Use Case 3: Firewall Acts as DNS Proxy Between Client and Server
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Use Case 3: Firewall Acts as DNS Proxy Between Client and Server

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Use Case 3: Firewall Acts as DNS Proxy Between Client and Server

In this use case, the firewall is located between a DNS client and a DNS server. A DNS Proxy on the firewall is configured to act as the DNS server for the hosts that reside on the tenant’s network connected to the firewall interface. In such a scenario, the firewall performs DNS resolution on its dataplane.
This scenario happens to use split DNS, a configuration where DNS Proxy rules are configured to redirect DNS requests to a set of DNS servers based on a domain name match. If there is no match, the server profile determines the DNS servers to which to send the request, hence the two, split DNS resolution methods.
For dataplane DNS resolutions, the source IP address from the DNS proxy in PAN-OS to the outside DNS server would be the address of the proxy (the destination IP of the original request). Any service routes defined in the DNS Server Profile are not used. For example, if the request is from host 172.16.1.1 to the DNS proxy at 192.168.1.1, then the request to the DNS server (at 10.10.10.10) would use a source of 192.168.1.1 and a destination of 10.10.10.10.
  1. Select
    Network
    DNS Proxy
    and click
    Add
    .
  2. Click
    Enable
    and enter a
    Name
    for the DNS Proxy.
  3. For
    Location
    , select the virtual system of the tenant, in this example, Corp1 Corporation (vsys6).
  4. For
    Interface
    , select the interface that will receive the DNS requests from the tenant’s hosts, in this example, Ethernet1/20.
  5. Choose or create a
    Server Profile
    to customize DNS servers to resolve DNS requests for this tenant.
  6. On the
    DNS Proxy Rules
    tab,
    Add
    a
    Name
    for the rule.
  7. (
    Optional
    ) Select
    Turn on caching of domains resolved by this mapping
    .
  8. Add
    one or more
    Domain Name
    (s), one entry per row. DNS Proxy Rule and FQDN Matching describes how the firewall matches FQDNs to domain names in a DNS proxy rule.
  9. For
    DNS Server profile
    , select a profile. The firewall compares the domain name in the DNS request to the domain name(s) defined in the
    DNS Proxy Rules
    . If there is a match, the
    DNS Server profile
    defined in the rule is used to determine the DNS server.
  10. In this example, if the domain in the request matches myweb.corp1.com, the DNS server defined in the myweb DNS Server Profile is used. If there is no match, the DNS server defined in the
    Server Profile
    (Corp1 DNS Server Profile) is used.
  11. Click
    OK
    twice.

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