_redirect, always_transparent,
	      block_a, always_refuse,  always_nxdomain,	 always_null,  noview,
	      and  are	explained  below.  After that the default settings are
	      listed. Use local-data: to enter data into the local  zone.  An-
	      swers  for local zones are authoritative DNS answers. By default
	      the zones	are class IN.

	      If you need more complicated authoritative data, with referrals,
	      wildcards, CNAME/DNAME support, or DNSSEC	authoritative service,
	      setup a stub-zone	for it as detailed in the  stub	 zone  section
	      below.  A	 stub-zone  can	 be  used  to  have local-unbound send
	      queries to another server, an authoritative server, to fetch the
	      information. With	a forward-zone,	local-unbound sends queries to
	      a	server that is a recursive server to  fetch  the  information.
	      With  an	auth-zone  a zone can be loaded	from file and used, it
	      can be used like a  local-zone  for  users  downstream,  or  the
	      auth-zone	information can	be used	to fetch information from when
	      resolving	 like  it  is an upstream server. The forward-zone and
	      auth-zone	options	are described in their sections	below.	If you
	      want to perform filtering	of the information that	the users  can
	      fetch,  the local-zone and local-data statements allow for this,
	      but also the rpz functionality can be used, described in the RPZ
	      section.

	    deny Do not	send an	answer,	drop the query.	 If there is  a	 match
		 from local data, the query is answered.

	    refuse
		 Send an error message reply, with rcode REFUSED.  If there is
		 a match from local data, the query is answered.

	    static
		 If  there  is a match from local data,	the query is answered.
		 Otherwise, the	query is answered  with	 nodata	 or  nxdomain.
		 For  a	 negative  answer  a  SOA is included in the answer if
		 present as local-data for the zone apex domain.

	    transparent
		 If there is a match from local	data, the query	 is  answered.
		 Otherwise if the query	has a different	name, the query	is re-
		 solved	 normally.  If the query is for	a name given in	local-
		 data but no such type of data is given	in localdata,  then  a
		 noerror nodata	answer is returned.  If	no local-zone is given
		 local-data  causes  a	transparent  zone to be	created	by de-
		 fault.

	    typetransparent
		 If there is a match from local	data, the query	 is  answered.
		 If  the  query	 is for	a different name, or for the same name
		 but for a different type, the	query  is  resolved  normally.
		 So,  similar  to transparent but types	that are not listed in
		 local data are	resolved normally, so if an A record is	in the
		 local data that does  not  cause  a  nodata  reply  for  AAAA
		 queries.

	    redirect
		 The  query is answered	from the local data for	the zone name.
		 There may be no local data beneath the	zone name.   This  an-
		 swers	queries	 for  the zone,	and all	subdomains of the zone
		 with the local	data for the zone.  It can be used to redirect
		 a domain to return a different	 address  record  to  the  end
		 user,	 with  local-zone:  "example.com."  redirect  and  lo-
		 cal-data: "example.com. A 127.0.0.1"  queries	for  www.exam-
		 ple.com and www.foo.example.com are redirected, so that users
		 with  web  browsers  cannot  access  sites  with suffix exam-
		 ple.com.

	    inform
		 The query is answered normally,  same	as  transparent.   The
		 client	 IP  address  (@portnumber) is printed to the logfile.
		 The log message is: timestamp,	local-unbound-pid, info: zone-
		 name inform IP@port queryname type class.  This option	can be
		 used for normal resolution, but machines looking up  infected
		 names are logged, eg. to run antivirus	on them.

	    inform_deny
		 The query is dropped, like 'deny', and	logged,	like 'inform'.
		 Ie. find infected machines without answering the queries.

	    inform_redirect
		 The  query  is	 redirected, like 'redirect', and logged, like
		 'inform'.  Ie.	answer queries with fixed data	and  also  log
		 the machines that ask.

	    always_transparent
		 Like  transparent,  but  ignores local	data and resolves nor-
		 mally.

	    block_a
		 Like transparent, but ignores local data  and	resolves  nor-
		 mally	all query types	excluding A. For A queries it uncondi-
		 tionally returns NODATA.  Useful in cases  when  there	 is  a
		 need  to  explicitly  force all apps to use IPv6 protocol and
		 avoid any queries to IPv4.

	    always_refuse
		 Like refuse, but ignores local	data and refuses the query.

	    always_nxdomain
		 Like static, but ignores local	data and returns nxdomain  for
		 the query.

	    always_nodata
		 Like  static,	but  ignores local data	and returns nodata for
		 the query.

	    always_deny
		 Like deny, but	ignores	local data and drops the query.

	    always_null
		 Always	returns	0.0.0.0	or ::0 for every  name	in  the	 zone.
		 Like  redirect	 with zero data	for A and AAAA.	 Ignores local
		 data in the zone.  Used for some block	lists.

	    noview
		 Breaks	out of that view and moves towards  the	 global	 local
		 zones	for  answer  to	 the  query.  If the view first	is no,
		 it'll resolve normally.  If  view  first  is  enabled,	 it'll
		 break	perform	 that  step and	check the global answers.  For
		 when the view has view	specific overrides but some  zone  has
		 to be answered	from global local zone contents.

	    nodefault
		 Used  to turn off default contents for	AS112 zones. The other
		 types also turn off default contents for the zone. The	'node-
		 fault'	option has no other effect than	 turning  off  default
		 contents  for	the  given zone.  Use nodefault	if you use ex-
		 actly that zone, if you want to use a subzone,	use  transpar-
		 ent.

       The  default  zones  are	 localhost,  reverse  127.0.0.1	 and  ::1, the
       home.arpa, the resolver.arpa, the service.arpa, the  onion,  test,  in-
       valid  and  the	AS112 zones. The AS112 zones are reverse DNS zones for
       private use and reserved	IP addresses for which the servers on the  in-
       ternet  cannot  provide correct answers.	They are configured by default
       to give nxdomain	(no reverse information) answers. The defaults can  be
       turned off by specifying	your own local-zone of that name, or using the
       'nodefault' type. Below is a list of the	default	zone contents.

	    localhost
		 The  IP4  and	IP6 localhost information is given. NS and SOA
		 records are provided for completeness and to satisfy some DNS
		 update	tools. Default content:
		 local-zone: "localhost." redirect
		 local-data: "localhost. 10800 IN NS localhost."
		 local-data: "localhost. 10800 IN
		     SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200	604800 10800"
		 local-data: "localhost. 10800 IN A 127.0.0.1"
		 local-data: "localhost. 10800 IN AAAA ::1"

	    reverse IPv4 loopback
		 Default content:
		 local-zone: "127.in-addr.arpa." static
		 local-data: "127.in-addr.arpa.	10800 IN NS localhost."
		 local-data: "127.in-addr.arpa.	10800 IN
		     SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200	604800 10800"
		 local-data: "1.0.0.127.in-addr.arpa. 10800 IN
		     PTR localhost."

	    reverse IPv6 loopback
		 Default content:
		 local-zone: "1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
		     0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa." static
		 local-data: "1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
		     0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa. 10800 IN
		     NS	localhost."
		 local-data: "1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
		     0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa. 10800 IN
		     SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200	604800 10800"
		 local-data: "1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
		     0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa. 10800 IN
		     PTR localhost."

	    home.arpa (RFC 8375)
		 Default content:
		 local-zone: "home.arpa." static
		 local-data: "home.arpa. 10800 IN NS localhost."
		 local-data: "home.arpa. 10800 IN
		     SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200	604800 10800"

	    resolver.arpa (RFC 9462)
		 Default content:
		 local-zone: "resolver.arpa." static
		 local-data: "resolver.arpa. 10800 IN NS localhost."
		 local-data: "resolver.arpa. 10800 IN
		     SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200	604800 10800"

	    service.arpa (draft-ietf-dnssd-srp-25)
		 Default content:
		 local-zone: "service.arpa." static
		 local-data: "service.arpa. 10800 IN NS	localhost."
		 local-data: "service.arpa. 10800 IN
		     SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200	604800 10800"

	    onion (RFC 7686)
		 Default content:
		 local-zone: "onion." static
		 local-data: "onion. 10800 IN NS localhost."
		 local-data: "onion. 10800 IN
		     SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200	604800 10800"

	    test (RFC 6761)
		 Default content:
		 local-zone: "test." static
		 local-data: "test. 10800 IN NS	localhost."
		 local-data: "test. 10800 IN
		     SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200	604800 10800"

	    invalid (RFC 6761)
		 Default content:
		 local-zone: "invalid."	static
		 local-data: "invalid. 10800 IN	NS localhost."
		 local-data: "invalid. 10800 IN
		     SOA localhost. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200	604800 10800"

	    reverse RFC1918 local use zones
		 Reverse data for zones	 10.in-addr.arpa,  16.172.in-addr.arpa
		 to   31.172.in-addr.arpa,   168.192.in-addr.arpa.    The  lo-
		 cal-zone: is set static and as	local-data: SOA	and NS records
		 are provided.

	    reverse RFC3330 IP4	this, link-local, testnet and broadcast
		 Reverse data for zones	0.in-addr.arpa,	 254.169.in-addr.arpa,
		 2.0.192.in-addr.arpa  (TEST  NET  1), 100.51.198.in-addr.arpa
		 (TEST	NET   2),   113.0.203.in-addr.arpa   (TEST   NET   3),
		 255.255.255.255.in-addr.arpa.	 And  from 64.100.in-addr.arpa
		 to 127.100.in-addr.arpa (Shared Address Space).

	    reverse RFC4291 IP6	unspecified
		 Reverse data for zone
		 0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
		 0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.arpa.

	    reverse RFC4193 IPv6 Locally Assigned Local	Addresses
		 Reverse data for zone D.F.ip6.arpa.

	    reverse RFC4291 IPv6 Link Local Addresses
		 Reverse data for zones	8.E.F.ip6.arpa to B.E.F.ip6.arpa.

	    reverse IPv6 Example Prefix
		 Reverse data for zone 8.B.D.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa. This zone  is
		 used  for tutorials and examples. You can remove the block on
		 this zone with:
		   local-zone: 8.B.D.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa. nodefault
		 You can also selectively unblock a part of the	zone by	making
		 that part transparent with a local-zone statement.  This also
		 works with the	other default zones.

       local-data: "<resource record string>"
	    Configure local data, which	is served in reply to queries for  it.
	    The	query has to match exactly unless you configure	the local-zone
	    as	redirect.  If  not matched exactly, the	local-zone type	deter-
	    mines further processing. If local-data is configured that is  not
	    a  subdomain  of a local-zone, a transparent local-zone is config-
	    ured.  For record types such as TXT, use single quotes, as in  lo-
	    cal-data: 'example.	TXT "text"'.

