Installation

Installation from a package

Knot DNS may already be included in your operating system distribution and therefore can be installed from packages (Linux), ports (BSD), or via Homebrew (macOS). This is always preferred unless you want to test the latest features, contribute to Knot development, or you just know what you are doing.

See the project download page for the latest information.

Installation from the source code

Required build environment

The build process relies on these standard tools:

  • make
  • libtool
  • pkg-config
  • autoconf >= 2.65
  • python-sphinx (optional, for documentation building)

GCC at least 4.1 is strictly required for atomic built-ins, but the latest available version is recommended. Another requirements _GNU_SOURCE and C99 support, otherwise it adapts to the compiler available features. LLVM clang compiler since version 2.9 can be used as well.

Getting the source code

You can find the source code for the latest release on www.knot-dns.cz. Alternatively, you can fetch the whole project from the git repository git://git.nic.cz/knot-dns.git.

After obtaining the source code, the compilation and installation is a quite straightforward process using autotools.

Configuring and generating Makefiles

If compiling from the git source, you need to bootstrap the ./configure file first:

$ autoreconf -i -f

In most cases, you can just run configure without any options:

$ ./configure

For all available configure options run:

$ ./configure --help

Compilation

After running ./configure you can compile Knot DNS by running make command, which will produce binaries and other related files:

$ make

Note

The compilation with enabled optimizations may take a long time. In such a case the --disable-fastparser configure option can help.

Installation

When you have finished building Knot DNS, it’s time to install the binaries and configuration files into the operation system hierarchy. You can do so by executing:

$ make install

When installing as a non-root user, you might have to gain elevated privileges by switching to root user, e.g. sudo make install or su -c 'make install'.