Provided by: gdnsd_3.8.3-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       gdnsd-plugin-geoip - gdnsd meta-plugin for GSLB + failover via MaxMind's GeoIP2 databases

SYNOPSIS

       Minimal example gdnsd config file using this plugin:

         plugins => { geoip => {
           maps => {
             my_prod_map => {
               geoip2_db => GeoIP2-City.mmdb,
               datacenters => [dc-03, dc-02, dc-01, dc-fail],
               map => {
                   EU => {
                       DE => [dc-03, dc-01, dc-fail],
                       CH => [dc-01, dc-03, dc-fail]
                   },
                   NA => { MX => [dc-02, dc-fail] }
               }
             },
             my_auto_map => {
               geoip2_db => GeoIP2-Country.mmdb,
               datacenters => [dc1, dc2],
               auto_dc_coords => {
                  dc1 => [ 38.9, -77 ],
                  dc2 => [ 50.1, 8.7 ],
               }
             }
           },
           resources => {
             prod_www => {
               map => my_prod_map
               service_types => up
               dcmap => {
                 dc-01 => 192.0.2.1,
                 dc-02 => { lb01 => 192.0.2.2, lb02 => 192.0.2.3 },
                 dc-03 => [ 192.0.2.4, 192.0.2.5, 192.0.2.6 ],
                 dc-fail => last.resort.cname.example.net.
               }
             }
             corp_www => {
               map => my_auto_map
               dcmap => {
                 dc1 => 192.0.2.100,
                 dc2 => 192.0.2.101
               }
             }
           }
         }}

       Example zonefile RRs in zone example.com:

         www      600 DYNA geoip!prod_www
         www-dc01 600 DYNA geoip!prod_www/dc-01
         www.corp 600 DYNA geoip!corp_www

DESCRIPTION

       gdnsd-plugin-geoip uses MaxMind's GeoIP2 binary databases to map address and CNAME results
       based on geography and monitored service availability.  It fully supports both IPv6 and
       the emerging edns-client-subnet standard.  If a request contains the edns-client-subnet
       option with a source netmask greater than zero, the edns-client-subnet information will be
       used instead of the source IP of the request (the IP of the querying cache).

       It supports the GeoIP2 format databases, which typically end in .mmdb.  It does not
       supports the legacy GeoIP1 format databases (which typically end in .dat).

       It can also be used with no GeoIP database at all, in which case the only network-mapping
       input comes from the "nets" config data or an external "nets" file, which explicitly map
       subnets to datacenter lists.

       This plugin can operate in an automatic distance-based mode (using a City-level database's
       coordinate information) It can also operate coordinate-free and rely on the user to
       configure a hierarchical map of cascading default user-location-to-datacenter mappings,
       starting at the continent level.

       The two modes can also be effectively mixed at geographic boundaries.

       For each "map" you define (which maps geographic location codes to preference-ordered
       lists of your datacenter locations), this plugin merges all of the raw GeoIP subnets into
       the largest possible supernets which contain identical responses in your configuration.
       These in turn are used to set larger edns-client-subnet scope masks than you'd see simply
       returning raw GeoIP results.

PLUGIN_METAFO

       The documentation for gdnsd-plugin-metafo(8) is required reading for understanding the
       geoip plugin documentation here.  The geoip plugin is an exact superset of the metafo
       plugin, and re-uses almost all of the metafo plugin's source code.  Metafo does failover
       along a single, global, ordered list of datacenters.  What plugin_geoip adds on top of the
       functionality of metafo is the ability to have the order of the datacenter failover list
       become dynamic per-request based on geographic hints derived from the client's network
       address.

FILE LOCATIONS

       The configuration of this plugin can reference several external configuration and/or data
       files.  By default, all files referenced in this plugin's configuration are loaded from
       the geoip subdirectory of the daemon's configuration directory (default /etc/gdnsd).  You
       can load from other locations by specifying absolute file paths.

