2.1 KiB
name
name |
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NO_PURGE |
NO_PURGE
indicates that existing records should not be deleted from a domain.
Records will be added and updated, but not removed.
Suppose a domain is managed by both DNSControl and a third-party system. This creates a problem because DNSControl will try to delete records inserted by the other system.
By setting NO_PURGE
on a domain, this tells DNSControl not to delete the
records found in the domain.
It is similar to IGNORE
but more general.
The original reason for NO_PURGE
was that a legacy system was adopting
DNSControl. Previously the domain was managed via Microsoft DNS Server's GUI.
ActiveDirectory was in use, so various records were being inserted behind the
scenes. It was decided to use DNSControl to simply insert a few records. The
NO_PURGE
setting instructed DNSControl not to delete the existing records.
In this example DNSControl will insert "foo.example.com" into the zone, but otherwise leave the zone alone. Changes to "foo"'s IP address will update the record. Removing the A("foo", ...) record from DNSControl will leave the record in place.
{% code title="dnsconfig.js" %}
D("example.com", REG_MY_PROVIDER, DnsProvider(DSP_MY_PROVIDER), NO_PURGE,
A("foo","1.2.3.4")
);
{% endcode %}
The main caveat of NO_PURGE
is that intentionally deleting records becomes
more difficult. Suppose a NO_PURGE
zone has an record such as A("ken",
"1.2.3.4"). Removing the record from dnsconfig.js will not delete "ken" from
the domain. DNSControl has no way of knowing the record was deleted from the
file The DNS record must be removed manually. Users of NO_PURGE
are prone
to finding themselves with an accumulation of orphaned DNS records. That's easy
to fix for a small zone but can be a big mess for large zones.
Support
Prior to DNSControl v4.0.0, not all providers supported NO_PURGE
.
With introduction of diff2
algorithm (enabled by default in v4.0.0),
NO_PURGE
works with all providers.