	    If	you  need more complicated authoritative data, with referrals,
	    wildcards, CNAME/DNAME support, or DNSSEC  authoritative  service,
	    setup  a stub-zone for it as detailed in the stub zone section be-
	    low.

       local-data-ptr: "IPaddr name"
	    Configure local data shorthand for a PTR record with the  reversed
	    IPv4  or  IPv6  address and	the host name.	For example "192.0.2.4
	    www.example.com".  TTL can be  inserted  like  this:  "2001:DB8::4
	    7200 www.example.com"

       local-zone-tag: <zone> <"list of	tags">
	    Assign  tags to localzones.	Tagged localzones will only be applied
	    when the used access-control element has a matching	tag. Tags must
	    be defined in define-tags.	Enclose	list of	tags  in  quotes  ("")
	    and	 put  spaces  between  tags.   When there are multiple tags it
	    checks if the intersection of the list of tags for the  query  and
	    local-zone-tag is non-empty.

       local-zone-override: <zone> <IP netblock> <type>
	    Override  the  localzone  type for queries from addresses matching
	    netblock.  Use this	localzone type,	regardless the type configured
	    for	the local-zone (both tagged and	untagged) and  regardless  the
	    type configured using access-control-tag-action.

       response-ip: <IP-netblock> <action>
	    This requires use of the "respip" module.

	    If	the  IP	 address in an AAAA or A RR in the answer section of a
	    response matches the specified IP netblock,	the  specified	action
	    will apply.	 <action> has generally	the same semantics as that for
	    access-control-tag-action, but there are some exceptions.

	    Actions for	response-ip are	different from those for local-zone in
	    that in case of the	former there is	no point of such conditions as
	    "the  query	 matches  it  but there	is no local data".  Because of
	    this difference, the semantics of response-ip actions are modified
	    or simplified as follows: The static, refuse,  transparent,	 type-
	    transparent,  and  nodefault  actions are invalid for response-ip.
	    Using any of these will cause the configuration to be rejected  as
	    faulty. The	deny action is non-conditional,	i.e. it	always results
	    in dropping	the corresponding query.  The resolution result	before
	    applying the deny action is	still cached and can be	used for other
	    queries.

       response-ip-data: <IP-netblock> <"resource record string">
	    This requires use of the "respip" module.

	    This  specifies  the action	data for response-ip with action being
	    to redirect	as specified by	"resource record  string".   "Resource
	    record  string"  is	 similar to that of access-control-tag-action,
	    but	it must	be of either AAAA, A or	CNAME types.  If  the  IP-net-
	    block  is  an  IPv6/IPv4 prefix, the record	must be	AAAA/A respec-
	    tively, unless it is a CNAME (which	can be used for	both  versions
	    of	IP netblocks).	If it is CNAME there must not be more than one
	    response-ip-data for the same IP-netblock.	Also, CNAME and	 other
	    types  of  records must not	coexist	for the	same IP-netblock, fol-
	    lowing the normal rules for	CNAME  records.	  The  textual	domain
	    name  for the CNAME	does not have to be explicitly terminated with
	    a dot ("."); the root name is assumed to be	 the  origin  for  the
	    name.

       response-ip-tag:	<IP-netblock> <"list of	tags">
	    This requires use of the "respip" module.

	    Assign  tags  to  response	IP-netblocks.  If the IP address in an
	    AAAA or A RR in the	answer section of a response matches the spec-
	    ified IP-netblock, the specified tags are assigned to the  IP  ad-
	    dress.   Then,  if an access-control-tag is	defined	for the	client
	    and	it includes one	of the tags for	the response  IP,  the	corre-
	    sponding  access-control-tag-action	will apply.  Tag matching rule
	    is the same	as that	for access-control-tag and  local-zones.   Un-
	    like local-zone-tag, response-ip-tag can be	defined	for an IP-net-
	    block  even	 if  no	 response-ip is	defined	for that netblock.  If
	    multiple response-ip-tag options are specified for	the  same  IP-
	    netblock  in  different  statements, all but the first will	be ig-
	    nored.  However, this will not be flagged as a  configuration  er-
	    ror, but the result	is probably not	what was intended.

	    Actions  specified	in  an	access-control-tag-action  that	 has a
	    matching tag with response-ip-tag can be those that	are  "invalid"
	    for	response-ip listed above, since	access-control-tag-actions can
	    be	shared	with  local  zones.  For these actions,	if they	behave
	    differently	depending on whether local data	exists or not in  case
	    of	local  zones, the behavior for response-ip-data	will generally
	    result in NOERROR/NODATA instead of	NXDOMAIN, since	the  response-
	    ip	data  are  inherently type specific, and non-existence of data
	    does not indicate anything about the existence or non-existence of
	    the	qname itself.  For example, if the matching tag	action is sta-
	    tic	but there is no	data for the corresponding response-ip config-
	    uration, then the result will be NOERROR/NODATA.   The  only  case
	    where  NXDOMAIN  is	returned is when an always_nxdomain action ap-
	    plies.

       ratelimit: <number or 0>
	    Enable ratelimiting	of queries sent	to nameserver  for  performing
	    recursion.	If 0, the default, it is disabled.  This option	is ex-
	    perimental	at  this time.	The ratelimit is in queries per	second
	    that are allowed.  More queries are	 turned	 away  with  an	 error
	    (servfail).	  This stops recursive floods, eg. random query	names,
	    but	not spoofed reflection floods.	Cached responses are not rate-
	    limited by this setting.  The zone of the query is	determined  by
	    examining  the  nameservers	 for it, the zone name is used to keep
	    track of the rate.	For example, 1000 may be a suitable  value  to
	    stop the server from being overloaded with random names, and keeps
	    Local-unbound  from	 sending  traffic to the nameservers for those
	    zones.  Configured forwarders are excluded from ratelimiting.

       ratelimit-size: <memory size>
	    Give the size of the data structure	in which the  current  ongoing
	    rates  are	kept  track in.	 Default 4m.  In bytes or use m(mega),
	    k(kilo), g(giga).  The ratelimit structure is small, so this  data
	    structure likely does not need to be large.

       ratelimit-slabs:	<number>
	    Give  power	of 2 number of slabs, this is used to reduce lock con-
	    tention in the ratelimit tracking data structure.	Close  to  the
	    number of cpus is a	fairly good setting.

       ratelimit-factor: <number>
	    Set	 the  amount  of  queries  to rate limit when the limit	is ex-
	    ceeded.  If	set to 0, all queries are dropped  for	domains	 where
	    the	 limit is exceeded.  If	set to another value, 1	in that	number
	    is allowed through to complete.   Default  is  10,	allowing  1/10
	    traffic to flow normally.  This can	make ordinary queries complete
	    (if	repeatedly queried for), and enter the cache, whilst also mit-
	    igating the	traffic	flow by	the factor given.

       ratelimit-backoff: <yes or no>
	    If	enabled, the ratelimit is treated as a hard failure instead of
	    the	default	maximum	allowed	constant  rate.	  When	the  limit  is
	    reached,  traffic  is  ratelimited and demand continues to be kept
	    track of for a 2 second rate window.  No traffic is	 allowed,  ex-
	    cept  for  ratelimit-factor, until demand decreases	below the con-
	    figured ratelimit for a 2 second rate window.  Useful to set rate-
	    limit to a suspicious rate to aggressively	limit  unusually  high
	    traffic.  Default is off.

       ratelimit-for-domain: <domain> <number qps or 0>
	    Override  the global ratelimit for an exact	match domain name with
	    the	listed number.	You can	give this for  any  number  of	names.
	    For	 example, for a	top-level-domain you may want to have a	higher
	    limit than other names.  A value of	0  will	 disable  ratelimiting
	    for	that domain.

       ratelimit-below-domain: <domain>	<number	qps or 0>
	    Override  the global ratelimit for a domain	name that ends in this
	    name.  You can give	this multiple times, it	then describes differ-
	    ent	settings in different parts of	the  namespace.	  The  closest
	    matching  suffix is	used to	determine the qps limit.  The rate for
	    the	 exact	matching  domain  name	is  not	 changed,  use	 rate-
	    limit-for-domain to	set that, you might want to use	different set-
	    tings  for	a  top-level-domain and	subdomains.  A value of	0 will
	    disable ratelimiting for domain names that end in this name.

       ip-ratelimit: <number or	0>
	    Enable global ratelimiting of queries  accepted  per  IP  address.
	    This  option  is  experimental  at this time.  The ratelimit is in
	    queries per	second that are	allowed.  More queries are  completely
	    dropped  and  will not receive a reply, SERVFAIL or	otherwise.  IP
	    ratelimiting happens before	looking	in the cache. This may be use-
	    ful	for mitigating amplification attacks.  Clients	with  a	 valid
	    DNS	 Cookie	 will  bypass  the ratelimit.  If a ratelimit for such
	    clients is still needed, ip-ratelimit-cookie can be	used  instead.
	    Default is 0 (disabled).

       ip-ratelimit-cookie: <number or 0>
	    Enable global ratelimiting of queries accepted per IP address with
	    a  valid  DNS  Cookie.   This option is experimental at this time.
	    The	ratelimit is in	queries	per second  that  are  allowed.	  More
	    queries are	completely dropped and will not	receive	a reply, SERV-
	    FAIL  or otherwise.	 IP ratelimiting happens before	looking	in the
	    cache.  This option	 could	be  useful  in	combination  with  al-
	    low_cookie	in  an attempt to mitigate other amplification attacks
	    than UDP reflections (e.g.,	attacks	 targeting  Local-unbound  it-
	    self)  which  are  already handled with DNS	Cookies.  If used, the
	    value is suggested to be higher than ip-ratelimit  e.g.,  tenfold.
	    Default is 0 (disabled).

