How To Configure Multiple Pools¶
Designate supports “pools” of nameservers. A pool is a collection of nameservers and targets that Designate will write to and read from to confirm changes are successful. In some cases you might have multiple pools that you need to manage differently. For example, you might use separate pools to distribute tenants across some subset of your DNS infrastructure.
Read the section on DNS Server Pools to learn more about what pools are and what they can do.
Pools Configuration¶
Pools are configured by a pools.yml file. This file describes the pools and can be used to update Designate via designate-manage commands.
Here is an example pools.yml that configures two different pools. The idea is that we’ll configure our pools to support different usage levels. We’ll define a gold and standard level and put zones in each based on the tenant.
Our gold level will provide 6 nameservers that users have access to where our standard will only provide 2. Both pools will have one master target we write to.
---
- name: golden_pool
description: The golden pool!
attributes:
service_tier: gold
ns_records:
- hostname: ns1-gold.example.org
priority: 1
- hostname: ns2-gold.example.org
priority: 2
- hostname: ns3-gold.example.net
priority: 3
- hostname: ns4-gold.example.net
priority: 4
- hostname: ns5-gold.example.net
priority: 5
- hostname: ns6-gold.example.net
priority: 6
nameservers:
- host: ns1-gold.example.net
port: 53
- host: ns2-gold.example.net
port: 53
- host: ns3-gold.example.net
port: 53
- host: ns4-gold.example.net
port: 53
- host: ns5-gold.example.net
port: 53
- host: ns6-gold.example.net
port: 53
targets:
- type: bind9
description: bind9 golden master
masters:
- host: mdns.designate.example.com.
port: 5354
options:
host: ns-master-gold.example.org
port: 53
rndc_host: ns-master-gold.example.org
rndc_port: 953
rndc_key_file: /etc/designate.rndc.key
- name: standard_pool
description: The standard pool
attributes:
service_tier: standard
ns_records:
- hostname: ns1-std.example.org
priority: 1
- hostname: ns2-std.example.org
priority: 2
nameservers:
- host: ns1-std.example.net
port: 53
- host: ns2-std.example.net
port: 53
targets:
- type: bind9
description: bind9 golden master
masters:
- host: mdns.designate.example.com.
port: 5354
options:
host: ns-master-std.example.org
port: 53
rndc_host: ns-master-std.example.org
rndc_port: 953
rndc_key_file: /etc/designate.rndc.key
With our configuration in place, we can then update Designate to use the pool configuration.
# Do a dry run
$ designate-manage pool update --file pools.yml --dry-run
$ designate-manage pool update --file pools.yml
Designate now has two pools to work with. The next step will be to configure the scheduler to use the attributes when choosing what pool to store the zone on.
Pool Scheduler¶
The pool scheduler allows selecting a pool when a zone is created. Each scheduler acts as a filter, selecting or negating each pool based on some attributes. Designate comes with some simple schedulers to support common patterns:
default_pool
fallback
random
pool_id_attribute
attribute
These are configured in the service:central section of the config.
Schedule by Pool ID Example¶
For example, if we wanted to allow a user to select a specific pool by id or fallback to using a default, we could use the following configuration.
[service:central]
default_pool_id = 794ccc2c-d751-44fe-b57f-8894c9f5c842
scheduler_filters = pool_id_attribute, fallback
The filters are applied from left to right. If the zone body doesn’t contain an attributes object with a pool_id set to a valid pool id, the fallback filter is then called, returning the default pool as the scheduled pool for that zone.
Schedule by Tier Example¶
In our tiered example, we’ll use the attribute filter to select the correct pool.
[service:central]
default_pool_id = 794ccc2c-d751-44fe-b57f-8894c9f5c842 # the std pool
scheduler_filters = attribute, fallback
When a user needs the zone to go to the gold pool, the user needs to provide the appropriate attribute in the zone.
POST /v2/zones HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
Content-Type: application/json
{
"attributes": {
"service_tier": "gold"
},
"email": "user@example.com",
"name": "example.net."
}
This ensures the zone ends up on the correct pool.
In this example, we’ve allowed the user to define what pool should be scheduled. If we wanted to schedule the zone based on the tenant, we could write a custom filter that looked up the appropriate group and adds the appropriate pool.