forked from isc-projects/bind9
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
Copy pathPLATFORMS
99 lines (78 loc) · 3.51 KB
/
PLATFORMS
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
PLATFORMS
Supported platforms
In general, this version of BIND will build and run on any POSIX-compliant
system with a C11-compliant C compiler, BSD-style sockets with
RFC-compliant IPv6 support, POSIX-compliant threads, the libuv
asynchronous I/O library, and the OpenSSL cryptography library.
The following C11 features are used in BIND 9:
* Atomic operations support from the compiler is needed, either in the
form of builtin operations, C11 atomics, or the Interlocked family of
functions on Windows.
* Thread Local Storage support from the compiler is needed, either in
the form of C11 _Thread_local/thread_local, the __thread GCC
extension, or the __declspec(thread) MSVC extension on Windows.
BIND 9.15 requires a fairly recent version of libuv (at least 1.x). For
some of the older systems listed below, you will have to install an
updated libuv package from sources such as EPEL, PPA, or other native
sources for updated packages. The other option is to build and install
libuv from source.
Certain optional BIND features have additional library dependencies. These
include libxml2 and libjson-c for statistics, libmaxminddb for
geolocation, libfstrm and libprotobuf-c for DNSTAP, and libidn2 for
internationalized domain name conversion.
ISC regularly tests BIND on many operating systems and architectures, but
lacks the resources to test all of them. Consequently, ISC is only able to
offer support on a "best effort" basis for some.
Regularly tested platforms
As of Dec 2019, BIND 9.15 is fully supported and regularly tested on the
following systems:
* Debian 9, 10
* Ubuntu LTS 16.04, 18.04
* Fedora 31
* Red Hat Enterprise Linux / CentOS 7, 8
* FreeBSD 11.3, 12.0
* OpenBSD 6.5
* Alpine Linux
The amd64, i386, armhf and arm64 CPU architectures are all fully
supported.
Best effort
The following are platforms on which BIND is known to build and run. ISC
makes every effort to fix bugs on these platforms, but may be unable to do
so quickly due to lack of hardware, less familiarity on the part of
engineering staff, and other constraints. With the exception of Windows
Server 2012 R2, none of these are tested regularly by ISC.
* Windows Server 2012 R2, 2016 / x64
* Windows 10 / x64
* macOS 10.12+
* Solaris 11
* NetBSD
* Other Linux distributions still supported by their vendors, such as:
+ Ubuntu 19.04+
+ Gentoo
+ Arch Linux
* OpenWRT/LEDE 17.01+
* Other CPU architectures (mips, mipsel, sparc, ...)
Community maintained
These systems may not all have the required dependencies for building BIND
easily available, although it will be possible in many cases to compile
those directly from source. The community and interested parties may wish
to help with maintenance, and we welcome patch contributions, although we
cannot guarantee that we will accept them. All contributions will be
assessed against the risk of adverse effect on officially supported
platforms.
* Platforms past or close to their respective EOL dates, such as:
+ Ubuntu 14.04, 18.10
+ CentOS 6
+ Debian Jessie
+ FreeBSD 10.x
Unsupported platforms
These are platforms on which BIND 9.15 is known not to build or run:
* Platforms without at least OpenSSL 1.0.2
* Windows 10 / x86
* Windows Server 2012 and older
* Solaris 10 and older
* Platforms that don't support IPv6 Advanced Socket API (RFC 3542)
* Platforms that don't support atomic operations (via compiler or
library)
* Linux without NPTL (Native POSIX Thread Library)
* Platforms on which libuv cannot be compiled