       ip-ratelimit-size: <memory size>
	    Give  the  size of the data	structure in which the current ongoing
	    rates are kept track in.  Default 4m.  In bytes  or	 use  m(mega),
	    k(kilo),  g(giga).	 The  ip ratelimit structure is	small, so this
	    data structure likely does not need	to be large.

       ip-ratelimit-slabs: <number>
	    Give power of 2 number of slabs, this is used to reduce lock  con-
	    tention in the ip ratelimit	tracking data structure.  Close	to the
	    number of cpus is a	fairly good setting.

       ip-ratelimit-factor: <number>
	    Set	 the  amount  of  queries  to rate limit when the limit	is ex-
	    ceeded.  If	set to 0, all queries are dropped for addresses	 where
	    the	 limit is exceeded.  If	set to another value, 1	in that	number
	    is allowed through to complete.   Default  is  10,	allowing  1/10
	    traffic to flow normally.  This can	make ordinary queries complete
	    (if	repeatedly queried for), and enter the cache, whilst also mit-
	    igating the	traffic	flow by	the factor given.

       ip-ratelimit-backoff: <yes or no>
	    If	enabled, the ratelimit is treated as a hard failure instead of
	    the	default	maximum	allowed	constant  rate.	  When	the  limit  is
	    reached,  traffic  is  ratelimited and demand continues to be kept
	    track of for a 2 second rate window.  No traffic is	 allowed,  ex-
	    cept  for  ip-ratelimit-factor,  until  demand decreases below the
	    configured ratelimit for a 2 second	rate window.   Useful  to  set
	    ip-ratelimit  to a suspicious rate to aggressively limit unusually
	    high traffic.  Default is off.

       outbound-msg-retry: <number>
	    The	number of retries, per upstream	nameserver  in	a  delegation,
	    that  Unbound  will	 attempt  in  case a throwaway response	is re-
	    ceived.  No	response (timeout) contributes to the  retry  counter.
	    If	a forward/stub zone is used, this is the number	of retries per
	    nameserver in the zone.  Default is	5.

       max-sent-count: <number>
	    Hard limit on the number of	outgoing  queries  Local-unbound  will
	    make  while	 resolving  a  name,  making sure large	NS sets	do not
	    loop.  Results in SERVFAIL	when  reached.	 It  resets  on	 query
	    restarts (e.g., CNAME) and referrals.  Default is 32.

       max-query-restarts: <number>
	    Hard  limit	 on  the  number  of times Local-unbound is allowed to
	    restart a query upon encountering  a  CNAME	 record.   Results  in
	    SERVFAIL  when  reached.   Changing	this value needs caution as it
	    can	allow long CNAME chains	to be  accepted,  where	 Local-unbound
	    needs to verify (resolve) each link	individually.  Default is 11.

       iter-scrub-ns: <number>
	    Limit  on the number of NS records allowed in an rrset of type NS,
	    from the iterator scrubber.	This protects the internals of the re-
	    solver from	overly large NS	sets. Default is 20.

       iter-scrub-cname: <number>
	    Limit on the number	of CNAME, DNAME	records	in an answer, from the
	    iterator scrubber. This protects the  internals  of	 the  resolver
	    from  overly  long	indirection chains. Clips off the remainder of
	    the	reply packet at	that point.  Default is	11.

       max-global-quota: <number>
	    Limit on the number	of upstream queries sent out for  an  incoming
	    query  and	its  subqueries	from recursion.	It is not reset	during
	    the	resolution. When it is exceeded	the query is  failed  and  the
	    lookup process stops.  Default is 200.

       fast-server-permil: <number>
	    Specify how	many times out of 1000 to pick from the	set of fastest
	    servers.  0	turns the feature off.	A value	of 900 would pick from
	    the	fastest	servers	90 percent of the time,	and would perform nor-
	    mal	 exploration  of  random  servers for the remaining time. When
	    prefetch is	enabled	(or serve-expired), such  prefetches  are  not
	    sped up, because there is no one waiting for it, and it presents a
	    good moment	to perform server exploration. The fast-server-num op-
	    tion  can  be used to specify the size of the fastest servers set.
	    The	default	for fast-server-permil is 0.

       fast-server-num:	<number>
	    Set	the number of servers that should be used for fast server  se-
	    lection. Only use the fastest specified number of servers with the
	    fast-server-permil	option,	that turns this	on or off. The default
	    is to use the fastest 3 servers.

       answer-cookie: <yes or no>
	    If enabled,	Local-unbound will answer to requests  containing  DNS
	    Cookies as specified in RFC	7873 and RFC 9018.  Default is no.

       cookie-secret: <128 bit hex string>
	    Server's  secret  for DNS Cookie generation.  Useful to explicitly
	    set	for servers in an anycast deployment that need	to  share  the
	    secret in order to verify each other's Server Cookies.  An example
	    hex	 string	 would be "000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f".  Default
	    is a 128 bits random secret	generated at startup time.   This  op-
	    tion  is ignored if	a cookie-secret-file is	present.  In that case
	    the	secrets	from that file are used	in DNS Cookie calculations.

       cookie-secret-file: <filename>
	    File from which the	secrets	are read used in DNS  Cookie  calcula-
	    tions.  When  this	file exists, the secrets in this file are used
	    and	the secret specified by	the cookie-secret option  is  ignored.
	    Enable   it	  by  setting  a  filename,  like  "/usr/local/etc/un-
	    bound_cookiesecrets.txt".  The content of this file	must be	manip-
	    ulated with	the add_cookie_secret,	drop_cookie_secret  and	 acti-
	    vate_cookie_secret	commands to the	local-unbound-control(8) tool.
	    Please see that manpage on how to perform  a  safe	cookie	secret
	    rollover.  Default is "" (disabled).

       edns-client-string: <IP netblock> <string>
	    Include  an	 EDNS0	option	containing  configured ascii string in
	    queries with destination address matching the configured  IP  net-
	    block.   This configuration	option can be used multiple times. The
	    most specific match	will be	used.

       edns-client-string-opcode: <opcode>
	    EDNS0 option code for the edns-client-string  option,  from	 0  to
	    65535.   A	value from the `Reserved for Local/Experimental` range
	    (65001-65534) should be used.  Default is 65001.

       ede: <yes or no>
	    If enabled,	Local-unbound will respond  with  Extended  DNS	 Error
	    codes (RFC8914).  These EDEs provide additional information	with a
	    response mainly for, but not limited to, DNS and DNSSEC errors.

	    When the val-log-level option is also set to 2, responses with Ex-
	    tended  DNS	 Errors	concerning DNSSEC failures will	also contain a
	    descriptive	text message about the reason for  the	failure.   De-
	    fault is "no".

       ede-serve-expired: <yes or no>
	    If	enabled,  Local-unbound	 will  attach  an  Extended  DNS Error
	    (RFC8914) Code 3 - Stale Answer as EDNS0 option to the expired re-
	    sponse.  The ede option needs to be	enabled	as well	 for  this  to
	    work.  Default is "no".

       dns-error-reporting: <yes or no>
	    If	enabled,  Local-unbound	will send DNS Error Reports (RFC9567).
	    The	name servers need to express support by	attaching the  Report-
	    Channel  EDNS0  option  on	their replies specifying the reporting
	    agent for the zone.	 Any errors encountered	during resolution that
	    would result in Unbound generating an Extended DNS Error (RFC8914)
	    will be reported to	the zone's reporting agent.   The  ede	option
	    does  not need to be enabled for this to work.  It is advised that
	    the	qname-minimisation option is also enabled to increase  privacy
	    on the outgoing reports.  Default is "no".

   Remote Control Options
       In  the remote-control: clause are the declarations for the remote con-
       trol facility.  If this is enabled, the local-unbound-control(8)	 util-
       ity  can	 be used to send commands to the running Local-unbound server.
       The server uses these clauses to	setup TLSv1 security for  the  connec-
       tion.   The local-unbound-control(8) utility also reads the remote-con-
       trol section for	options.  To setup the	correct	 self-signed  certifi-
       cates use the local-unbound-control-setup(8) utility.

       control-enable: <yes or no>
	    The	 option	is used	to enable remote control, default is "no".  If
	    turned off,	the server does	not listen for control commands.

       control-interface: <ip address or interface name	or path>
	    Give IPv4 or IPv6 addresses	or local socket	path to	listen on  for
	    control  commands.	 If an interface name is used instead of an ip
	    address, the list of ip addresses on that interface	are used.   By
	    default localhost (127.0.0.1 and ::1) is listened to.  Use 0.0.0.0
	    and	 ::0 to	listen to all interfaces.  If you change this and per-
	    missions have been dropped,	you must restart the  server  for  the
	    change to take effect.

	    If	you  set it to an absolute path, a unix	domain socket is used.
	    This socket	does not use the certificates and keys,	so those files
	    need not be	present.  To restrict access, Local-unbound sets  per-
	    missions on	the file to the	user and group that is configured, the
	    access  bits are set to allow the group members to access the con-
	    trol socket	file.  Put users that need to access the socket	in the
	    that group.	 To restrict access further, create a directory	to put
	    the	control	socket in and restrict access to that directory.

       control-port: <port number>
	    The	port number to listen on for IPv4 or IPv6 control  interfaces,
	    default  is	 8953.	 If  you change	this and permissions have been
	    dropped, you must restart the server for the change	 to  take  ef-
	    fect.

       control-use-cert: <yes or no>
	    For	 localhost control-interface you can disable the use of	TLS by
	    setting this option	to "no", default is "yes".  For	local sockets,
	    TLS	is disabled and	the value of this option is ignored.

       server-key-file:	<private key file>
	    Path to the	server private	key,  by  default  unbound_server.key.
	    This file is generated by the local-unbound-control-setup utility.
	    This  file	is used	by the Local-unbound server, but not by	local-
	    unbound-control.

       server-cert-file: <certificate file.pem>
	    Path to  the  server  self	signed	certificate,  by  default  un-
	    bound_server.pem.	 This  file  is	 generated  by	the  local-un-
	    bound-control-setup	utility.  This file is used by	the  Local-un-
	    bound server, and also by local-unbound-control.

       control-key-file: <private key file>
	    Path  to  the  control client private key, by default unbound_con-
	    trol.key.	This  file  is	generated  by  the  local-unbound-con-
	    trol-setup utility.	 This file is used by local-unbound-control.

       control-cert-file: <certificate file.pem>
	    Path  to  the  control client certificate, by default unbound_con-
	    trol.pem.  This certificate	has to be signed with the server  cer-
	    tificate.	This  file  is	generated  by  the  local-unbound-con-
	    trol-setup utility.	 This file is used by local-unbound-control.

