Version 1.0.5
go-dnsmasq is a lightweight (1.2 MB) DNS caching server/forwarder with minimal filesystem and runtime overhead.
- Caching DNS server/forwarder in a local network
- Container/Host DNS cache
- DNS proxy providing DNS
search
capabilities tomusl-libc
based clients, particularly Alpine Linux
- Automatically set upstream
nameservers
andsearch
domains from resolv.conf - Insert itself into the host's /etc/resolv.conf on start
- Serve static A/AAAA records from a hosts file
- Provide DNS response caching
- Replicate the
search
domain treatment not supported bymusl-libc
based Linux distributions - Supports virtually unlimited number of
search
paths andnameservers
(related Kubernetes article) - Configure stubzones (different nameserver for specific domains)
- Round-robin of DNS records
- Send server metrics to Graphite and StatHat
- Configuration through both command line flags and environment variables
DNS queries are resolved in the style of the GNU libc resolver:
- The first nameserver (as listed in resolv.conf or configured by
--nameservers
) is always queried first, additional servers are considered fallbacks - Multiple
search
domains are tried in the order they are configured. - Single-label queries (e.g.: "redis-service") are always qualified with the
search
domains - Multi-label queries (ndots >= 1) are first tried as absolute names before qualifying them with the
search
domains
Flag | Description | Default | Environment vars |
---|---|---|---|
--listen, -l | Address to listen on host[:port] |
127.0.0.1:53 | $DNSMASQ_LISTEN |
--default-resolver, -d | Update resolv.conf to make go-dnsmasq the host's nameserver | False | $DNSMASQ_DEFAULT |
--nameservers, -n | Comma delimited list of nameservers host[:port] . IPv6 literal addresses must be enclosed in brackets. (defaults to /etc/resolv.conf value) |
- | $DNSMASQ_SERVERS |
--stubzones, -z | Use a different nameserver for specific domains. Flag can be passed multiple times to specify more zones. domain[,domain]/host[:port] |
- | $DNSMASQ_STUB |
--hostsfile, -f | Path to a hosts file (e.g. ‘/etc/hosts‘) | - | $DNSMASQ_HOSTSFILE |
--hostsfile-poll, -p | How frequently to poll hosts file for changes (seconds, ‘0‘ to disable) | 0 | $DNSMASQ_POLL |
--search-domains, -s | Comma delimited list of search domains domain[,domain] (defaults to /etc/resolv.conf value) |
- | $DNSMASQ_SEARCH |
--append-search-domains, -a | Resolve queries by appending search domains | False | $DNSMASQ_APPEND |
--rcache, -r | Capacity of the response cache (‘0‘ to disable cache) | 0 | $DNSMASQ_RCACHE |
--rcache-ttl | TTL for entries in the response cache | 60 | $DNSMASQ_RCACHE_TTL |
--no-rec | Disable recursion | False | $DNSMASQ_NOREC |
--fwd-ndots | Minimum number of dots a name must have before the query is allowed to be forwarded to upstream nameservers | 0 | $DNSMASQ_FWD_NDOTS |
--ndots | Number of dots a name must have before an initial absolute query will be made (defaults to /etc/resolv.conf value) | 1 | $DNSMASQ_NDOTS |
--round-robin | Enable round robin of A/AAAA records | False | $DNSMASQ_RR |
--systemd | Bind to socket(s) activated by Systemd (ignores --listen) | False | $DNSMASQ_SYSTEMD |
--verbose | Enable verbose logging | False | $DNSMASQ_VERBOSE |
--syslog | Enable syslog logging | False | $DNSMASQ_SYSLOG |
--multithreading | Enable multithreading | False | |
--help, -h | Show help | ||
--version, -v | Print the version |
EnvVar: GRAPHITE_SERVER
Default:
Set to the host:port
of the Graphite server
EnvVar: GRAPHITE_PREFIX
Default: go-dnsmasq
Set a custom prefix for Graphite metrics
EnvVar: STATHAT_USER
Default:
Set to your StatHat account email address
Download the binary for your OS from the releases page.
go-dnsmasq is available in two versions. The minimal version (go-dnsmasq-min
) has a lower memory footprint but doesn't have caching, stats reporting and systemd support.
sudo ./go-dnsmasq [options]
Docker Hub trusted builds are available.
docker run -d -p 53:53/udp -p 53:53 janeczku/go-dnsmasq:latest
You can pass go-dnsmasq configuration parameters by setting the corresponding environmental variables with Docker's -e
flag.
The --hostsfile
parameter expects a standard plain text hosts file with the only difference being that a wildcard *
in the left-most label of hostnames is allowed. Wildcard entries will match any subdomain that is not explicitly defined.
For example, given a hosts file with the following content:
192.168.0.1 db1.db.local
192.168.0.2 *.db.local
Queries for db2.db.local
would be answered with an A record pointing to 192.168.0.2, while queries for db1.db.local
would yield an A record pointing to 192.168.0.1.