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PowerDNS administration app for Django

Project description

Welcome to the PowerDNS app for Django.

This application allows easy administration of PowerDNS records stored in an SQL database by leveraging the standard Django Admin app. You may also use the Django PowerDNS application as part of a larger project to programatically modify your DNS records.

Note: This is an updated and enhanced fork of django-powerdns which looks abandoned as of November 2012.

Quickstart

Simply add powerdns and lck.django.common to INSTALLED_APPS in your settings.py. Use South for database migrations.

Customizing resource record types

If you’re not using DNSSEC or the other less common record types, you can simplify the user interface even more by specifying a sequence of types the app should use. Simply put this in your settings.py:

POWERDNS_RECORD_TYPES = (
    'A', 'AAAA', 'CNAME', 'HINFO', 'MX', 'NAPTR', 'NS',
    'PTR', 'SOA', 'SRV', 'TXT',
)

Consult PowerDNS documentation for a list of supported resource record types.

Using a separate database for PowerDNS

If your Django application is using a different database than the one used by PowerDNS, provide the configuration for the DNS database in settings.py as a separate entry in DATABASES, for example:

DATABASES = {
    'default': {
        'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
        'NAME': 'project_db',
        'USER': 'user',
        'PASSWORD': 'secret',
        'HOST': '127.0.0.1',
        'PORT': '3306',
        'OPTIONS': {
            "init_command": "SET storage_engine=INNODB",
        },
    },
    'powerdns': {
        'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
        'NAME': 'powerdns',
        'USER': 'pdns',
        'PASSWORD': 'pdns',
        'HOST': '127.0.0.1',
        'PORT': '3306',
        'OPTIONS': {
            "init_command": "SET storage_engine=INNODB",
        },
    },
}

For Django to automatically route powerdns requests to the right database, add this setting to settings.py:

DATABASE_ROUTERS = ['powerdns.routers.PowerDNSRouter']

You have to sync and migrate the default and the powerdns databases separately. First the default database:

$ python manage.py syncdb
$ python manage.py migrate

Then the powerdns database:

$ python manage.py syncdb --database=powerdns
$ python manage.py migrate --database==powerdns powerdns

Note that the powerdns database will maintain its own separate South migration history table. This is especially helpful if your connecting several Django projects to a single PowerDNS database.

Also note that due to South limitations, migrate will create all powerdns tables also in the default database. This is harmless, even though creates some clutter.

Change Log

0.9.3

  • Fixed issue #3: HTTP 500 in record admin form if no type given

0.9.2

  • Fixed issue #2: numeric sorting of IP addresses in admin

0.9.1

  • Domain foreign keys support auto completion and have “Edit separately” links

  • Field choices use radio selects whenever that makes sense (fever clicks necessary)

  • Forward/reverse domain filter (requires Django 1.4+)

  • The 0002 database migration in 0.9.0 was incomplete, this is now fixed

0.9.0

  • DNSSEC tables supported.

  • Support for multiple databases.

  • Updated the project to require at least Django 1.3.

  • UI translations supported (currently Polish translation added).

  • South migrations.

  • Source code compliant with PEP8.

  • Minor fixes.

0.2.0

  • First release with basic PowerDNS support.

Authors

Application written by Peter Nixon and Łukasz Langa. NSEC3 code based on George Notaras’ work with django-powerdns-manager.

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