   Stub	Zone Options
       There may be multiple stub-zone:	clauses. Each with a name: and zero or
       more hostnames or IP addresses.	For the	stub zone this list  of	 name-
       servers	is used. Class IN is assumed.  The servers should be authority
       servers,	not recursors; Local-unbound performs the recursive processing
       itself for stub zones.

       The stub	zone can be used to configure authoritative data to be used by
       the resolver that cannot	be accessed using the public internet servers.
       This is useful for company-local	data or	private	zones.	Setup  an  au-
       thoritative  server  on	a  different host (or different	port). Enter a
       config  entry  for  Local-unbound  with	stub-addr:  <ip	  address   of
       host[@port]>.   The  Local-unbound  resolver  can then access the data,
       without referring to the	public internet	for it.

       This setup allows DNSSEC	signed zones to	be served by  that  authorita-
       tive  server, in	which case a trusted key entry with the	public key can
       be put in config, so that Local-unbound can validate the	data  and  set
       the  AD	bit  on	replies	for the	private	zone (authoritative servers do
       not set the AD bit).  This setup	makes Local-unbound capable of answer-
       ing queries for the private zone, and can even set the AD bit ('authen-
       tic'), but the AA ('authoritative') bit is not set on these replies.

       Consider	adding server: statements for  domain-insecure:	 and  for  lo-
       cal-zone:  name	nodefault for the zone if it is	a locally served zone.
       The insecure clause stops DNSSEC	from invalidating the zone.  The local
       zone nodefault (or transparent) clause makes the	(reverse-) zone	bypass
       Local-unbound's filtering of RFC1918 zones.

       name: <domain name>
	      Name of the stub zone. This is the full domain name of the zone.

       stub-host: <domain name>
	      Name of stub zone	nameserver. Is itself resolved	before	it  is
	      used.  To	use a nondefault port for DNS communication append '@'
	      with  the	port number.  If tls is	enabled, then you can append a
	      '#' and a	name, then it'll check the tls authentication certifi-
	      cates with that name.  If	you combine the	'@' and	'#',  the  '@'
	      comes  first.   If only '#' is used the default port is the con-
	      figured tls-port.

       stub-addr: <IP address>
	      IP address of stub zone nameserver. Can be IP 4 or IP 6.	To use
	      a	nondefault port	for DNS	communication append '@' with the port
	      number.  If tls is enabled, then you can	append	a  '#'	and  a
	      name,  then it'll	check the tls authentication certificates with
	      that name.  If you combine the '@' and '#', the '@' comes	first.
	      If only '#' is used the default port is the configured tls-port.

       stub-prime: <yes	or no>
	      This option is by	default	no.  If	enabled	 it  performs  NS  set
	      priming,	which  is similar to root hints, where it starts using
	      the list of nameservers currently	published by the zone.	 Thus,
	      if  the  hint list is slightly outdated, the resolver picks up a
	      correct list online.

       stub-first: <yes	or no>
	      If enabled, a query is attempted without the stub	clause	if  it
	      fails.   The  data  could	not be retrieved and would have	caused
	      SERVFAIL because the servers  are	 unreachable,  instead	it  is
	      tried without this clause.  The default is no.

       stub-tls-upstream: <yes or no>
	      Enabled  or disable whether the queries to this stub use TLS for
	      transport.  Default is no.

       stub-ssl-upstream: <yes or no>
	      Alternate	syntax for stub-tls-upstream.

       stub-tcp-upstream: <yes or no>
	      If it is set to "yes" then upstream queries  use	TCP  only  for
	      transport	 regardless  of	 global	flag tcp-upstream.  Default is
	      no.

       stub-no-cache: <yes or no>
	      Default is no.  If enabled, data inside the stub is not  cached.
	      This is useful when you want immediate changes to	be visible.

   Forward Zone	Options
       There may be multiple forward-zone: clauses. Each with a	name: and zero
       or  more	 hostnames or IP addresses.  For the forward zone this list of
       nameservers is used to forward the queries to. The  servers  listed  as
       forward-host:  and  forward-addr:  have to handle further recursion for
       the query.  Thus, those servers are  not	 authority  servers,  but  are
       (just  like Local-unbound is) recursive servers too; Local-unbound does
       not perform recursion itself for	the forward zone, it lets  the	remote
       server do it.  Class IN is assumed.  CNAMEs are chased by Local-unbound
       itself,	asking	the  remote  server  for every name in the indirection
       chain, to protect the local  cache  from	 illegal  indirect  referenced
       items.	A  forward-zone	 entry with name "." and a forward-addr	target
       will forward all	queries	to that	other server  (unless  it  can	answer
       from the	cache).

       name: <domain name>
	      Name  of	the  forward zone. This	is the full domain name	of the
	      zone.

       forward-host: <domain name>
	      Name of server to	forward	to. Is itself resolved	before	it  is
	      used.  To	use a nondefault port for DNS communication append '@'
	      with  the	port number.  If tls is	enabled, then you can append a
	      '#' and a	name, then it'll check the tls authentication certifi-
	      cates with that name.  If	you combine the	'@' and	'#',  the  '@'
	      comes  first.   If only '#' is used the default port is the con-
	      figured tls-port.

       forward-addr: <IP address>
	      IP address of server to forward to. Can be IP 4 or IP 6.	To use
	      a	nondefault port	for DNS	communication append '@' with the port
	      number.  If tls is enabled, then you can	append	a  '#'	and  a
	      name,  then it'll	check the tls authentication certificates with
	      that name.  If you combine the '@' and '#', the '@' comes	first.
	      If only '#' is used the default port is the configured tls-port.

	      At high verbosity	it logs	the TLS	certificate, with TLS enabled.
	      If you leave out the '#' and auth	name  from  the	 forward-addr,
	      any  name	 is  accepted.	The cert must also match a CA from the
	      tls-cert-bundle.

       forward-first: <yes or no>
	      If a forwarded query is met with a SERVFAIL error, and this  op-
	      tion  is	enabled, Local-unbound will fall back to normal	recur-
	      sive resolution for this query as	if  no	query  forwarding  had
	      been specified.  The default is "no".

       forward-tls-upstream: <yes or no>
	      Enabled or disable whether the queries to	this forwarder use TLS
	      for transport.  Default is no.  If you enable this, also config-
	      ure a tls-cert-bundle or use tls-win-cert	to load	CA certs, oth-
	      erwise the connections cannot be authenticated.

       forward-ssl-upstream: <yes or no>
	      Alternate	syntax for forward-tls-upstream.

       forward-tcp-upstream: <yes or no>
	      If  it  is  set  to "yes"	then upstream queries use TCP only for
	      transport	regardless of global flag  tcp-upstream.   Default  is
	      no.

       forward-no-cache: <yes or no>
	      Default  is  no.	 If  enabled,  data  inside the	forward	is not
	      cached.  This is useful when you want immediate  changes	to  be
	      visible.

   Authority Zone Options
       Authority  zones	are configured with auth-zone:,	and each one must have
       a name:.	 There can be multiple ones,  by  listing  multiple  auth-zone
       clauses,	 each  with  a	different name,	pertaining to that part	of the
       namespace.  The authority zone with the name closest to the name	looked
       up is used.  Authority zones can	be processed on	two distinct,  non-ex-
       clusive,	configurable stages.

       With for-downstream: yes	(default), authority zones are processed after
       local-zones  and	before cache.  When used in this manner, Local-unbound
       responds	like an	authority server with no further processing other than
       returning an answer from	the zone contents.  A notable example, in this
       case, is	CNAME  records	which  are  returned  verbatim	to  downstream
       clients without further resolution.

       With  for-upstream:  yes	(default), authority zones are processed after
       the cache lookup, just before going to the network to fetch information
       for recursion.  When used in this manner	they provide a local  copy  of
       an authority server that	speeds up lookups for that data	during resolv-
       ing.

       If  both	options	are enabled (default), client queries for an authority
       zone are	answered authoritatively from  Local-unbound,  while  internal
       queries	that  require  data  from the authority	zone consult the local
       zone data instead of going to the network.

       An interesting configuration is for-downstream: no,  for-upstream:  yes
       that  allows  for  hyperlocal  behavior	where both client and internal
       queries consult the local zone data while resolving.  In	this case, the
       aforementioned CNAME example will result	in a thoroughly	 resolved  an-
       swer.

       Authority zones can be read from	zonefile.  And can be kept updated via
       AXFR  and  IXFR.	  After	 update	the zonefile is	rewritten.  The	update
       mechanism uses the SOA timer values and performs	SOA UDP	queries	to de-
       tect zone changes.

