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CSV1(5)			       MaraDNS reference		       CSV1(5)

NAME
       csv1 - Format of	the csv1 zone file that	MaraDNS	uses

SPECIAL	NOTE
       The csv1	zone file format is supported primarily	for MaraDNS users who
       already have zone files in the csv1 format. MaraDNS now supports	a csv2
       zone file format. Note that the csv1 zone file format will continue to
       function	as long	as I am	MaraDNS' maintainer.

SPECIAL	CHARACTERS
       |  This delimits	fields

       #  This	signifies  a  comment.	Lines  starting	with this are ignored,
	  otherwise it has no significance

       %  This,	in domain names, signifies that	the rest of  the  domain  name
	  should be the	name of	this zone

       *  This	is  translated	to mean	"any host name that otherwise does not
	  resolve". It must be at the beginning	of a domain name.

       \  This is used as an escape character, either to escape	 octal	values
	  such	as  '\045'  for	%, or to escape	the '%'	character so it	has no
	  special meaning, or to escape	the backslash character.

NOTES ON PROCESSING
       All domain-name labels are converted to	their  lower-case  equivalents
       before  processing is done. This	is because domain-name literals	in the
       database	with  one  or  more  upper-case	 letters  in  them  are	 case-
       sensitive.  This	 is  my	way to resolve RFC1035 schizophrenic desire to
       both allow binary domain	labels,	and its	desire to be case-insensitive.

       The file	must first have	a SOA record,  followed	 by  one  or  more  NS
       records,	followed by other records. The initial NS and SOA records must
       be RR for this zone. NS records after any non-NS	record must be part of
       another	zone.  The  resolution	algorithm  will	not break if non-CNAME
       records share records with a CNAME record, but this is not a good  idea
       to do.

RR FORMAT
       A  domain name is a one-letter designation of its type, followed	by the
       domain name separated by	dots, ending with either a  %  or  a  trailing
       dot.   If  the  domain  name  does not end with a % or trailing dot, an
       error is	returned.

SUPPORTED RR TYPES
       MaraDNS only supports the following types of resource records (RRs)  in
       csv1  files.  More  resource  records  types are	supported in csv2 zone
       files; see csv2(5) for details.

	    Letter Type	  RFC1035 section 3.2.2	value
	    A	   A	  1
	    N	   NS	  2
	    C	   CNAME  5
	    S	   SOA	  6
	    P	   PTR	  12
	    @	   MX	  15
	    T	   TXT	  16
	    U	   any	  determined in	third field of line

FORMAT OF SUPPORTED RR TYPES
       Here are	the formats, shown by letter name:

       A: Has three fields
       field one: the domain name
       field two: the ttl for the name in seconds
       field three: the	ip address, in dotted decimal notation
       Example:
       Ahost.example.com.|7200|10.1.2.3

       A records are described with grueling detail in RFC1035.	In short, an A
       record is an IP address for a given host	name.

       N: Has three fields
       field one: the domain name of the record
       field two: the ttl for the name in seconds
       field three: the	domain name this NS points to.
       Example:
       Nexample.com.|86400|ns.example.com.

       NS (N here) records are described in RFC1035

       C: Has three fields
       field one: the domain name of the record
       field two: the ttl for the name in seconds
       field three: the	domain this CNAME record points	to
       Example:
       Calias.example.org.|3200|realname.example.org.

       CNAME (which C is short for) records are	described in RFC1035

       S: Has nine fields
       field one: the domain name of the record
       field two: the TTL of the record
       field three: the	origin of the domain.  In other	words, the name	of the
		    primary name server	for the	domain.
       field four: the email address for this domain (in the RFC822, not
		   BIND	format)
       field five: the serial for the domain
       field six: the refresh (how often to see	updates) for the domain
       field seven: the	retry (how often to try	when down) for the domain
       field eight: the	expire (how long before	the slave gives	up) for	the
		    domain
       field nine: the minimum (and default) TTL for the domain
       Example:
       Sexample.net.|86400|%|hostmaster@%|19771108|7200|3600|604800|1800

       SOA (S here) records are	described in RFC1035

       P: has three fields
       field one: the IP we wish to point to (in in-addr.arpa form)
       field two: the ttl for the name in seconds
       field three: the	FQDN for the IP	in question
       Example:
       P3.2.1.10.in-addr.arpa.|86400|ns.example.com.

       PTR (P here) records, which are	used  for  reverse  DNS	 lookups,  are
       described  in  RFC1035.	Note that one needs control of the appropriate
       in-addr.arpa subdomain to make PTR records visible on the  internet  at
       large.

       @: has four fields
       field one: The host that	people send email to
       field two: the ttl for this record
       field three: The	preference for this MX host
       field four: The name of this MX host
       Example:
       @example.com.|86400|10|mail.example.com.

       MX (@ here) records are described in RFC1035

       T: has three fields
       field one: The host someone wants to get	additional information about
       field two: the ttl for this record
       field three: The	desired	text.  Any data	becomes	the record up until a
		    new	line is	reached.  The new line is not part of the TXT
		    record
       Example:
       Texample.com.|86400|Example.com:	Buy example products online

       TXT (T here) records are	described in RFC1035

       U: has four fields
       field one: The host someone wants a data	type normally unsupported by
		  MaraDNS for
       field two: the ttl for this record
       field three: The	numeric	code for this data type	(33 for	SRV, etc.)
       field four: The raw binary data for this	data type
       Example:
       Uexample.com.|3600|40|\010\001\002Kitchen sink data

       The  above  example  is	a  "Kitchen  Sink"  RR (see draft-ietf-dnsind-
       kitchen-sink-02.txt) with  a  "meaning"	of  8,	a  "coding"  of	 1,  a
       "subcoding" of 2, and a data string of "Kitchen sink data".  Since this
       particular  data	type is	not formalized in a RFC	at this	time, the most
       appropriate method of storing this  data	 is  by	 using	the  catch-all
       "unsupported" syntax.

EXAMPLE	CSV1 ZONE FILE
       # Example CSV1 zone file

       # This is what is known as a SOA	record.	 All zone files	need to	have one
       # of these
       S%|86400|%|hostmaster@%|19771108|7200|3600|604800|1800
       # These are known as authoritative NS records.  All zone	files need
       # one or	more of	these
       N%|86400|ns1.%
       N%|86400|ns2.%

       # Some IP addresses
       Ans1.%|86400|10.0.0.1
       Ans2.%|86400|192.168.0.1
       A%|86400|10.1.2.3
       Amx.%|86400|10.1.2.4

       # An 'IN	MX' record
       @%|86400|10|mx.%

LEGAL DISCLAIMER
       THIS  SOFTWARE  IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHORS ''AS IS'' AND	ANY EXPRESS OR
       IMPLIED	WARRANTIES,  INCLUDING,	 BUT  NOT  LIMITED  TO,	 THE   IMPLIED
       WARRANTIES  OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A	PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
       DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR
       ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR	 CONSEQUENTIAL
       DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
       OR  SERVICES;  LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR	BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
       HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY	OF  LIABILITY,	WHETHER	 IN  CONTRACT,
       STRICT  LIABILITY,  OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
       IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE,  EVEN  IF  ADVISED  OF  THE
       POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

AUTHOR
       Sam Trenholme http://www.samiam.org/

MARADNS				 January 2002			       CSV1(5)

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