# auto *auto* enables serving zone data from an RFC 1035-style master file which is automatically picked up from disk. The *auto* middleware is used for an "old-style" DNS server. It serves from a preloaded file that exists on disk. If the zone file contains signatures (i.e. is signed, i.e. DNSSEC) correct DNSSEC answers are returned. Only NSEC is supported! If you use this setup *you* are responsible for resigning the zonefile. New zones or changed zone are automatically picked up from disk. ## Syntax ~~~ auto [ZONES...] { directory DIR [REGEXP ORIGIN_TEMPLATE [TIMEOUT]] no_reload upstream ADDRESS... } ~~~ **ZONES** zones it should be authoritative for. If empty, the zones from the configuration block are used. * `directory` loads zones from the speficied **DIR**. If a file name matches **REGEXP** it will be used to extract the origin. **ORIGIN_TEMPLATE** will be used as a template for the origin. Strings like `{}` are replaced with the respective matches in the file name, i.e. `{1}` is the first match, `{2}` is the second, etc.. The default is: `db\.(.*) {1}` e.g. from a file with the name `db.example.com`, the extracted origin will be `example.com`. **TIMEOUT** specifies how often CoreDNS should scan the directory, the default is every 60 seconds. This value is in seconds. The minimum value is 1 second. * `no_reload` by default CoreDNS will reload a zone from disk whenever it detects a change to the file. This option disables that behavior. * `upstream` defines upstream resolvers to be used resolve external names found (think CNAMEs) pointing to external names. All directives from the *file* middleware are supported. Note that *auto* will load all zones found, even though the directive might only receive queries for a specific zone. I.e: ~~~ auto example.org { directory /etc/coredns/zones } ~~~ Will happily pick up a zone for `example.COM`, except it will never be queried, because the *auto* directive only is authoritative for `example.ORG`. ## Examples Load `org` domains from `/etc/coredns/zones/org` and allow transfers to the internet, but send notifies to 10.240.1.1 ~~~ auto org { directory /etc/coredns/zones/org transfer to * transfer to 10.240.1.1 } ~~~ Load `org` domains from `/etc/coredns/zones/org` and looks for file names as `www.db.example.org`, where `example.org` is the origin. Scan every 45 seconds. ~~~ auto org { directory /etc/coredns/zones/org www\.db\.(.*) {1} 45 } ~~~