# Copyright (C) 2011 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") # # Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any # purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above # copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. # # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ISC DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH # REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY # AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL ISC BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, # INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM # LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE # OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR # PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. $NAMESPACE isc::server_common # \brief Messages for the server_common library % SRVCOMM_ADDRESSES_NOT_LIST the address and port specification is not a list This points to an error in configuration. What was supposed to be a list of IP address - port pairs isn't a list at all but something else. % SRVCOMM_ADDRESS_FAIL failed to listen on addresses (%1) The server failed to bind to one of the address/port pair it should according to configuration, for reason listed in the message (usually because that pair is already used by other service or missing privileges). The server will try to recover and bind the address/port pairs it was listening before. % SRVCOMM_ADDRESS_MISSING address specification is missing "address" or "port" element in %1 This points to an error in configuration. Some address specification is missing either the address or port part and therefore can not be used. % SRVCOMM_ADDRESS_TYPE address specification type is invalid in %1 This points to an error in configuration. Some address specification is malformed. The address part must be a string (and a valid IP address, either IPv4 or IPv6) and the port must be integer (in the valid range). % SRVCOMM_ADDRESS_UNRECOVERABLE failed to recover original addresses also (%2) The recovery of old addresses after SRVCOMM_ADDRESS_FAIL also failed (for the reason listed). This should not happen. We would really like to terminate the server right now, but considering that the server needs reconfiguration and it is not possible to reconfigure a server without it being run, we leave it running in inconsistent and broken state. It probably will not work, but will allow the reconfiguration. We hope to update the configuration system so we can really crash the server happily instead. % SRVCOMM_ADDRESS_VALUE address to set: %1#%2 Debug message. This lists one address and port value of the set of addresses we are going to listen on (eg. there will be one log message per pair). This appears only after SRVCOMM_SET_LISTEN, but might be hidden, as it has higher debug level. % SRVCOMM_KEYS_DEINIT deinitilizing TSIG keyring Debug message indicating that the server is deinilizing the TSIG keyring. This could be seen at server shutdown only, but usually not even there, as leaving the TSIG in memory until the real shutdown and memory reclamation by OS is harmless, so we don't usually do it. % SRVCOMM_KEYS_INIT initializing TSIG keyring Debug message indicating new keyring is being loaded from configuration (either on startup or as a result of configuration update). % SRVCOMM_KEYS_UPDATE updating TSIG keyring Debug message indicating that the server is initializing global TSIG keyring. This should be seen only at server start. % SRVCOMM_PORT_RANGE port out of valid range (%1 in %2) This points to an error in configuration. The port in some address specification is out of the valid range (0-65535). % SRVCOMM_SET_LISTEN setting addresses to listen to Debug message, noting that the server is about to start listening on a different set of IP addresses and ports.