CONFIGURATION - TOP-LEVEL

       The top level of the geoip plugin's configuration (i.e. "plugins => { geoip => { ... } }")
       supports only three explicit keys.  One is the optional setting
       "undefined_datacenters_ok".

       The other two are required and expanded upon in detail in the next two sections: "maps",
       and "resources".  The "maps" section defines one or more named mappings of location
       information from GeoIP binary databases to ordered subsets of datacenter names.  The
       "resources" section defines one or more named resources, each of which references one of
       the named maps and resolves datacenter names to specific sets of addresses or CNAMEs.

       Any other keys present at this level will be inherited down inside of each per-resource
       hash inside the "resources" stanza, acting as per-resource defaults for anything not
       defined explicitly there.

   "undefined_datacenters_ok = false"
       Boolean, default false.  If set to true, geoip resources are allowed to leave some of the
       datacenters specified in their "map" undefined in their resource-level "dcmap".  For
       example, a map M might define 3 datacenters named A, B, and C, but a resource using map M
       might only define result addresses for datacenters B and C in its "dcmap".  This would
       otherwise be a hard configuration error.

       !!! DANGER !!! - Setting this value to true is a good way to shoot yourself in the foot if
       you're not very careful about how your maps and resources are configured with respect to
       each other, especially in "City Auto Mode".  Maps are calculated without any knowledge of
       the resources that use them.  If a specific network or location maps to a list of
       datacenters which contains none of the defined datacenters for a given resource, the
       results of runtime queries for that resource from that location or network will be the
       empty set (no answer records at all).  This is virtually guaranteed to happen in "City
       Auto Mode" if the number of undefined datacenters in a resource is greater than or equal
       to the map's "auto_dc_limit".

CONFIGURATION - MAPS

       All "maps"-level configuration keys are the names of the maps you choose to define.  A
       map, conceptually, is a mapping between geography and/or network topology to varying
       ordered datacenter sub-sets.  The value of each named map must be a hash, and the
       following configuration keys apply within:

   "geoip2_db = GeoIP2-City.mmdb"
       String, filename, optional.  This is the filename of a MaxMind GeoIP2 format database.  It
       should contain either the City or Country data model.  There is no distinction made here
       for the IP version, and it is normal for these databases to contain both IPv4 and IPv6
       data together.  If one or the other is missing, clients using that address family will be
       defaulted.

   "datacenters = [ one, two, three, ... ]"
       Array of strings, required.  This is the total set of datacenter names used by this map.
       You must define at least one datacenter name (although 2 or more would be infinitely more
       useful).  At this time, there is a maximum limit of 254 datacenter names per map, although
       this could be raised if anyone requires it.  The order specified here is the fallback
       default result ordering in various default cases (e.g. if no explicit top-level map
       default list is given).

   "ignore_ecs = true"
       Boolean, default false.  If this is set to "true", all resources using this map will
       ignore EDNS Client Subnet (ECS) information when performing lookups against the map,
       relying solely on the DNS source IP for the lookup.  If the client provided ECS in such a
       query, the response will also contain the ECS option to signal that we're ECS aware in
       general, but the response scope mask will be set to zero to signal the cache that the ECS
       data wasn't used and the result is globally cacheable.

       This is useful for situations in which the map is intentionally meant to operate solely on
       recursor IPs rather than ECS IPs, but other maps serviced by the same authserver do make
       use of ECS data, and thus the global edns_client_subnet config option can't be used to
       disable handling the option completely for the whole server.

   "nets = { ... }"
       Key-value hash, optional (see below for alternate form).  If specified, the contents
       should be key-value pairs of "network/netmask" mapped to a datacenter name (or an array of
       datacenter names).  Any network-to-datacenter mappings specified here will override
       mappings determined via GeoIP.  Note that it is illegal to specify networks in the
       IPv4-like subspaces of IPv6 other than v4compat, but it is legal to specify actual IPv4
       networks (which are treated identically to v4compat).  See the section on IPv4 Compatible
       Addresses later in this document for more details.  The order of the networks is
       unimportant; they will always be sorted and inserted such that an entry which is a subnet
       of another entry is not obliterated by the parent supernet.

