stackia / DNSAgent

A powerful "hosts" replacement.
MIT License
614 stars 88 forks source link

This project is no longer actively maintained. We instead recommend using other modern DNS solutions, e.g. CoreDNS.

DNSAgent

A powerful "hosts" replacement.

Features

Download

You can always get the latest release here: https://github.com/stackia/DNSAgent/releases/latest

Requirement

For Dnsmasq Users

There is a Dnsmasq to DNSAgent rules converter available to quickly make your Dnsmasq rules working with this program:

https://stackia.github.io/masq2agent/

Usage

Edit options.cfg to change options.

Edit rules.cfg to customize your rules.

Both options.cfg and rules.cfg are standord JSON files, your can use any of your favorite editors to open them.

Launch DNSAgent.exe and change your system DNS to 127.0.0.1. Voilà!

Configuration

You can choose to install DNSAgent as a Windows service by running Install as Service.bat. And Uninstall Service.bat to remove this service.

A sample configuration:

options.cfg:

{
    "HideOnStart": false,
    "ListenOn": "127.0.0.1:53, [::1]",
    "DefaultNameServer": "119.29.29.29",
    "UseHttpQuery": false,
    "QueryTimeout": 4000,
    "CompressionMutation": false,
    "CacheResponse": true,
    "CacheAge": 86400,
    "NetworkWhitelist": null
}

Set CacheResponse to false will disable local cache. Set CacheAge to 0 will use the DNS response's record TTL as cache TTL.

Set UseHttpQuery to true will use DNSPod HttpDNS procotal to query the name server. HttpDNS protocol doesn't support IPv6.

If you want to filter source IP, you can set NetworkWhitelist with the following format (CIDR notation is used below):

    "NetworkWhitelist": [
        "127.0.0.1/32",
        "192.168.199.0/24"
    ]

WARNING: Set NetworkWhitelist to [] will deny all requests. If you want to disable source IP filting, set NetworkWhitelist to null.

rules.cfg:

[
    {
        "Pattern": "^(.*\\.mydomain\\.com)|((.*\\.)?(yourdomain|hisdomain)\\.com)$",
        "Address": "112.223.221.26"
    },
    {
        "Pattern": "^www\\.google\\.com\\.hk$",
        "Address": "www.google.com",
        "NameServer": "8.8.4.4",
        "CompressionMutation": true
    },
    {
        "Pattern": "^(.*)\\.mysuffix\\.com$",
        "Address": "{1}"
    },
    {
        "Pattern": "^www\\.google\\.com\\.tw$",
        "Address": "www.google.com",
        "NameServer": "127.0.0.1"
    },
    {
        "Pattern": "^www\\.google\\.co\\.jp$",
        "Address": "www.google.com"
    },
    {
        "Pattern": "^www\\.google\\.cn$",
        "NameServer": "114.114.114.114"
    },
    {
        "Pattern": "^.*\\.cn$",
        "NameServer": "119.29.29.29",
        "UseHttpQuery": true,
        "QueryTimeout": 1000
    }
]

When a domain name matchs mutiple rules, the last one is used.

You can use {0}/{1}/{2}/... to insert regular expression group match result in "Address" field.

IPv6 address will only be returned when the client querys for AAAA records.

ListenOn / DefaultNameServer / NameServer field can be of following formats:

127.0.0.1 // IPv4 address with a default port 53
127.0.0.1:9029 // IPv4 address with a custom port 9029
2001:4860:4860::8888 // IPv6 address with a default port 53
[2001:4860:4860::8888]:9029 // IPv6 address with a custom port 9029

You can press Ctrl + R to reload all configurations and clear cache without restart this program.

License

The project is released under MIT License.

The project uses a modified version of ARSoft.Tools.Net, which is released under Apache License 2.0. The modification enables compression pointer on DNS questions, which shouldn't be done normally according to RFC, but it can be used to bypass DNS poisoning under certain environments.

ARSoft.Tools.Net is an excellent DNS library purely written in C#. Thanks to their great work for .NET community!