BIND DNS Zone Import
The BIND DNS Zone Upload / Import tool uses the named.conf configuration file tied to the zones you are uploading, a .zip or .tar file of the zones themselves, and an optional .csv file mapping zones to customers. The following steps are used when importing BIND DNS zones:
Preparing your DNS Zones for Import
If your zone data is currently in BIND format - this is very straightforward.
There are three components for the upload process:
1) The named.conf configuration file tied to the zones you are uploading (required)
This tells the importer the Zone Name and where the zone file is written. It could be as simple as a multi-line file:
zone "my-zone.com" { type master; file "my-zone.com.zone"; }; zone "my-other-zone.com" { type master; file "my-other-zone.com.zone"; }; zone "my-third-zone.com" { type master; file "my-third-zone.com.zone"; };
or could be more complex like this file structure directory:
zone "my-zone.com" { type master; file "/usr/local/zones/my-zone.com.zone"; }; zone "my-other-zone.com" { type master; file "/usr/local/zones/more/my-other-zone.com.zone"; }; zone "my-third-zone.com" { type master; file "/usr/local/zones/more/even more/my-third-zone.com.zone"; };
This configuration file can be taken directly from the DNS server, and can be in either ISC BIND or NSD format. The system auto-detects which one is being supplied.
For a sample Simple Config: conf.conf
2) A ZIP or TAR file of the DNS zones themselves (required)
This is as it sounds - a file archive where we can find the zones and it should match the configuration file uploaded in Step 1.
Zone Order
For a sample simple ZIP: zones.zip
3) Match CSV for assigning DNS Zones to Resources (optional)
This file allows the administrator to "assign" zone files to a given Resource. If you have Imported a group of Resources, they have Resource IDs associated with them. You can then import DNS zones and assign them to those Resource IDs. When complete, you will be able to pull up the Resource Record and see the DNS Zones associated to that Resource ID.
my-zone.com,test-01,fun stuff, 174.23.14.4, 174.23.14.9 my-otherzone.com,test-02,great stuff, dns1.dns.net, dns2.dns.net even-reverse-zones.arpa,test-03,amazing stuff
Note the columns are the "Zone Name", the "Resource ID", "Notes", "Master Server", "Slave Server"
Importing DNS Server Linkages
For a sample CSV: config.csv
Importing your DNS Zones (BIND)
Video Walkthrough
Note: Video walkthrough is from ProVision version 5.1.x - however, import steps and descriptions still apply to current version. Updated videos are in progress!
Step 1: Create a new DNS Import Job
Navigate to the Data Import Tab from the Admin button to import your data. Select "BIND Zone Upload/Import" under "DNS Import".
Under the "New Import" section, select the DNS Group under which you want the zones to be imported, then create a Job Name and Description for the import. This is especially useful to keep track of progress in cases the data arrives from multiple sources, or will require multiple stages of manual review.
Select the appropriate Configuration File (required if the .zip is not a flat archive file), Archive File (required), and CSV File (optional) that you prepared above by selecting the "Choose File" button(s) under each section, and browsing to the correct file location. Then hit "Start Import".
Working with Large or Multiple Data Sets
Although you cannot add new files to an existing job, for jobs with multiple sources for data (which may have different formatting), you can simply create separate jobs and descriptions for each source - no need to manually combine the data into one file before importing. The Import tool's mapping and editing functions will allow for the data to be reconciled in ProVision.
For large data sets where multiple stages of manual review might be needed, you can create a new job using the same set of data files in order to work in parallel on a different portion of the data.
After importing, the new job will appear under the "Existing Jobs" section. To continue working with this job, select it from the list and the next step will appear on the page.
Step 2: Map Data Columns (Optional)
If you chose to load an optional match CSV file to assign DNS Zones to Resource, a mapping step will be available. Otherwise, proceed to Step 3: Reviewing Data.
For DNS imports, two column definitions are available: Zone and Resource Holder ID. Using the dropdown menu, select the appropriate column for the zone name and Resource Holder (customer) associated with zone. The Resource Holder ID field will be used to set the Parent Resource of the individual zone once imported.
Server associations will not be imported. Instead, the associated server will be the server attached to the selected DNS Group.
Other columns which do not apply under the available definitions should be left as blank, and will be skipped during the upload process.
When completed, hit "Next".
Step 3: Reviewing Data
After supplying the file set and defining columns (if applicable), a review step is provided. The configuration file is broken into individual jobs, scanned for errors, and shown by row (in batches of 100) to be reviewed. Zones with errors will show as color coded. and can be filtered to be viewed by All, Valid, Warnings, Invalid, or Ignored. From here, the zone can be edited or ignored.
To edit the zone name or select a different Resource Holder, hit "Edit" on the zone record.
After editing, hit "Save", and continue reviewing / editing data as desired.
Step 4: Execute Import
When the review step is completed, hit the "Execute Import" button. A progress bar will appear to show progress and note errors if they occur.
When the bar reaches 100%, the import is complete.