           nets => {
               10.0.0.0/8 => [ dc1, dc2 ],
               192.0.2.128/25 => dc3
               2001:DB8::/32 => [ dc4, dc5, dc6 ],
           }

       In the case that one entry is a subnet of another with a different result dclist, the
       entries are merged correctly such that the supernet surrounds the subnet.  In the case of
       an exact duplicate entry (or an effective one, after merging smaller subnets) with a
       different dclist, it is arbitrary which one "wins" and the condition is warned about.  If
       you care about this case, you should sanitize your nets data beforehand with an external
       tool and/or parse for the warning message in log outputs.

   "nets = nets_file_name"
       String pathname, optional.  A variant of the above, but the contents of the key-value hash
       are loaded from the named external file.  This makes life easier for external tools and
       scripts generating large sets of nets entries (e.g. from BGP data).  The file will be
       monitored for changes and reloaded at runtime much like the GeoIP databases.

   "map = { ... }"
       Key-value hash, optional.  This is the heart of a named map which uses GeoIP: the map
       itself, which maps places to ordered lists of datacenters.  It requires "geoip2_db" is
       also specified, and makes no sense without it.

       This is a nested key-value hash.  At each level, the keys are location codes (continent,
       country, region/subdivision, or city information depending on depth), and the values are
       either an ordered datacenter array (e.g. "[ dc03, dc01, dc04 ]"), or a sub-hash containing
       a deeper level of distinction.  At each layer, a special key named "default" is available,
       which sets the default for everything within the current scope.  The top-level default
       itself defaults to the ordered list from "datacenters" in the normal case.  If the entire
       "map" stanza is missing or empty, you just get the default behavior of "default".  A
       datacenter array can also be empty, which implies that this location is mapped to receive
       no response data (the server will still respond to the query, and will not issue an
       NXDOMAIN.  It will simply be a NODATA/NOERROR response like you'd get if there were no
       records of this type, but could be records of other types for the same name).

   GeoIP2 Location Data Hierarchy
       The top level of the map hierarchy is comprised of MaxMind's seven continent codes: "AF"
       for Africa, "AS" for Asia, "NA" for North America, "SA" for South America, "EU" for
       Europe, "OC" for Oceania, and "AN" for Antarctica.  The next level is the ISO 3166-1
       2-letter country code.

       From here there are a number of Subdivision levels, the count of which varies for
       different network database entries.  In the US, for example, there is only one level of
       subdivision data for the US States.  In the Czech Republic there are two levels of
       subdivision: first into 14 regions, and then further into 91 districts.  Subdivisions are
       all specified using their ISO 3166-2 codes directly.

       After all subdivision levels, the final level is the City level.  The City names are all
       in the UTF-8 character set.  Currently this plugin only uses the English city names from
       the database, even though other languages may be available depending on the database.

       As a pragmatic answer to the issues that can arise with multiple subdivision layers, the
       map automatically searches deeper in the database data when no map match is found at a
       given level of the map hierarchy beneath the Country level.  This means you can skip over
       any levels of Subdivision detail in your map that are irrelevant to you.

       For example, this targets the New Zealand regional council subdivision of Otago without
       explicitly specifying the enclosing subdivision for the South Island:

         { OC => { NZ => { OTA => [...] } } }

       As another example, this works correctly for targeting the city of Paris without caring
       about what layers of subdivisions lie between it and FR:

         { EU => { FR => { Paris => [...] } } }

CONFIGURATION - MAPS - CITY AUTO MODE

       "City-auto-mode" is a special mode of operation that automatically maps out the world to
       your datacenters based on coordinate math, so that you don't have to manually construct a
       complex hierarchical "map".  It can still be mixed with "map" of course, allowing you to
       use auto-mode for only select geographic areas if you wish (or disabling it for select
       areas by specifying manual lists).  The key parameter is "auto_dc_coords", which enables
       city-auto-mode.  This requires a City-level GeoIP2 database; the Country ones don't
       contain coordinate information.