       If the update fetch fails, the timers in	the SOA	 record	 are  used  to
       time  another  fetch  attempt.	Until the SOA expiry timer is reached.
       Then the	zone is	expired.  When a zone is expired,  queries  are	 SERV-
       FAIL,  and  any new serial number is accepted from the primary (even if
       older), and if fallback is enabled, the	fallback  activates  to	 fetch
       from the	upstream instead of the	SERVFAIL.

       name: <zone name>
	      Name of the authority zone.

       primary:	<IP address or host name>
	      Where  to	 download a copy of the	zone from, with	AXFR and IXFR.
	      Multiple primaries can be	specified.  They are all tried if  one
	      fails.   To  use	a nondefault port for DNS communication	append
	      '@' with the port	number.	 You can append	a '#' and a name, then
	      AXFR over	TLS can	be used	and the	 tls  authentication  certifi-
	      cates  will  be  checked with that name.	If you combine the '@'
	      and '#', the '@' comes first.  If	you point it at	another	Local-
	      unbound instance,	it would not work because that does  not  sup-
	      port  AXFR/IXFR  for  the	zone, but if you used url: to download
	      the zonefile as a	text file from a webserver  that  would	 work.
	      If  you specify the hostname, you	cannot use the domain from the
	      zonefile,	because	it may not  have  that	when  retrieving  that
	      data,  instead use a plain IP address to avoid a circular	depen-
	      dency on retrieving that IP address.

       master: <IP address or host name>
	      Alternate	syntax for primary.

       url: <url to zonefile>
	      Where to download	a zonefile for the zone.  With http or	https.
	      An   example   for   the	url  is	 "http://www.example.com/exam-
	      ple.org.zone".  Multiple url statements can be given,  they  are
	      tried  in	turn.  If only urls are	given the SOA refresh timer is
	      used to wait for making new downloads.  If  also	primaries  are
	      listed,  the  primaries are first	probed with UDP	SOA queries to
	      see if the SOA serial number has changed,	reducing the number of
	      downloads.  If none of the urls work, the	 primaries  are	 tried
	      with  IXFR  and  AXFR.   For  https, the tls-cert-bundle and the
	      hostname from the	url are	used to	authenticate  the  connection.
	      If  you specify a	hostname in the	URL, you cannot	use the	domain
	      from the zonefile, because it may	not have that when  retrieving
	      that  data,  instead  use	a plain	IP address to avoid a circular
	      dependency on retrieving that IP address.	 Avoid dependencies on
	      name lookups by using a notation like "http://192.0.2.1/unbound-
	      primaries/example.com.zone", with	an explicit IP address.

       allow-notify: <IP address or host name or netblockIP/prefix>
	      With allow-notify	you can	specify	additional  sources  of	 noti-
	      fies.   When  notified,  the  server attempts to first probe and
	      then zone	transfer.  If the notify is from a primary,  it	 first
	      attempts that primary.  Otherwise	other primaries	are attempted.
	      If there are no primaries, but only urls,	the file is downloaded
	      when  notified.  The primaries from primary: and url: statements
	      are allowed notify by default.

       fallback-enabled: <yes or no>
	      Default no.  If enabled, Local-unbound falls  back  to  querying
	      the internet as a	resolver for this zone when lookups fail.  For
	      example for DNSSEC validation failures.

       for-downstream: <yes or no>
	      Default  yes.   If  enabled,  Local-unbound serves authority re-
	      sponses to downstream clients for	this zone.  This option	 makes
	      Local-unbound  behave,  for the queries with names in this zone,
	      like one of the authority	servers	for that zone.	Turn it	off if
	      you want Local-unbound to	provide	recursion  for	the  zone  but
	      have  a  local  copy  of zone data.  If for-downstream is	no and
	      for-upstream is yes, then	Local-unbound will DNSSEC validate the
	      contents of the zone before serving the zone contents to clients
	      and store	validation results in the cache.

       for-upstream: <yes or no>
	      Default yes.  If enabled,	Local-unbound fetches data  from  this
	      data  collection	for  answering	recursion queries.  Instead of
	      sending queries over the internet	to the authority  servers  for
	      this  zone,  it'll  fetch	 the data directly from	the zone data.
	      Turn it on when you want Local-unbound to	provide	recursion  for
	      downstream  clients,  and	 use  the zone data as a local copy to
	      speed up lookups.

       zonemd-check: <yes or no>
	      Enable this option to check ZONEMD records in the	zone.  Default
	      is  disabled.   The  ZONEMD  record  is a	checksum over the zone
	      data. This includes glue in the zone  and	 data  from  the  zone
	      file, and	excludes comments from the zone	file.  When there is a
	      DNSSEC chain of trust, DNSSEC signatures are checked too.

       zonemd-reject-absence: <yes or no>
	      Enable  this  option to reject the absence of the	ZONEMD record.
	      Without it, when zonemd is not there it is not checked.	It  is
	      useful  to enable	for a nonDNSSEC	signed zone where the operator
	      wants to require the verification	of a ZONEMD, hence  a  missing
	      ZONEMD  is  a failure.  The action upon failure is controlled by
	      the zonemd-permissive-mode option, for log only  or  also	 block
	      the zone.	 The default is	no.

	      Without  the  option  absence of a ZONEMD	is only	a failure when
	      the zone is DNSSEC signed, and we	have a trust anchor,  and  the
	      DNSSEC  verification  of	the absence of the ZONEMD fails.  With
	      the option enabled, the absence of a ZONEMD is always a failure,
	      also for nonDNSSEC signed	zones.

       zonefile: <filename>
	      The filename where the zone is stored.  If  not  given  then  no
	      zonefile	is  used.  If the file does not	exist or is empty, Lo-
	      cal-unbound will attempt to fetch	zone data (eg. from  the  pri-
	      mary servers).

   View	Options
       There may be multiple view: clauses. Each with a	name: and zero or more
       local-zone  and local-data elements. Views can also contain view-first,
       response-ip, response-ip-data and local-data-ptr	elements.  View	can be
       mapped to requests by  specifying  the  view  name  in  an  access-con-
       trol-view element. Options from matching	views will override global op-
       tions.  Global  options	will  be used if no matching view is found, or
       when the	matching view does not have the	option specified.

       name: <view name>
	      Name of the view.	Must be	unique.	 This  name  is	 used  in  ac-
	      cess-control-view	elements.

       local-zone: <zone> <type>
	      View specific local-zone elements. Has the same types and	behav-
	      iour  as	the global local-zone elements.	When there is at least
	      one local-zone specified and view-first is no, the  default  lo-
	      cal-zones	 will be added to this view.  Defaults can be disabled
	      using the	nodefault type.	When view-first	is yes or when a  view
	      does  not	 have a	local-zone, the	global local-zone will be used
	      including	it's default zones.

       local-data: "<resource record string>"
	      View specific local-data elements. Has the same behaviour	as the
	      global local-data	elements.

       local-data-ptr: "IPaddr name"
	      View specific local-data-ptr elements. Has the same behaviour as
	      the global local-data-ptr	elements.

       view-first: <yes	or no>
	      If enabled, it attempts to use the  global  local-zone  and  lo-
	      cal-data if there	is no match in the view	specific options.  The
	      default is no.

   Python Module Options
       The  python: clause gives the settings for the python(1)	script module.
       This module acts	like the iterator and validator	modules	do, on queries
       and answers.  To	enable the script module it has	to  be	compiled  into
       the  daemon,  and the word "python" has to be put in the	module-config:
       option (usually first, or between the validator and iterator). Multiple
       instances of the	 python	 module	 are  supported	 by  adding  the  word
       "python"	more than once.

       If the chroot: option is	enabled, you should make sure Python's library
       directory  structure  is	 bind mounted in the new root environment, see
       mount(8).  Also the python-script: path should be specified as  an  ab-
       solute  path  relative  to  the	new root, or as	a relative path	to the
       working directory.

       python-script: <python file>
	      The script file to load. Repeat this  option  for	 every	python
	      module instance added to the module-config: option.

   Dynamic Library Module Options
       The dynlib: clause gives	the settings for the dynlib module.  This mod-
       ule  is	only  a	 very  small wrapper that allows dynamic modules to be
       loaded on runtime instead of being compiled into	 the  application.  To
       enable the dynlib module	it has to be compiled into the daemon, and the
       word  "dynlib" has to be	put in the module-config: option. Multiple in-
       stances of dynamic libraries are	supported by adding the	word  "dynlib"
       more than once.

       The  dynlib-file: path should be	specified as an	absolute path relative
       to the new path set by chroot: option, or as a  relative	 path  to  the
       working directory.

       dynlib-file: <dynlib file>
	      The  dynamic  library file to load. Repeat this option for every
	      dynlib module instance added to the module-config: option.

   DNS64 Module	Options
       The dns64 module	must be	configured  in	the  module-config:  directive
       e.g.,  "dns64 validator iterator" and be	compiled into the daemon to be
       enabled.	 These settings	go in the server: section.

       dns64-prefix: <IPv6 prefix>
	      This sets	the DNS64 prefix to use	 to  synthesize	 AAAA  records
	      with.   It  must	be  /96	 or  shorter.	The  default prefix is
	      64:ff9b::/96.

       dns64-synthall: <yes or no>
	      Debug option, default  no.   If  enabled,	 synthesize  all  AAAA
	      records despite the presence of actual AAAA records.

       dns64-ignore-aaaa: <name>
	      List  domain  for	 which	the AAAA records are ignored and the A
	      record is	used by	dns64 processing instead.  Can be entered mul-
	      tiple times, list	a new domain for which	it  applies,  one  per
	      line.  Applies also to names underneath the name given.

   NAT64 Operation
       NAT64  operation	 allows	 using a NAT64 prefix for outbound requests to
       IPv4-only servers.  It is controlled by two options in the server: sec-
       tion:

       do-nat64: <yes or no>
	      Use NAT64	to reach IPv4-only servers.   Consider	also  enabling
	      prefer-ip6  to  prefer  native  IPv6 connections to nameservers.
	      Default no.

       nat64-prefix: <IPv6 prefix>
	      Use a specific NAT64 prefix to  reach  IPv4-only	servers.   De-
	      faults  to using the prefix configured in	dns64-prefix, which in
	      turn defaults to 64:ff9b::/96.  The prefix length	must be	one of
	      /32, /40,	/48, /56, /64 or /96.

