plugin/grpc/README.md
grpc - facilitates proxying DNS messages to upstream resolvers via gRPC protocol.
The grpc plugin supports gRPC and TLS.
This plugin can only be used once per Server Block.
In its most basic form:
grpc FROM TO...
Multiple upstreams are randomized (see policy) on first use. When a proxy returns an error
the next upstream in the list is tried.
Extra knobs are available with an expanded syntax:
grpc FROM TO... {
except IGNORED_NAMES...
tls CERT KEY CA
tls_servername NAME
policy random|round_robin|sequential
fallthrough [ZONES...]
}
FROM and TO... as above.
IGNORED_NAMES in except is a space-separated list of domains to exclude from proxying.
Requests that match none of these names will be passed through.
tls CERT KEY CA define the TLS properties for TLS connection. From 0 to 3 arguments can be
provided with the meaning as described below
tls - no client authentication is used, and the system CAs are used to verify the server certificatetls CA - no client authentication is used, and the file CA is used to verify the server certificatetls CERT KEY - client authentication is used with the specified cert/key pair.
The server certificate is verified with the system CAstls CERT KEY CA - client authentication is used with the specified cert/key pair.
The server certificate is verified using the specified CA filetls_servername NAME allows you to set a server name in the TLS configuration; for instance 9.9.9.9
needs this to be set to dns.quad9.net. Multiple upstreams are still allowed in this scenario,
but they have to use the same tls_servername. E.g. mixing 9.9.9.9 (QuadDNS) with 1.1.1.1
(Cloudflare) will not work.
policy specifies the policy to use for selecting upstream servers. The default is random.
fallthrough [ZONES...] If a query results in NXDOMAIN from the gRPC backend, pass the request
to the next plugin instead of returning the NXDOMAIN response. This is useful when the gRPC backend
is authoritative for a zone but should not return authoritative NXDOMAIN responses for queries that
don't actually belong to that zone (e.g., search path queries). If [ZONES...] is omitted, then
fallthrough happens for all zones. If specific zones are listed, then only queries for those zones
will be subject to fallthrough.
Also note the TLS config is "global" for the whole grpc proxy if you need a different
tls-name for different upstreams you're out of luck.
If monitoring is enabled (via the prometheus plugin) then the following metric are exported:
coredns_grpc_request_duration_seconds{to} - duration per upstream interaction.coredns_grpc_requests_total{to} - query count per upstream.coredns_grpc_responses_total{to, rcode} - count of RCODEs per upstream.
and we are randomly (this always uses the random policy) spraying to an upstream.Proxy all requests within example.org. to a nameserver running on a different port:
example.org {
grpc . 127.0.0.1:9005
}
Load balance all requests between three resolvers, one of which has a IPv6 address.
. {
grpc . 10.0.0.10:53 10.0.0.11:1053 [2003::1]:53
}
Forward everything except requests to example.org
. {
grpc . 10.0.0.10:1234 {
except example.org
}
}
Proxy everything except example.org using the host's resolv.conf's nameservers:
. {
grpc . /etc/resolv.conf {
except example.org
}
}
Proxy all requests to 9.9.9.9 using the TLS protocol, and cache every answer for up to 30
seconds. Note the tls_servername is mandatory if you want a working setup, as 9.9.9.9 can't be
used in the TLS negotiation.
. {
grpc . 9.9.9.9 {
tls_servername dns.quad9.net
}
cache 30
}
Or with multiple upstreams from the same provider
. {
grpc . 1.1.1.1 1.0.0.1 {
tls_servername cloudflare-dns.com
}
cache 30
}
Forward requests to a local upstream listening on a Unix domain socket.
. {
grpc . unix:///path/to/grpc.sock
}
Proxy requests for example.org. to a gRPC backend, but fallthrough to the next plugin for NXDOMAIN responses to handle search path queries correctly.
example.org {
grpc . 127.0.0.1:9005 {
fallthrough
}
forward . 8.8.8.8
}
The TLS config is global for the whole grpc proxy if you need a different tls_servername for
different upstreams you're out of luck.