SRV Records
Revision as of 10:25, 7 April 2023 by Zash (talk | contribs) (→External links: Remove STUN & TURN links, they should be on their own page somewere)
A Service record (SRV record) is a specification of data in the Domain Name System (DNS) defining the location (i.e. the hostname and port number) of servers for specified services. It is defined in RFC 2782.
Default Ports
XMPP
For TCP connections (RFC 6120)
- Server 2 Server (S2S) - 5269
- Client 2 Server (C2S) - 5222 (START TLS) / 5223 (DIRECT TLS)
Record format
An SRV record has the form:
_service._proto.name TTL class SRV priority weight port target
- service: the symbolic name of the desired service.
- proto: the transport protocol of the desired service; this is usually either TCP or UDP.
- name: the domain name for which this record is valid.
- TTL: standard DNS time to live field.
- class: standard DNS class field (this is always IN).
- priority: the priority of the target host, lower value means more preferred.
- weight: A relative weight for records with the same priority.
- port: the TCP or UDP port on which the service is to be found.
- target: the canonical hostname of the machine providing the service.
XMPP SRV records
_xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. TTL IN SRV priority weight port target _xmpps-client._tcp.example.net. TTL IN SRV priority weight port target _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. TTL IN SRV priority weight port target _xmpps-server._tcp.example.net. TTL IN SRV priority weight port target
Example 1
_xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 5 0 5222 example.net. _xmpps-client._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 5 0 5223 example.net. _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 5 0 5269 example.net.
The XMPP domain is example.net and the server is example.net.
Example 2
_xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 5 0 5222 server.example.net. _xmpps-client._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 5 0 5223 server.example.net. _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 5 0 5269 server.example.net.
The XMPP domain is example.net and the server is server.example.net.
Example 3
_xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 5 50 5222 server1.example.net. _xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 10 30 5222 server2.example.net. _xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 10 10 5222 server3.example.net. _xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 10 10 5222 server4.example.net. _xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 15 0 5222 backup.example.net. _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 5 50 5269 server1.example.net. _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 10 30 5269 server2.example.net. _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 10 10 5269 server3.example.net. _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 10 10 5269 server4.example.net. _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. 86400 IN SRV 15 0 5269 backup.example.net.
The XMPP domain is example.net and the principal server is server1.example.net which used 50% after server2.example.net 30%, server3.example.net 10%, server4.example.net 10% too, if server1 is down, server2, server3 and server4 will work, if servers 1/2/3/4 are down, backup will work.
Retrieving XMPP SRV records
$ dig SRV _xmpp-client._tcp.example.net $ dig SRV _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net