   DNSCrypt Options
       The dnscrypt: clause gives the settings of the dnscrypt channel.	 While
       those  options are available, they are only meaningful if Local-unbound
       was compiled with --enable-dnscrypt.   Currently	 certificate  and  se-
       cret/public keys	cannot be generated by Unbound.	 You can use dnscrypt-
       wrapper	 to  generate  those:  https://github.com/cofyc/dnscrypt-wrap-
       per/blob/master/README.md#usage

       dnscrypt-enable:	<yes or	no>
	      Whether or not the dnscrypt config should	be  enabled.  You  may
	      define configuration but not activate it.	 The default is	no.

       dnscrypt-port: <port number>
	      On which port should dnscrypt should be activated. Note that you
	      should  have  a  matching	interface option defined in the	server
	      section for this port.

       dnscrypt-provider: <provider name>
	      The provider name	to use to distribute certificates. This	is  of
	      the form:	2.dnscrypt-cert.example.com.. The name MUST end	with a
	      dot.

       dnscrypt-secret-key: <path to secret key	file>
	      Path  to	the  time  limited secret key file. This option	may be
	      specified	multiple times.

       dnscrypt-provider-cert: <path to	cert file>
	      Path to the certificate  related	to  the	 dnscrypt-secret-keys.
	      This option may be specified multiple times.

       dnscrypt-provider-cert-rotated: <path to	cert file>
	      Path  to	a certificate that we should be	able to	serve existing
	      connection  from	 but   do   not	  want	 to   advertise	  over
	      dnscrypt-provider's  TXT	record	certs distribution.  A typical
	      use case is when rotating	 certificates,	existing  clients  may
	      still  use  the  client magic from the old cert in their queries
	      until they fetch and update the new cert.	Likewise, it would al-
	      low one to prime the new cert/key	without	distributing  the  new
	      cert yet,	this can be useful when	using a	network	of servers us-
	      ing  anycast  and	on which the configuration may not get updated
	      at the exact same	time. By priming the  cert,  the  servers  can
	      handle  both  old	 and new certs traffic while distributing only
	      one.  This option	may be specified multiple times.

       dnscrypt-shared-secret-cache-size: <memory size>
	      Give the size of the data	structure in which the	shared	secret
	      keys  are	 kept  in.   Default  4m.   In	bytes  or use m(mega),
	      k(kilo), g(giga).	 The shared secret cache is used when  a  same
	      client  is making	multiple queries using the same	public key. It
	      saves a substantial amount of CPU.

       dnscrypt-shared-secret-cache-slabs: <number>
	      Give power of 2 number of	slabs, this is	used  to  reduce  lock
	      contention  in  the dnscrypt shared secrets cache.  Close	to the
	      number of	cpus is	a fairly good setting.

       dnscrypt-nonce-cache-size: <memory size>
	      Give the size of the data	structure in which the	client	nonces
	      are  kept	 in.   Default	4m.  In	bytes or use m(mega), k(kilo),
	      g(giga).	The nonce cache	is used	to  prevent  dnscrypt  message
	      replaying.  Client nonce should be unique	for any	pair of	client
	      pk/server	sk.

       dnscrypt-nonce-cache-slabs: <number>
	      Give power of 2 number of	slabs, this is	used  to  reduce  lock
	      contention  in the dnscrypt nonce	cache.	Close to the number of
	      cpus is a	fairly good setting.

   EDNS	Client Subnet Module Options
       The ECS module must be configured in the	module-config: directive e.g.,
       "subnetcache validator iterator"	and be compiled	into the daemon	to  be
       enabled.	 These settings	go in the server: section.

       If  the	destination  address is	allowed	in the configuration Local-un-
       bound will add the EDNS0	option to the query  containing	 the  relevant
       part  of	 the client's address.	When an	answer contains	the ECS	option
       the response and	the option are placed in a specialized cache.  If  the
       authority  indicated  no	support, the response is stored	in the regular
       cache.

       Additionally, when a client includes the	option in its queries,	Local-
       unbound	will  forward  the  option when	sending	the query to addresses
       that are	explicitly allowed in the configuration	using send-client-sub-
       net. The	option will always be forwarded, regardless  the  allowed  ad-
       dresses,	 if  client-subnet-always-forward  is set to yes. In this case
       the lookup in the regular cache is skipped.

       The maximum size	of the ECS cache is controlled by 'msg-cache-size'  in
       the configuration file. On top of that, for each	query only 100 differ-
       ent subnets are allowed to be stored for	each address family. Exceeding
       that number, older entries will be purged from cache.

       Note  that due to the nature of how EDNS	Client Subnet works, by	segre-
       gating the client IP space in order to try and have tailored  responses
       for  prefixes  of  unknown sizes, resolution and	cache response perfor-
       mance are impacted as a result.	Usage of the subnetcache module	should
       only be enabled in installations	that require such functionality	 where
       the  resolver and the clients belong to different networks.  An example
       of that is an open resolver installation.

       This module does	not interact with the serve-expired* and prefetch: op-
       tions.

       send-client-subnet: <IP address>
	      Send client source address to this authority. Append /num	to in-
	      dicate  a	 classless  delegation	netblock,  for	example	  like
	      10.2.3.4/24 or 2001::11/64. Can be given multiple	times. Author-
	      ities  not  listed will not receive edns-subnet information, un-
	      less domain in query is specified	in client-subnet-zone.

       client-subnet-zone: <domain>
	      Send client source address in queries for	this  domain  and  its
	      subdomains.  Can	be given multiple times. Zones not listed will
	      not receive edns-subnet information, unless hosted by  authority
	      specified	in send-client-subnet.

       client-subnet-always-forward: <yes or no>
	      Specify	whether	  the  ECS  address  check  (configured	 using
	      send-client-subnet) is applied for  all  queries,	 even  if  the
	      triggering query contains	an ECS record, or only for queries for
	      which the	ECS record is generated	using the querier address (and
	      therefore	 did not contain ECS data in the client	query).	If en-
	      abled, the address check is skipped when the client  query  con-
	      tains  an	 ECS  record.  And  the	lookup in the regular cache is
	      skipped.	Default	is no.

       max-client-subnet-ipv6: <number>
	      Specifies	the maximum prefix length of the client	source address
	      we are willing to	expose to third	parties	for IPv6.  Defaults to
	      56.

       max-client-subnet-ipv4: <number>
	      Specifies	the maximum prefix length of the client	source address
	      we are willing to	expose to third	parties	for IPv4. Defaults  to
	      24.

       min-client-subnet-ipv6: <number>
	      Specifies	 the  minimum prefix length of the IPv6	source mask we
	      are willing to accept in queries.	Shorter	source masks result in
	      REFUSED answers. Source mask of 0	is always accepted. Default is
	      0.

       min-client-subnet-ipv4: <number>
	      Specifies	the minimum prefix length of the IPv4 source  mask  we
	      are willing to accept in queries.	Shorter	source masks result in
	      REFUSED answers. Source mask of 0	is always accepted. Default is
	      0.

       max-ecs-tree-size-ipv4: <number>
	      Specifies	 the maximum number of subnets ECS answers kept	in the
	      ECS radix	tree.  This number applies for each qname/qclass/qtype
	      tuple. Defaults to 100.

       max-ecs-tree-size-ipv6: <number>
	      Specifies	the maximum number of subnets ECS answers kept in  the
	      ECS radix	tree.  This number applies for each qname/qclass/qtype
	      tuple. Defaults to 100.

   Opportunistic IPsec Support Module Options
       The  IPsec  module  must	 be configured in the module-config: directive
       e.g., "ipsecmod validator iterator" and be compiled into	 Local-unbound
       by  using  --enable-ipsecmod  to	 be enabled.  These settings go	in the
       server: section.

       When Local-unbound receives an A/AAAA query that	is not	in  the	 cache
       and finds a valid answer, it will withhold returning the	answer and in-
       stead  will generate an IPSECKEY	subquery for the same domain name.  If
       an answer was found, Unbound will call an  external  hook  passing  the
       following arguments:

	    QNAME
		 Domain	name of	the A/AAAA and IPSECKEY	query.	In string for-
		 mat.

	    IPSECKEY TTL
		 TTL of	the IPSECKEY RRset.

	    A/AAAA
		 String	 of space separated IP addresses present in the	A/AAAA
		 RRset.	 The IP	addresses are in string	format.

	    IPSECKEY
		 String	of space  separated  IPSECKEY  RDATA  present  in  the
		 IPSECKEY  RRset.   The	IPSECKEY RDATA are in DNS presentation
		 format.

       The A/AAAA answer is then cached	and returned to	the  client.   If  the
       external	 hook  was called the TTL changes to ensure it doesn't surpass
       ipsecmod-max-ttl.

       The same	procedure is also followed when	prefetch:  is  used,  but  the
       A/AAAA answer is	given to the client before the hook is called.	ipsec-
       mod-max-ttl  ensures  that  the A/AAAA answer given from	cache is still
       relevant	for opportunistic IPsec.

       ipsecmod-enabled: <yes or no>
	      Specifies	whether	the IPsec module is enabled or not.  The IPsec
	      module still needs to be defined in  the	module-config:	direc-
	      tive.  This option facilitates turning on/off the	module without
	      restarting/reloading Unbound.  Defaults to yes.

       ipsecmod-hook: <filename>
	      Specifies	 the  external	hook that Local-unbound	will call with
	      system(3).  The file can be specified  as	 an  absolute/relative
	      path.   The  file	 needs the proper permissions to be able to be
	      executed by the same user	that runs Unbound.  It must be present
	      when the IPsec module is defined in  the	module-config:	direc-
	      tive.

       ipsecmod-strict:	<yes or	no>
	      If  enabled Local-unbound	requires the external hook to return a
	      success value of 0.  Failing to do so Local-unbound  will	 reply
	      with  SERVFAIL.  The A/AAAA answer will also not be cached.  De-
	      faults to	no.

       ipsecmod-max-ttl: <seconds>
	      Time to live maximum for A/AAAA cached records after calling the
	      external hook.  Defaults to 3600.

       ipsecmod-ignore-bogus: <yes or no>
	      Specifies	the behaviour of Local-unbound when the	 IPSECKEY  an-
	      swer  is	bogus.	If set to yes, the hook	will be	called and the
	      A/AAAA answer will be returned to	the client.  If	set to no, the
	      hook will	not be called and the answer to	the A/AAAA query  will
	      be SERVFAIL.  Mainly used	for testing.  Defaults to no.

       ipsecmod-allow: <domain>
	      Allow the	ipsecmod functionality for the domain so that the mod-
	      ule  logic  will	be executed.  Can be given multiple times, for
	      different	domains.  If the option	is not specified, all  domains
	      are treated as being allowed (default).

       ipsecmod-whitelist: <domain>
	      Alternate	syntax for ipsecmod-allow.

