title | titleSuffix | description | services | author | ms.service | ms.custom | ms.date | ms.author | ms.topic |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Import and export a domain zone file - Azure CLI |
Azure DNS |
Learn how to import and export a DNS (Domain Name System) zone file to Azure DNS by using Azure CLI. |
dns |
greg-lindsay |
azure-dns |
devx-track-azurecli |
10/20/2023 |
greglin |
how-to |
In this article, you learn how to import and export a DNS zone file in Azure DNS using Azure CLI. You can also import and export a zone file using the Azure portal.
A DNS zone file is a text file containing information about every Domain Name System (DNS) record in the zone. It follows a standard format, making it suitable for transferring DNS records between DNS systems. Using a zone file is a fast and convenient way to import DNS zones into Azure DNS. You can also export a zone file from Azure DNS to use with other DNS systems.
Azure DNS supports importing and exporting zone files via the Azure CLI and the Azure portal.
Azure CLI is a cross-platform command-line tool used for managing Azure services. It's available for Windows, Mac, and Linux from the Azure downloads page.
Before you import a DNS zone file into Azure DNS, you need to obtain a copy of the zone file. The source of this file depends on where the DNS zone is hosted.
- If your DNS zone is hosted by a partner service, the service should have a way for you to download the DNS zone file. Partner services include domain registrar, dedicated DNS hosting provider, or an alternative cloud provider.
- If your DNS zone is hosted on Windows DNS, the default folder for the zone files is %systemroot%\system32\dns. The full path to each zone file is also shown on the General tab of the DNS console.
- If your DNS zone is hosted using BIND, the location of the zone file for each zone gets specified in the BIND configuration file named.conf.
Important
If the zone file that you import contains CNAME entries that point to names in another private zone, Azure DNS resolution of the CNAME fails unless the other zone is also imported, or the CNAME entries are modified.
Importing a zone file creates a new zone in Azure DNS if the zone doesn't already exist. If the zone exists, then the record sets in the zone file are merged with the existing record sets.
- By default, the new record sets get merged with the existing record sets. Identical records within a merged record set aren't duplicated.
- When record sets are merged, the time to live (TTL) of pre-existing record sets is used.
- Start of Authority (SOA) parameters, except
host
are always taken from the imported zone file. The name server record set at the zone apex also always uses the TTL taken from the imported zone file. - An imported CNAME record will replace the existing CNAME record that has the same name.
- When a conflict happens between a CNAME record and another record with the same name of different type, the existing record gets used.
The following notes provide more technical details about the zone import process.
- The
$TTL
directive is optional, and is supported. When no$TTL
directive is given, records without an explicit TTL are imported set to a default TTL of 3600 seconds. When two records in the same record set specify different TTLs, the lower value is used. - The
$ORIGIN
directive is optional, and is supported. When no$ORIGIN
is set, the default value used is the zone name as specified on the command line, including the ending dot (.). - The
$INCLUDE
and$GENERATE
directives aren't supported. - These record types are supported: A, AAAA, CAA, CNAME, MX, NS, SOA, SRV, and TXT.
- The SOA record is created automatically by Azure DNS when a zone is created. When you import a zone file, all SOA parameters are taken from the zone file except the
host
parameter. This parameter uses the value provided by Azure DNS because it needs to refer to the primary name server provided by Azure DNS. - The name server record set at the zone apex is also created automatically by Azure DNS when the zone is created. Only the TTL of this record set is imported. These records contain the name server names provided by Azure DNS. The record data isn't overwritten by the values contained in the imported zone file.
- During Public Preview, Azure DNS supports only single-string TXT records. Multistring TXT records are to be concatenated and truncated to 255 characters.
The format of the Azure CLI command to import a DNS zone is:
az network dns zone import -g <resource group> -n <zone name> -f <zone file name>
Values:
<resource group>
is the name of the resource group for the zone in Azure DNS.<zone name>
is the name of the zone.<zone file name>
is the path/name of the zone file to be imported.
If a zone with this name doesn't already exist in the resource group, one is created for you. For an existing zone, the imported record sets are merged with existing record sets.
To import a zone file for the zone contoso.com.
-
Create a resource group if you don't have one.
az group create --resource-group myresourcegroup -l westeurope
-
To import the zone contoso.com from the file contoso.com.txt into a new DNS zone in the resource group myresourcegroup, run the command
az network dns zone import
.This command loads the zone file and parses it. The command executes a series of operations on the Azure DNS service to create the zone and all the record sets in the zone. The command reports the progress in the console window along with any errors or warnings. Since record sets are created in series, it could take a few minutes to import a large zone file.
az network dns zone import -g myresourcegroup -n contoso.com -f contoso.com.txt
You can use any one of the following methods to verify the DNS zone after you've imported the file:
-
To list the records, use the following Azure CLI command:
az network dns record-set list -g myresourcegroup -z contoso.com
-
You can also list the records by using the Azure CLI command
az network dns record-set ns list
. -
Use
nslookup
to verify name resolution for the records. If the zone hasn't been delegated yet, you need to specify the correct Azure DNS name servers explicitly. The following sample shows how to retrieve the name server names assigned to the zone.az network dns record-set ns list -g myresourcegroup -z contoso.com --output json
[ { ....... "name": "@", "nsRecords": [ { "additionalProperties": {}, "nsdname": "ns1-03.azure-dns.com." }, { "additionalProperties": {}, "nsdname": "ns2-03.azure-dns.net." }, { "additionalProperties": {}, "nsdname": "ns3-03.azure-dns.org." }, { "additionalProperties": {}, "nsdname": "ns4-03.azure-dns.info." } ], "resourceGroup": "myresourcegroup", "ttl": 86400, "type": "Microsoft.Network/dnszones/NS" } ]
Use Windows Command Prompt to query the "www" record with the
nslookup
command.nslookup www.contoso.com ns1-03.azure-dns.com Server: ns1-01.azure-dns.com Address: 40.90.4.1 Name:www.contoso.com Addresses: 134.170.185.46 134.170.188.221
After you've verified that the zone has been imported correctly, you then need to update the DNS delegation to point to the Azure DNS name servers. For more information, see Update the DNS delegation.
To export a DNS zone, use the following Azure CLI command:
az network dns zone export -g <resource group> -n <zone name> -f <zone file name>
Values:
<resource group>
is the name of the resource group for the zone in Azure DNS.<zone name>
is the name of the zone.<zone file name>
is the path/name of the zone file to be exported.
As with the zone import, you first need to sign in, choose your subscription, and configure the Azure CLI to use Resource Manager mode.
To export the existing Azure DNS zone contoso.com in resource group myresourcegroup to the file contoso.com.txt (in the current folder), run azure network dns zone export
. This command calls the Azure DNS service to enumerate record sets in the zone and export the results to a BIND-compatible zone file.
az network dns zone export -g myresourcegroup -n contoso.com -f contoso.com.txt
- Learn how to manage record sets and records in your DNS zone.
- Learn how to delegate your domain to Azure DNS.