reload
Name
reload - allows automatic reload of a changed Corefile.
Description
This plugin allows automatic reload of a changed Corefile.
To enable automatic reloading of zone file changes, use the auto
plugin.
This plugin periodically checks if the Corefile has changed by reading
it and calculating its MD5 checksum. If the file has changed, it reloads
CoreDNS with the new Corefile. This eliminates the need to send a SIGHUP
or SIGUSR1 after changing the Corefile.
The reloads are graceful - you should not see any loss of service when the
reload happens. Even if the new Corefile has an error, CoreDNS will continue
to run the old config and an error message will be printed to the log. But see
the Bugs section for failure modes.
In some environments (for example, Kubernetes), there may be many CoreDNS
instances that started very near the same time and all share a common
Corefile. To prevent these all from reloading at the same time, some
jitter is added to the reload check interval. This is jitter from the
perspective of multiple CoreDNS instances; each instance still checks on a
regular interval, but all of these instances will have their reloads spread
out across the jitter duration. This isn't strictly necessary given that the
reloads are graceful, and can be disabled by setting the jitter to 0s
.
Jitter is re-calculated whenever the Corefile is reloaded.
This plugin can only be used once per Server Block.
Syntax
reload [INTERVAL] [JITTER]
- The plugin will check for changes every INTERVAL, subject to +/- the JITTER duration
- INTERVAL and JITTER are Golang (durations)[https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration]
- Default INTERVAL is 30s, default JITTER is 15s
- Minimal value for INTERVAL is 2s, and for JITTER is 1s
- If JITTER is more than half of INTERVAL, it will be set to half of INTERVAL
Examples
Check with the default intervals:
. {
reload
erratic
}
Check every 10 seconds (jitter is automatically set to 10 / 2 = 5 in this case):
. {
reload 10s
erratic
}
Bugs
The reload happens without data loss (i.e. DNS queries keep flowing), but there is a corner case
where the reload fails, and you loose functionality. Consider the following Corefile:
. {
health :8080
whoami
}
CoreDNS starts and serves health from :8080. Now you change :8080
to :443
not knowing a process
is already listening on that port. The process reloads and performs the following steps:
- close the listener on 8080
- reload and parse the config again
- fail to start a new listener on 443
- fail loading the new Corefile, abort and keep using the old process
After the aborted attempt to reload we are left with the old processes running, but the listener is
closed in step 1; so the health endpoint is broken. The same can hopen in the prometheus metrics plugin.
In general be careful with assigning new port and expecting reload to work fully.
In CoreDNS v1.6.0 and earlier any import
statements are not discovered by this plugin.
This means if any of these imported files changes the reload plugin is ignorant of that fact.
CoreDNS v1.7.0 and later does parse the Corefile and supports detecting changes in imported files.
Metrics
If monitoring is enabled (via the prometheus directive) then the following metric is exported:
coredns_reload_failed_count_total{}
- counts the number of failed reload attempts.
Also See
See coredns-import(7) and corefile(5).