   Cache DB Module Options
       The  Cache DB module must be configured in the module-config: directive
       e.g., "validator	cachedb	iterator" and be compiled into the daemon with
       --enable-cachedb.  If this module is enabled and	configured, the	speci-
       fied backend database works as a	second level cache: When Local-unbound
       cannot find an answer to	a query	in its built-in	 in-memory  cache,  it
       consults	 the  specified	 backend.   If	it finds a valid answer	in the
       backend,	Local-unbound uses it to respond to the	query without perform-
       ing iterative DNS resolution.  If Local-unbound cannot even find	an an-
       swer in the backend, it resolves	the query as usual, and	stores the an-
       swer in the backend.

       This module interacts with the serve-expired-* options and  will	 reply
       with expired data if Local-unbound is configured	for that.

       If  Local-unbound was built with	--with-libhiredis on a system that has
       installed the hiredis C client library of Redis,	then the "redis" back-
       end can be used.	 This backend communicates with	 the  specified	 Redis
       server  over a TCP connection to	store and retrieve cache data.	It can
       be used as a persistent and/or shared  cache  backend.	It  should  be
       noted that Local-unbound	never removes data stored in the Redis server,
       even  if	some data have expired in terms	of DNS TTL or the Redis	server
       has cached too much data; if necessary the Redis	server must be config-
       ured to limit the cache size, preferably	with some  kind	 of  least-re-
       cently-used  eviction  policy.	Additionally, the redis-expire-records
       option can be used in order to set the relative DNS TTL of the  message
       as timeout to the Redis records;	keep in	mind that some additional mem-
       ory  is	used  per key and that the expire information is stored	as ab-
       solute Unix timestamps in Redis (computer time must be  stable).	  This
       backend	uses  synchronous communication	with the Redis server based on
       the assumption that the communication is	stable and sufficiently	 fast.
       The  thread  waiting for	a response from	the Redis server cannot	handle
       other DNS queries.  Although the	backend	has the	ability	 to  reconnect
       to the server when the connection is closed unexpectedly	and there is a
       configurable  timeout  in  case	the server is overly slow or hangs up,
       these cases are assumed to be very rare.	 If connection close or	 time-
       out  happens too	often, Local-unbound will be effectively unusable with
       this backend.  It's the administrator's responsibility to make the  as-
       sumption	hold.

       The cachedb: clause gives custom	settings of the	cache DB module.

       backend:	<backend name>
	      Specify  the backend database name.  The default database	is the
	      in-memory	backend	named "testframe", which,  as  the  name  sug-
	      gests, is	not of any practical use.  Depending on	the build-time
	      configuration,  "redis"  backend	may  also be used as described
	      above.

       secret-seed: <"secret string">
	      Specify a	seed to	calculate a hash value from query information.
	      This value will be used as the key of the	 corresponding	answer
	      for  the	backend	 database  and	can  be	customized if the hash
	      should not be predictable	operationally.	If the	backend	 data-
	      base  is	shared	by  multiple  Local-unbound instances, all in-
	      stances must use the same	secret seed.  This option defaults  to
	      "default".

       cachedb-no-store: <yes or no>
	      If  the  backend	should	be read	from, but not written to. This
	      makes this instance not store dns	messages in the	 backend.  But
	      if data is available it is retrieved. The	default	is no.

       cachedb-check-when-serve-expired: <yes or no>
	      If enabled, the cachedb is checked before	an expired response is
	      returned.	  When	serve-expired  is  enabled,  without serve-ex-
	      pired-client-timeout, it then does not immediately respond  with
	      an  expired  response  from  cache, but instead first checks the
	      cachedb for valid	contents, and if so returns it.	If the cachedb
	      also has no valid	contents, the serve expired response is	 sent.
	      If also serve-expired-client-timeout is enabled, the expired re-
	      sponse  is  delayed until	the timeout expires. Unless the	lookup
	      succeeds within the timeout. The default is yes.

       The following cachedb options are specific to the redis backend.

       redis-server-host: <server address or name>
	      The IP (either v6	or v4) address or domain  name	of  the	 Redis
	      server.	In general an IP address should	be specified as	other-
	      wise Local-unbound will have to resolve the name of  the	server
	      every  time it establishes a connection to the server.  This op-
	      tion defaults to "127.0.0.1".

       redis-server-port: <port	number>
	      The TCP port number of the Redis server.	This  option  defaults
	      to 6379.

       redis-server-path: <unix	socket path>
	      The  unix	socket path to connect to the Redis server. Off	by de-
	      fault, and it can	be set to "" to	turn this  off.	 Unix  sockets
	      may have better throughput than the IP address option.

       redis-server-password: "<password>"
	      The Redis	AUTH password to use for the Redis server.  Only rele-
	      vant  if	Redis is configured for	client password	authorisation.
	      Off by default, and it can be set	to "" to turn this off.

       redis-timeout: <msec>
	      The period until when Local-unbound waits	for  a	response  from
	      the  Redis  sever.  If this timeout expires Local-unbound	closes
	      the connection, treats it	as if the Redis	server does  not  have
	      the  requested  data, and	will try to re-establish a new connec-
	      tion later.  This	option defaults	to 100 milliseconds.

       redis-command-timeout: <msec>
	      The timeout to use for Redis commands, in	milliseconds.	If  0,
	      it uses the redis-timeout	value.	The default is 0.

       redis-connect-timeout: <msec>
	      The timeout to use for Redis connection set up, in milliseconds.
	      If 0, it uses the	redis-timeout value.  The default is 0.

       redis-expire-records: <yes or no>
	      If  Redis	 record	 expiration is enabled.	 If yes, Local-unbound
	      sets timeout for Redis records so	that Redis can evict keys that
	      have expired automatically.  If Local-unbound is configured with
	      serve-expired and	serve-expired-ttl is 0,	this option is	inter-
	      nally  reverted  to  "no".   Redis SETEX support is required for
	      this option (Redis >= 2.0.0).  This option defaults to no.

       redis-logical-db: <logical database index>
	      The logical database in Redis to use.  These  are	 databases  in
	      the  same	Redis instance sharing the same	configuration and per-
	      sisted in	the same RDB/AOF file.	If unsure about	using this op-
	      tion,  Redis  documentation  (https://redis.io/commands/select/)
	      suggests	not  to	use a single Redis instance for	multiple unre-
	      lated applications.  The default database	in Redis  is  0	 while
	      other  logical  databases	 need  to be explicitly	SELECT'ed upon
	      connecting.  This	option defaults	to 0.

       redis-replica-server-host: <server address or name>
	      The IP (either v6	or v4) address or domain  name	of  the	 Redis
	      replica server.  In general an IP	address	should be specified as
	      otherwise	 Local-unbound	will  have  to resolve the name	of the
	      server every time	it establishes a  connection  to  the  server.
	      This   server   is   treated   as	 a  read-only  replica	server
	      (https://redis.io/docs/management/replication/#read-only-
	      replica).	 If specified, all Redis read commands will go to this
	      replica server, while the	write commands will go to  the	redis-
	      server-host.  This option	defaults to "" (disabled).

       redis-replica-server-port: <port	number>
	      The  TCP	port  number of	the Redis replica server.  This	option
	      defaults to 6379.

       redis-replica-server-path: <unix	socket path>
	      The unix socket path to connect to the Redis server. Off by  de-
	      fault,  and  it  can be set to ""	to turn	this off. Unix sockets
	      may have better throughput than the IP address option.

       redis-replica-server-password: "<password>"
	      The Redis	AUTH password to use for  the  Redis  replica  server.
	      Only  relevant if	Redis is configured for	client password	autho-
	      risation.	 Off by	default, and it	can be set to "" to turn  this
	      off.

       redis-replica-timeout: <msec>
	      The  period  until  when Local-unbound waits for a response from
	      the Redis	replica	sever.	If this	timeout	expires	 Local-unbound
	      closes  the connection, treats it	as if the Redis	replica	server
	      does not have the	requested data,	and will try to	re-establish a
	      new connection later.  This option defaults to 100 milliseconds.

       redis-replica-command-timeout: <msec>
	      The timeout to use for Redis replica commands, in	 milliseconds.
	      If  0,  it uses the redis-replica-timeout	value.	The default is
	      0.

       redis-replica-connect-timeout: <msec>
	      The timeout to use for Redis replica connection set up, in  mil-
	      liseconds.   If 0, it uses the redis-replica-timeout value.  The
	      default is 0.

       redis-replica-logical-db: <logical database index>
	      Same as redis-logical-db but for the Redis replica server.  This
	      option defaults to 0.

   DNSTAP Logging Options
       DNSTAP support, when compiled in	by using --enable-dnstap,  is  enabled
       in  the	dnstap:	 section.   This starts	an extra thread	(when compiled
       with threading) that writes the log information to the destination.  If
       Local-unbound is	compiled without threading it does not spawn a thread,
       but connects per-process	to the destination.

       dnstap-enable: <yes or no>
	      If dnstap	is enabled.  Default no.  If yes, it connects  to  the
	      dnstap  server  and if any of the	dnstap-log-..-messages options
	      is enabled it sends logs for those messages to the server.

       dnstap-bidirectional: <yes or no>
	      Use frame	streams	in bidirectional mode to transfer DNSTAP  mes-
	      sages. Default is	yes.

       dnstap-socket-path: <file name>
	      Sets the unix socket file	name for connecting to the server that
	      is listening on that socket.  Default is "".

       dnstap-ip: <IPaddress[@port]>
	      If  "", the unix socket is used, if set with an IP address (IPv4
	      or IPv6) that address is used to connect to the server.

       dnstap-tls: <yes	or no>
	      Set this to use TLS  to  connect	to  the	 server	 specified  in
	      dnstap-ip.   The	default	 is yes.  If set to no,	TCP is used to
	      connect to the server.

       dnstap-tls-server-name: <name of	TLS authentication>
	      The TLS server name to authenticate the server with.  Used  when
	      dnstap-tls is enabled.  If "" it is ignored, default "".

       dnstap-tls-cert-bundle: <file name of cert bundle>
	      The pem file with	certs to verify	the TLS	server certificate. If
	      ""  the  server default cert bundle is used, or the windows cert
	      bundle on	windows.  Default is "".

       dnstap-tls-client-key-file: <file name>
	      The client key file for TLS client authentication. If ""	client
	      authentication is	not used.  Default is "".

       dnstap-tls-client-cert-file: <file name>
	      The  client cert file for	TLS client authentication.  Default is
	      "".

