0fae35d5b7
If only because we can use SHA2 for integrity checking. |
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dnscrypt-wrapper.sh | ||
Dockerfile | ||
entrypoint.sh | ||
key-rotation.sh | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
unbound-check.sh | ||
unbound.sh | ||
watchdog.sh |
DNSCrypt server Docker image
Run your own caching, non-censoring, non-logging, DNSSEC-capable, DNSCrypt-enabled DNS resolver virtually anywhere!
If you are already familiar with Docker, it shouldn't take more than 5 minutes to get your resolver up and running.
Installation
Download the Docker image source:
$ git clone https://github.com/jedisct1/dnscrypt-server-docker.git
Build the image:
$ docker build -t dnscrypt-server-image .
Think about a name. This is going to be part of your DNSCrypt provider name.
If you are planning to make your resolver publicly accessible, this name will
be public.
It has to look like a domain name (example.com
), but it doesn't have to be
a registered domain.
Let's pick example.com
here.
Create and initialize the container, once and for all:
$ docker run --name=dnscrypt-server -p 443:443/udp -p 443:443/tcp \
dnscrypt-server-image init -N example.com
This will only accept connections via DNSCrypt. Containers on the same virtual
network can directly access the DNS cache on the standard DNS port (53), but
to create a regular, non-authenticated public DNS resolver, this extra port
has to be explicitly exposed (-p 53:53/udp -p 53:53/tcp
).
Now, to start the whole stack:
$ docker start dnscrypt-server
Done.
To check that your DNSCrypt-enabled DNS resolver is accessible, run the DNSCrypt client proxy on another host:
# dnscrypt-proxy \
--provider-key=<provider key, as displayed when the container was initialized> \
--resolver-address=<your resolver's public IP address> \
--provider-name=2.dnscrypt-cert.example.com
And try using 127.0.0.1
as a DNS resolver.
Note that the actual provider name for DNSCrypt is 2.dnscrypt-cert.example.com
,
not just example.com
as initially entered. The full name has to start with
2.dnscrypt-cert.
for the client and the server to use the same version of the
protocol.
Let the world know about your server
Is your brand new DNS resolver publicly accessible?
Fork the dnscrypt-proxy repository, edit the dnscrypt.csv file to add your resolver's informations, and submit a pull request to have it included in the list of public DNSCrypt resolvers!
Details
- Caching resolver: Unbound, with DNSSEC, prefetching, and no logs. The number of threads and memory usage are automatically adjusted. Latest stable version, compiled from source.
- LibreSSL - Latest stable version, compiled from source.
- libsodium - Latest stable version, minimal build compiled from source.
- dnscrypt-wrapper - Latest stable version, compiled from source.
- dnscrypt-proxy - Latest stable version, compiled from source.
Keys and certificate are automatically rotated every 12 hour.
Coming up next
- Namecoin support, by linking a distinct image with namecore and ncdns.
- Metrics
- Better isolation of the certificate signing process, in a dedicated container.