simplify example dns config (#106)

This commit is contained in:
Yannik Sembritzki 2018-09-27 22:58:37 +02:00 committed by Joona Hoikkala
parent c827ee4801
commit dc0dd43017

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@ -175,8 +175,8 @@ Note: In this documentation:
These values should be changed based on your environment.
You will need to add some DNS records on your domain's regular DNS server:
- `NS` record for `auth.example.com` pointing to `ns.auth.example.com`
- `A` record for `ns.auth.example.com` pointing to `198.51.100.1`
- `NS` record for `auth.example.com` pointing to `auth.example.com` (this means, that `auth.example.com` is responsible for any `*.auth.example.com` records)
- `A` record for `auth.example.com` pointing to `198.51.100.1`
- If using IPv6, an `AAAA` record pointing to the IPv6 address.
- Each domain you will be authenticating will need a `_acme-challenge` `CNAME` subdomain added. The [client](README.md#clients) you use will explain how to do this.
@ -219,19 +219,15 @@ protocol = "udp"
# domain name to serve the requests off of
domain = "auth.example.org"
# zone name server
nsname = "ns1.auth.example.org"
nsname = "auth.example.org"
# admin email address, where @ is substituted with .
nsadmin = "admin.example.org"
# predefined records served in addition to the TXT
records = [
# default A
"auth.example.org. A 192.168.1.100",
# A
"ns1.auth.example.org. A 192.168.1.100",
"ns2.auth.example.org. A 192.168.1.100",
# NS
"auth.example.org. NS ns1.auth.example.org.",
"auth.example.org. NS ns2.auth.example.org.",
# specify that auth.example.org will resolve any *.auth.example.org records
"auth.example.org. NS auth.example.org.",
]
# debug messages from CORS etc
debug = false