ldapdns is a robust DNS server that forwards DNS requests to your LDAP directory. This means that changes to your LDAP directory will take affect immediately (no intermediate commands to run, and no cron jobs to wait for).
| Tags | Internet DNS Networking |
|---|---|
| Licenses | GPL |
| Operating Systems | POSIX |
Recent releases


Changes: This release features DomainKeys support, LDAP URL support, and a few bugfixes.


Changes: This release offers a major code cleanup, and was largely re-written to take advantage of a smarter LDAP client library (built in, so there are no external library dependancies) and transport independance, but is not ready for general use. In fact, this announcement is more to remind everyone that LDAPDNS isn't dead, and to get people reporting bugs in the CVS code.


Changes: There are bugfixes for the *bsdish systems (handling of mktime) and initial Debian support. There were also some changes made that will affect (hopefully positively) the use of AXFR, so if you use AXFR, do upgrade. For everyone else, it's completely optional.


Changes: This release has bugfixes for Solaris users, init script changes for SuSE, syslog now works after chroot(), and fixes for a few other minor issues.


Changes: This release includes two bugfixes, easier to use AXFRs, a few minor changes to DNS ordering, a correctly returned NXDOMAIN, some timing bugfixes for extremely low loads, and a couple of other minor things.
An extremely powerful object-relational database persistence API with automatic mapping (A-O/RM).