       "auto_dc_coords = { ... }"
           Key-value hash, optional.  If this option is specified, the whole map's basic mode of
           operation changes to "city-auto-mode".  The contents of the hash are a key for each
           datacenter named in "datacenters", with their values set to an array of "[lat, lon]"
           in decimal degree units.  When city-auto-mode is enabled by this, the following
           configuration-validation changes occur from the default, static-mapping mode: the
           loaded GeoIP2 database(s) are required be City-level databases, and the special
           keyword "auto" becomes a legal "datacenter list" in the "map" stanza.

           With city-auto-mode enabled, the top-level map "default" defaults to "auto", but can
           be overridden with a manual list.  For any location that maps to "auto", the
           coordinates specified here in "auto_dc_coords" will be compared with the coordinates
           from the City-level database(s) to determine an automatic distance-sorted datacenter
           list.

           If you omit one or more defined datacenters from the coordinate list in
           "auto_dc_coords", those datacenters will not be used in automatic results, but will
           still be available for manual use via "map" and/or "nets" entries.

       "auto_dc_limit = N"
           Unsigned integer, optional, default 3.  When city-auto-mode is in effect, this is the
           upper length limit for auto-generated lists.  3 is a reasonable default even if you
           have a considerably longer set of datacenters, as this provides a primary as well as
           two fallbacks.  Raising this to a large number in the presence of a long datacenter
           list will cause the set of unique result datacenter lists to increase rapidly, and
           thus reduce the optimization of the final result database for edns-client-subnet
           purposes.  It's really not worth raising this value in almost any case, unless you
           really need to handle more than 3 random datacenters going offline at the same time
           and still have clients fail elsewhere.  The value zero is treated as unlimited (highly
           un-recommended).

       Under city-auto-mode, when the top-level default is (explicitly or implicitly) "auto",
       there is still a fallback static ordering which is the whole ordered "datacenters" list,
       which is the normal static default "default" when not in city-auto-mode.  This fallback is
       used when no location information is available at all (e.g. IPv6 client vs IPv4 GeoIP DB,
       Anonymous Proxies, etc).

MAP TESTING

       A binary program "gdnsd_geoip_test" is included.  This can be used directly from the
       commandline, parses the relevant bits of your gdnsd config file for geoip map info, and
       then provides datacenter list results for IP address + map combinations supplied by the
       user.  Useful for debugging your maps and testing the mapping of client IPs.  It has a
       separate manpage gdnsd_geoip_test(1).

CONFIGURATION - RESOURCES

       Resource-level configuration within the "resources" stanza is nearly identical to the
       resources configuration of the metafo plugin, with all of the same basic behaviors about
       synthesizing or directly referencing the configuration of other plugins per-datacenter.

       One difference is that metafo's per-resource "datacenters" array is replaced with "map =>
       mapname", which references one of the maps defined in the "maps" stanza, described in
       detail earlier.  The set of defined datacenters in the "dcmap" stanza must match the total
       set of datacenters defined by the referenced map, unless "undefined_datacenters_ok" is set
       to "true" (see warnings and documentation above).

       The "skip_first" flag can also be set per resource, and is much more useful with the geoip
       plugin than it is with the basic metafo plugin.  If this flag is set, the first datacenter
       in the failover list for a given lookup will be skipped, allowing the definition of a
       "second choice" resource using the same basic map definition as the first choice.  In this
       case the original first choice is *never* a possible answer, and the rest of the logic
       (e.g. skipping datacenters marked as down) proceeds as normal with the remaining list.  If
       the map entry and/or the resource definition have already reduced the effective datacenter
       count to one, the flag has no effect.

META-PLUGIN INTERACTION

       Both of the meta-plugins ("metafo" and "geoip") can reference their own as well as each
       others' resources by direct reference within a "dcmap", so long as a resource does not
       directly refer to itself.  This allows plugin-layering configurations such as geoip ->
       metafo -> weighted, or metafo -> geoip -> multifo, or even metafo -> metafo -> simplefo,
       etc.

