Tip
This is the documentation for the 23.11 version. Looking for the documentation of the latest version? Have a look here.
Basic System Information¶
The TNSR CLI can set several basic elements about the system itself, which also
serves as a good introduction to making changes on TNSR. These settings are
made in config
mode.
Tip
These values are also propagated to SNMP, if configured. See Simple Network Management Protocol for information on setting up SNMP.
The following parameters are available:
- system contact <text>:
System contact information, such as an e-mail address or telephone number (
sysContact
in SNMP).- system description <text>:
A brief description of this TNSR instance, for example its role or other identifying information (
sysDescr
in SNMP).- system location <text>:
The location of this TNSR instance, for example a physical location such as a building name, room number, rack number/position, or VM host (
sysLocation
in SNMP).- system name <text>:
The hostname of this TNSR instance (
sysName
in SNMP).Warning
This setting also changes the hostname in the host operating system to match, replacing any previously configured hostname.
See also
This section of the CLI also contains a command which modifies the boot-time kernel command line parameters. That is an advanced task and as such it is covered in another section: Kernel Command Line Arguments.
This example shows how to set the above parameters, starting from basic mode:
gw tnsr# configure
gw tnsr(config)# system contact support@example.com
gw tnsr(config)# system description TNSR Lab Router
gw tnsr(config)# system location HQ MDF/Rack 2 Top
gw tnsr(config)# system name labrtr01
labrtr01 tnsr(config)# exit
To view the values of these parameters, along with uptime and memory usage, use
the show system
command from either basic or config
mode:
labrtr01 tnsr# show system
description: TNSR Lab Router
contact: support@example.com
name: labrtr01
location: HQ MDF/Rack 2 Top
System Parameters:
object-id: 1.3.6.1.4.1.13644
uptime: 1303615 seconds
total-ram: 8004488 KiB
free-ram: 3236820 KiB
total-swap: 2932732 KiB
free-swap: 2932732 KiB
Platform:
os-name: Linux
os-release: 5.4.0-91-generic
os-version: Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS
machine: x86_64
Product:
product-vendor: Netgate
product-name: TNSR
product-model: x
product-serial: 0
System DNS Resolution Behavior¶
The way TNSR and the host OS resolve hostnames via DNS can be fine-tuned if necessary. DNS resolution behavior has a separate configuration for each namespace (Networking Namespaces).
The default behavior in each namespace depends on the interface configuration. For example, if an interface is configured for DHCP, the DNS server supplied by the DHCP server will be used automatically.
DNS resolution behavior is configured using the system dns-resolver
<namespace>
command, which enters config-dns-resolver
mode. In that mode,
the following commands are available:
- server <name> <ip-addr>:
Configures a DNS server IP address to be used as a forwarding DNS server in this namespace. This command may be repeated multiple times to configure multiple servers. The name parameter is for reference only.
- search <domain>:
Configures a search domain, which is appended to hostnames without a domain name if a result is not found. This command may be repeated multiple times to configure multiple search domains.
DNS Resolution Examples¶
If Unbound is active and allows queries from 127.0.0.1
,
then the dataplane can be configured to use it as a DNS server:
tnsr(config)# system dns-resolver dataplane
tnsr(config-dns-resolver)# server localhost 127.0.0.1
tnsr(config-dns-resolver)# exit
Since the host
namespace cannot access unbound
running in the
dataplane
namespace, it must use a different external DNS server. Configure
the host operating system namespace to use specific forwarding DNS servers
directly as follows:
tnsr(config)# system dns-resolver host
tnsr(config-dns-resolver)# server g1 8.8.8.8
tnsr(config-dns-resolver)# server g2 8.8.4.4
tnsr(config-dns-resolver)# exit