       dnstap-send-identity: <yes or no>
	      If enabled, the server identity is included in the log messages.
	      Default is no.

       dnstap-send-version: <yes or no>
	      If enabled, the server version if	included in the	log  messages.
	      Default is no.

       dnstap-identity:	<string>
	      The  identity to send with messages, if "" the hostname is used.
	      Default is "".

       dnstap-version: <string>
	      The version to send with messages, if "" the package version  is
	      used.  Default is	"".

       dnstap-sample-rate: <number>
	      The  sample rate for log of messages, it logs only 1/N messages.
	      With 0 it	is disabled. Default is	0. This	is useful  in  a  high
	      volume  environment, where log functionality would otherwise not
	      be reliable. For example 10 would	spend only 1/10th time on log-
	      ging, and	100 would only spend a hundredth of the	time  on  log-
	      ging.

       dnstap-log-resolver-query-messages: <yes	or no>
	      Enable  to  log  resolver	query messages.	 Default is no.	 These
	      are messages from	Local-unbound to upstream servers.

       dnstap-log-resolver-response-messages: <yes or no>
	      Enable to	log resolver response messages.	 Default is no.	 These
	      are replies from upstream	servers	to Unbound.

       dnstap-log-client-query-messages: <yes or no>
	      Enable to	log client query messages.  Default is no.  These  are
	      client queries to	Unbound.

       dnstap-log-client-response-messages: <yes or no>
	      Enable  to  log client response messages.	 Default is no.	 These
	      are responses from Local-unbound to clients.

       dnstap-log-forwarder-query-messages: <yes or no>
	      Enable to	log forwarder query messages.  Default is no.

       dnstap-log-forwarder-response-messages: <yes or no>
	      Enable to	log forwarder response messages.  Default is no.

   Response Policy Zone	Options
       Response	Policy Zones are configured with rpz:, and each	one must  have
       a  name:.  There	can be multiple	ones, by listing multiple RPZ clauses,
       each with a different name. RPZ clauses are applied in order of config-
       uration and any match from an earlier RPZ zone will terminate  the  RPZ
       lookup.	Note  that a PASSTHRU action is	still considered a match.  The
       respip module needs to be added to the module-config, e.g.: module-con-
       fig: "respip validator iterator".

       QNAME, Response IP Address, nsdname, nsip  and  clientip	 triggers  are
       supported.   Supported  actions	are: NXDOMAIN, NODATA, PASSTHRU, DROP,
       Local Data, tcp-only and	drop.  RPZ QNAME triggers  are	applied	 after
       local-zones and before auth-zones.

       The RPZ zone is a regular DNS zone formatted with a SOA start record as
       usual.	The items in the zone are entries, that	specify	what to	act on
       (the trigger) and what to do (the action).  The trigger to  act	on  is
       recorded	 in  the  name,	 the  action to	do is recorded as the resource
       record.	The names all end in the zone name,  so	 you  could  type  the
       trigger names without a trailing	dot in the zonefile.

       An example RPZ record, that answers example.com with NXDOMAIN
	    example.com	CNAME .

       The triggers are	encoded	in the name on the left
	    name			  query	name
	    netblock.rpz-client-ip	  client IP address
	    netblock.rpz-ip		  response IP address in the answer
	    name.rpz-nsdname		  nameserver name
	    netblock.rpz-nsip		  nameserver IP	address
       The  netblock is	written	as <netblocklen>.<ip address in	reverse>.  For
       IPv6 use	'zz' for '::'.	Specify	individual addresses with scope	length
       of 32 or	128.  For example, 24.10.100.51.198.rpz-ip is 198.51.100.10/24
       and 32.10.zz.db8.2001.rpz-ip is 2001:db8:0:0:0:0:0:10/32.

       The actions are specified with the record on the	right
	    CNAME .			 nxdomain reply
	    CNAME *.			 nodata	reply
	    CNAME rpz-passthru.		 do nothing, allow to continue
	    CNAME rpz-drop.		 the query is dropped
	    CNAME rpz-tcp-only.		 answer	over TCP
	    A 192.0.2.1			 answer	with this IP address
       Other records like AAAA,	TXT and	other CNAMEs (not rpz-..) can also  be
       used to answer queries with that	content.

       The  RPZ	zones can be configured	in the config file with	these settings
       in the rpz: block.

       name: <zone name>
	      Name of the authority zone.

       primary:	<IP address or host name>
	      Where to download	a copy of the zone from, with AXFR  and	 IXFR.
	      Multiple	primaries can be specified.  They are all tried	if one
	      fails.  To use a nondefault port for  DNS	 communication	append
	      '@' with the port	number.	 You can append	a '#' and a name, then
	      AXFR  over  TLS  can be used and the tls authentication certifi-
	      cates will be checked with that name.  If	you  combine  the  '@'
	      and '#', the '@' comes first.  If	you point it at	another	Local-
	      unbound  instance,  it would not work because that does not sup-
	      port AXFR/IXFR for the zone, but if you used  url:  to  download
	      the  zonefile  as	 a text	file from a webserver that would work.
	      If you specify the hostname, you cannot use the domain from  the
	      zonefile,	 because  it  may  not	have that when retrieving that
	      data, instead use	a plain	IP address to avoid a circular	depen-
	      dency on retrieving that IP address.

       master: <IP address or host name>
	      Alternate	syntax for primary.

       url: <url to zonefile>
	      Where  to	download a zonefile for	the zone.  With	http or	https.
	      An  example  for	the   url   is	 "http://www.example.com/exam-
	      ple.org.zone".   Multiple	 url statements	can be given, they are
	      tried in turn.  If only urls are given the SOA refresh timer  is
	      used  to	wait  for making new downloads.	 If also primaries are
	      listed, the primaries are	first probed with UDP SOA  queries  to
	      see if the SOA serial number has changed,	reducing the number of
	      downloads.   If  none  of	the urls work, the primaries are tried
	      with IXFR	and AXFR.  For	https,	the  tls-cert-bundle  and  the
	      hostname from the	url are	used to	authenticate the connection.

       allow-notify: <IP address or host name or netblockIP/prefix>
	      With  allow-notify  you  can specify additional sources of noti-
	      fies.  When notified, the	server attempts	 to  first  probe  and
	      then  zone  transfer.  If	the notify is from a primary, it first
	      attempts that primary.  Otherwise	other primaries	are attempted.
	      If there are no primaries, but only urls,	the file is downloaded
	      when notified.  The primaries from primary: and url:  statements
	      are allowed notify by default.

       zonefile: <filename>
	      The  filename  where  the	 zone is stored.  If not given then no
	      zonefile is used.	 If the	file does not exist or is  empty,  Lo-
	      cal-unbound  will	 attempt to fetch zone data (eg. from the pri-
	      mary servers).

       rpz-action-override: <action>
	      Always use this RPZ action for matching triggers from this zone.
	      Possible action are: nxdomain, nodata, passthru, drop,  disabled
	      and cname.

       rpz-cname-override: <domain>
	      The CNAME	target domain to use if	the cname action is configured
	      for rpz-action-override.

       rpz-log:	<yes or	no>
	      Log all applied RPZ actions for this RPZ zone. Default is	no.

       rpz-log-name: <name>
	      Specify  a string	to be part of the log line, for	easy referenc-
	      ing.

       rpz-signal-nxdomain-ra: <yes or no>
	      Signal when a query is blocked by	the RPZ	with NXDOMAIN with  an
	      unset  RA	 flag.	 This allows certain clients, like dnsmasq, to
	      infer that the domain is externally blocked. Default is no.

       for-downstream: <yes or no>
	      If enabled the zone is authoritatively answered for and  queries
	      for the RPZ zone information are answered	to downstream clients.
	      This  is useful for monitoring scripts, that can then access the
	      SOA information to check if the RPZ information is up  to	 date.
	      Default is no.

       tags: <list of tags>
	      Limit the	policies from this RPZ clause to clients with a	match-
	      ing  tag.	 Tags  need to be defined in define-tag	and can	be as-
	      signed to	client	addresses  using  access-control-tag.  Enclose
	      list  of	tags in	quotes ("") and	put spaces between tags. If no
	      tags are specified the policies from this	clause will be applied
	      for all clients.

MEMORY CONTROL EXAMPLE
       In the example config settings below memory usage is reduced. Some ser-
       vice levels are lower, notable very large data and a high TCP load  are
       no longer supported. Very large data and	high TCP loads are exceptional
       for the DNS.  DNSSEC validation is enabled, just	add trust anchors.  If
       you do not have to worry	about programs using more than 3 Mb of memory,
       the below example is not	for you. Use the defaults to receive full ser-
       vice, which on BSD-32bit	tops out at 30-40 Mb after heavy usage.

       # example settings that reduce memory usage
       server:
	    num-threads: 1
	    outgoing-num-tcp: 1	# this limits TCP service, uses	less buffers.
	    incoming-num-tcp: 1
	    outgoing-range: 60	# uses less memory, but	less performance.
	    msg-buffer-size: 8192   # note this	limits service,	'no huge stuff'.
	    msg-cache-size: 100k
	    msg-cache-slabs: 1
	    rrset-cache-size: 100k
	    rrset-cache-slabs: 1
	    infra-cache-numhosts: 200
	    infra-cache-slabs: 1
	    key-cache-size: 100k
	    key-cache-slabs: 1
	    neg-cache-size: 10k
	    num-queries-per-thread: 30
	    target-fetch-policy: "2 1 0	0 0 0"
	    harden-large-queries: "yes"
	    harden-short-bufsize: "yes"

FILES
       /var/unbound
	      default Local-unbound working directory.

       /var/unbound
	      default chroot(2)	location.

       /var/unbound/unbound.conf
	      Local-unbound configuration file.

       /var/unbound/unbound.pid
	      default  Local-unbound  pidfile  with  process ID	of the running
	      daemon.

       unbound.log
	      Local-unbound log	file. default is to log	to syslog(3).

SEE ALSO
       local-unbound(8), local-unbound-checkconf(8).

AUTHORS
       Unbound was written by NLnet Labs. Please see CREDITS file in the  dis-
       tribution for further details.

NLnet Labs			 Jul 16, 2025		       unbound.conf(5)

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