       Bear in mind that once you begin using inter-meta-plugin references, you could create a
       reference loop.  gdnsd does not currently detect or prevent such loops, and they will
       cause complete runtime failure when queried, probably by running out of stack space during
       recursion.

       Additionally, "geoip" can synthesize configuration for "metafo" resources, but the reverse
       does not hold; "metafo" cannot synthesize configuration for "geoip" resources.

IPv4 Compatible Addresses

       This plugin knows of six different relatively-trivial ways to map IPv4 addresses into the
       IPv6 address space.  These are shown below in as much detail matters to this plugin, with
       "NNNN:NNNN" in place of the copied IPv4 address bytes:

                ::0000:NNNN:NNNN/96   # RFC 4291 - v4compat (deprecated)
                ::ffff:NNNN:NNNN/96   # RFC 4291 - v4mapped
           ::ffff:0000:NNNN:NNNN/96   # RFC 2765 - SIIT (obsoleted)
              64:ff9b::NNNN:NNNN/96   # RFC 6052 - Well-Known Prefix
           2001:0000:X:NNNN:NNNN/32   # RFC 4380 - Teredo (IPv4 bits are flipped)
                  2002:NNNN:NNNN::/16 # RFC 3056 - 6to4

           (in the Teredo case above, "X" represents some variable non-zero bytes
            that occupy the center 64 bits of the address).

       All of this plugin's internal lookup databases are IPv6 databases, and any IPv4-like
       information is always stored in the v4compat space within these databases.  When doing
       runtime lookups all other v4-like addresses (raw IPv4 addresses, v4mapped, SIIT, WKP,
       Teredo, and 6to4) are converted to the canonical v4compat IPv6 representation before
       querying the internal databases.  The other representations (v4mapped, SIIT, WKP, Teredo,
       6to4) are Undefined internally, and will never be referenced at lookup-time due to the
       v4compat conversion mentioned earlier.

       The "nets" stanza is not allowed to specify entries in the five undefined v4-like IPv6
       spaces (those other than v4compat).  Specify those networks as normal IPv4 networks or
       v4compat networks instead.  Legitimate IPv6 "nets" entries which happen to be a supernet
       of any v4-like spaces will *not* unduly affect v4-like lookups.  There is no functional
       difference between v4compat and native v4 forms in "nets", e.g. "192.0.2.0/24" and
       "::C000:0200/120" are completely identical.

       GeoIP databases that are natively IPv4-only get all of their data loaded into the v4compat
       space only.  For normal IPv6 GeoIP databases, by default we load the v4compat space
       directly (which is where MaxMind stores IPv4 data in their IPv6 databases), but ignore the
       v4mapped/SIIT/Teredo/6to4 spaces (some of which are empty in MaxMind's databases, and some
       of which simply alias the v4compat space).

ANOTHER CONFIG EXAMPLE

       A relatively-maximal example config, showing the interaction of valid "maps" and
       "resources" sections:

