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DoTheEvolution 2020-05-06 23:56:51 +02:00
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![logo](https://i.imgur.com/SOa4kRd.png)
# Purpose
# Purpose & Overview
Lightweight DHCP and DNS server.
* [Official site](http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/doc.html)
* [Arch wik](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/dnsmasq)
* [Arch wiki](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/dnsmasq)
dnsmasq solves the problem of accessing self hosted stuff when you are inside
your network. As asking googles DNS for `blabla.org` will return your
very own public IP and most routers/firewalls wont allow this loopback,
where your requests should go out and then right back.</br>
Usual quick way to solve this issue is editing the `hosts` file on your machine,
but if more devices should "just work" it is a no-go.</br>
So the answer is running a DNS server that pairs the local machines IP with
the correct hostnames, and a DHCP server that tells the devices on the network
to use this DNS.
# Files and directory structure
@ -26,7 +36,8 @@ Lightweight DHCP and DNS server.
* `hosts` - a file that can provide additional hostname-ip mapping
`hosts` and `resolve.conf` are just normal system files always in use on any linux
system.
system.</br>
`dnsmasq.conf` comes with the dnsmasq installation.
# Installation
@ -67,23 +78,33 @@ address=/plex.blabla.org/192.168.1.3
# DHCP -------------------------------------------------------------------------
dhcp-range=192.168.1.51,192.168.1.199,255.255.255.0,480h
# gateway
dhcp-option=3,192.168.1.1
dhcp-authoritative
dhcp-range=192.168.1.50,192.168.1.200,255.255.255.0,480h
# gateway
dhcp-option=option:router,192.168.1.1
# DHCP static IPs --------------------------------------------------------------
# mac address : ip address
dhcp-host=08:00:27:68:f9:bf,192.168.1.150
#dhcp-leasefile=/var/lib/misc/dnsmasq.leases
```
*extra info*
* `dnsmasq --test` - validates the config
* `dnsmasq --help dhcp` - lists all the DHCP options
# resolv.conf
Contains DNS nameservers to be used by this linux machine.</br>
A file that contains DNS nameservers to be used by the linux machine,
specifically its glibc resolver library.</br>
Since dnsmasq, a DNS server, is running right on this machine,
the entries should point to localhost.
the entries should just point to localhost.
Bit of an issue is that this file is often changed by various system services,
like systemd or dhcpcd.
Bit of an issue is that this file is often managed by various system services,
like dhcpcd, systemd, networkmanager... and they change it as they see fit.</br>
To prevent this, `resolv.conf` will be flagged as immutable,
which prevents all possible changes to it unless the attribute is removed.
@ -115,8 +136,10 @@ add immutability, and check.
# /etc/hosts
dnsmasq reads `/etc/hosts` for IP hostname pairs entries.
This is where you can add hostnames you wish to route to any ip you want.
This is a file present on every system, linux, windows, mac, android,...
where you can assign a hostname to an IP.</br>
dnsmasq reads `/etc/hosts` for IP hostname pairs and adds them to its own
resolve records.
Unfortunately no wildcard support.
But as seen in the `dnsmasq.conf` there is a wildcard section solving this,
@ -136,16 +159,16 @@ so blabla stuff here is just for show.
# Start the service
Make sure you disable other DHCP servers on the network beforehand,
usually a router is running one.
`sudo systemctl enable --now dnsmasq`
*Make sure you disable other DHCP servers on the network,
usually a router is running one.*
# Test it
#### DHCP
Set some machine to use DHCP for its network setting.</br>
Set some machine on the network to use DHCP for its network setting.</br>
It should just work.
You can check on the dnsmasq host, file `/var/lib/misc/dnsmasq.leases`
@ -177,4 +200,4 @@ which contains the config files.
#### restore
Replace the config files with the one from backup
Replace the content of the config files with the one from the backup.