DNS configuration

MailerQ relies on the DNS resolver functions that are standard installed on your system. The bad thing about these standard functions is that they are not very good, and they were never intended for high performance MTAs that do many DNS lookups at the same time. There is however also a nice thing about using the standard resolver functions: the DNS lookups of MailerQ return exactly the same results as the lookups done by system utilities like telnet, ping, openssl, dig, et cetera.

Since version 5.11, MailerQ relies on DNS-CPP internally. This is an asynchronous resolver that can handle many different concurrent requests efficiently, and also has support for DNSSEC. This library picks up /etc/resolv.conf and /etc/hosts normally, similar to getaddrinfo().

Unfortunately, for some domains the TTLs that are in DNS are very low, causing MailerQ to retry much too often. Some domains specify TTLs in the range of 0-30 seconds. To mitigate this, the minimum respected TTL is 60 seconds by default, since some domains specify 0 TTL which can cause lookups for every message. This incurs a significant performance penalty. To change this minimum value, the following config file option can be used:

dns-min-ttl:  120

This will make sure that the mininum respected TTL is 120 seconds. Note that the minimum allowed value should be greater than zero, since zero is explicitly disallowed due to the performance penalty.

Timeouts

Since 5.12, the timeouts on DNS requests can be configured in MailerQ. There are two settings for altering the timings. Naturally, settings from /etc/resolv.conf will be picked up first, and then the settings in MailerQ are applied on top of them. If the setting inside MailerQ is empty, the setting from resolv.conf will be kept.

dns-timeout:     60.0
dns-interval:    3.0

The dns-timeout setting limits the time the resolver waits for a response after the last attempt was made. The dns-interval specifies after how many seconds of waiting for a reply on the initial query, the query should be retransmitted.

Quality of Service

Since 5.13 three settings were added to finetune the maximum workload of the DNS resolver:

Buffer size

DNS works over UDP, and so these packets may be lost at any point in the process, which means that they may have never been seen by the recursor, or the recursor has replied and we had to drop the packet. To prevent the latter problem, the dns-buffersize setting was introduced.

dns-buffersize:  1MB

This sets the receiving and sending buffer size. We recommend raising this as high as possible, since that makes the probability of dropped packets because the receive buffer is full significantly lower. Keep in mind that this is bound by the system limit on the receive buffer size, which can be altered with sysctl. To make it larger, use the following commands to tune the settings.

sysctl -w net.core.rmem_max=1000000
sysctl -w net.core.wmem_max=1000000

Rotation

If all nameservers in /etc/resolv.conf are local resolvers and have a similar resolving speed, we recommend setting the rotate option to true:

dns-rotate:     true

This will allow MailerQ to distribute the load across the nameservers randomly, performing a rudimentary load-balancing on it.