         service_types => {
           xmpp_svc => { plugin => "tcp_connect", ... }
           www_svc => { plugin => "http_status", ... }
         }
         plugins => {
           geoip => {
             maps => {
               my_prod_map => {
                 geoip2_db => GeoIP2-City.mmdb,
                 datacenters => [us-01, de-01, sg-01],
                 map => {
                     # Hierarchy is Continent -> Country -> Region -> City
                     NA => {
                       US => {
                         Dallas => [sg-01],
                       }
                     }
                     SA => [us-01, sg-01, de-01],
                     EU => {
                       default => [de-01, us-01, sg-01],
                       CH => {
                         Geneve => {
                           Geneva => [sg-01],
                         }
                       }
                     }
                     AF => [de-01, us-01, sg-01],
                     AS => [sg-01, de-01, us-01],
                     OC => [sg-01, us-01, de-01],
                 }
                 nets => {
                     10.0.0.0/8 => [ de-01 ],
                     2001:DB8::/32 => [ us-01 ],
                 }
               }
               my_auto_map => {
                 geoip2_db => GeoIP2-City.mmdb,
                 datacenters => [us-01, de-01, sg-01],
                 auto_dc_coords => {
                    us-01 => [ 38.9, -77 ],
                    de-01 => [ 50.1, 8.7 ],
                    sg-01 => [ 1.3, 103.9 ],
                 }
               }
             }
             resources => {
               prod_app => {
                 map => my_auto_map
                 # these two are inherited multifo config keys
                 #  for all of the dcmap below:
                 service_types => [www_svc, xmpp_svc],
                 up_thresh => 0.4,
                 dcmap => {
                   us-01 => {
                     lb01 => 192.0.2.1,
                     lb02 => 192.0.2.2,
                     lb03 => 192.0.2.3,
                     lb01.v6 => 2001:DB8::1,
                     lb02.v6 => 2001:DB8::2,
                     lb03.v6 => 2001:DB8::3,
                   },
                   sg-01 => {
                     lb01 => 192.0.2.4,
                     lb02 => 192.0.2.5,
                     lb03 => 192.0.2.6,
                     lb01.v6 => 2001:DB8::4,
                     lb02.v6 => 2001:DB8::5,
                     lb03.v6 => 2001:DB8::6,
                   },
                   de-01 => {
                     lb01 => 192.0.2.7,
                     lb02 => 192.0.2.8,
                     lb03 => 192.0.2.9,
                     lb01.v6 => 2001:DB8::7,
                     lb02.v6 => 2001:DB8::8,
                     lb03.v6 => 2001:DB8::9,
                   },
                 }
               },
               prod_cdn => {
                 map => my_prod_map,
                 dcmap => {
                   us-01 => us-cdn-provider.example.net.
                   sg-01 => asia-cdn-provider.example.net.
                   de-01 => europe-cdn-provider.example.net.
                 }
               }
             }
           }
         }

       Example zonefile RRs in zone example.com:

         app     600 DYNA geoip!prod_app
         app.us  600 DYNA geoip!prod_app/us-01
         app.sg  600 DYNA geoip!prod_app/sg-01
         app.de  600 DYNA geoip!prod_app/de-01
         content 600 DYNC geoip!prod_cdn

EXAMPLE OF METAFO->GEOIP CITY-AUTO-MODE w/ LAST RESORT CNAME

         plugins => {
           geoip => {
             maps => {
               auto_map => {
                 geoip2_db => GeoIP2-City.mmdb,
                 datacenters => [dc1, dc2, dc3, dc4],
                 auto_dc_coords => {
                    dc1 => [ 38.9, -77 ],
                    dc2 => [ 50.1, 8.7 ],
                    dc3 => [ 20.2, 88.9 ],
                    dc4 => [ 39.0, -20 ],
                 },
                 # only fail through the nearest 2 before giving up:
                 auto_dc_limit => 2,
               }
             },
             resources => {
               www_real => {
                 map => my_auto_map,
                 service_types => [ http, xmpp ],
                 dcmap => {
                   dc1 => 192.0.2.100,
                   dc2 => 192.0.2.101,
                   dc3 => 192.0.2.102,
                   dc4 => 192.0.2.103
                 }
               }
             }
           },
           metafo => {
             resources => {
               www => {
                 datacenters => [ real, backup ],
                 dcmap => {
                   real => %geoip!www_real,
                   backup => backup-host.example.net.
                 }
               }
             }
           }
         }

         And in the example.com zonefile:

         ; This tries through the closest 2/4 datacenters to
         ;   the client from the geoip map, and if both of
         ;   those are down it returns a CNAME to backup-host.example.net.
         ;   for a downtime message or something:
         www DYNC metafo!www

SEE ALSO

       gdnsd-plugin-metafo(8), gdnsd_geoip_test(1), gdnsd.config(5), gdnsd.zonefile(5), gdnsd(8)

       The gdnsd manual.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (c) 2012 Brandon L Black <blblack@gmail.com>

       This file is part of gdnsd.

       gdnsd is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the
       GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3
       of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

       gdnsd is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without
       even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
       GNU General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with gdnsd.  If
       not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.