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166 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Kelley
89382bacaa Tweak sending ICMP6 echo requests for slaac. 2012-04-04 20:48:16 +01:00
Simon Kelley
6c559c34df tweak favicon 2012-04-02 20:40:34 +01:00
Simon Kelley
adaa6888dd Move FIXME message to comment - having it emitted by the code is just confusing. 2012-04-02 10:02:12 +01:00
Simon Kelley
a813111379 Fix bug in tag-matching logic with negated tags. 2012-03-31 21:35:12 +01:00
Simon Kelley
18f0fb050b RDNSS and DNSSL data in router advertisements. 2012-03-31 21:18:55 +01:00
Simon Kelley
05e92e5afe More RA flag evolution. 2012-03-30 22:24:15 +01:00
Simon Kelley
4723d49dad Set managed RA flag always when doing DHCP. 2012-03-30 21:04:17 +01:00
Simon Kelley
fbbc14541a Fix off-by-one in DHCPv6 FQDN option decoding. 2012-03-30 20:48:20 +01:00
Simon Kelley
5ef33279f2 Tidying radv 2012-03-30 15:10:28 +01:00
Simon Kelley
1e02a85970 radv.c tidying. 2012-03-29 11:07:25 +01:00
Simon Kelley
0e88d53faa Fix preprocessor checks, IP_TOS -> IPV6_TCLASS 2012-03-28 22:22:05 +01:00
Simon Kelley
01d1b8ddf2 Changelog update. 2012-03-28 21:37:25 +01:00
Simon Kelley
c8257540bc "deprecated" lease-time keyword for IPv6 2012-03-28 21:15:41 +01:00
Simon Kelley
2240704863 DHCP start-up logging tweak 2012-03-27 14:42:48 +01:00
Simon Kelley
e8ca69ea16 Doc updates for latest RA changes. 2012-03-26 21:23:26 +01:00
Simon Kelley
da632e7cc1 Comment typo. 2012-03-26 11:14:05 +01:00
Simon Kelley
30cd96663f More flexible RA configuration. 2012-03-25 20:44:38 +01:00
Simon Kelley
7dbe98147d tweak ra timer code to avoid missing events. 2012-03-25 14:49:54 +01:00
Simon Kelley
5d71d83420 Listen on ICMP6 file decriptor even when on ra-only only in use. 2012-03-24 14:40:42 +00:00
Simon Kelley
38a59a9ff7 debian changelog untangle. 2012-03-23 10:08:12 +00:00
Simon Kelley
4b028ad612 Merge branch 'bind' 2012-03-23 10:02:30 +00:00
Simon Kelley
442560beb4 Debian changelog for preivious fix. 2012-03-23 10:01:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
7d2b5c9583 Fix crash in DHCPINFORM without valid --dhcp-range. 2012-03-23 10:00:02 +00:00
Simon Kelley
29689cfa5a Handle errors when sending ICMP6 pings better. 2012-03-22 14:01:00 +00:00
Simon Kelley
52d4abf2f9 Make --listen-address work for all 127.0.0.0/8 addresses. 2012-03-21 21:39:48 +00:00
Simon Kelley
a953096485 Send "FTP transfer complete" events to the DHCP lease script. 2012-03-20 22:07:35 +00:00
Simon Kelley
884a6dfe6d RA managed-bit and use-SLAAC bit tweaks. 2012-03-20 16:20:22 +00:00
Simon Kelley
0068301d24 Conditional compilation tweak. 2012-03-19 20:29:55 +00:00
Simon Kelley
353ae4d270 Check assumed SLAAC addresses by pinging them. 2012-03-19 20:07:51 +00:00
Simon Kelley
e759d426fa --host-record support 2012-03-16 13:18:57 +00:00
Simon Kelley
40ef23b547 Move DHCP option stuff to dhcp-common.c 2012-03-13 21:59:28 +00:00
Simon Kelley
f5e8562f96 More DHCP-option logging tweaks. 2012-03-13 14:22:30 +00:00
Simon Kelley
1567feae3c Log vendor class for DHCPv6 2012-03-12 22:15:35 +00:00
Simon Kelley
daf061c9de randomise DHCPv6 lease renewal intervals 2012-03-12 21:57:18 +00:00
Simon Kelley
d0e2c6c9ab decode DHCPv4 T1, T2 and lease-time options better. 2012-03-12 21:44:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
8643ec7fea Update CHANGLEOG 2012-03-12 20:04:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
5cfea3d402 Tidy last commit. 2012-03-12 17:28:27 +00:00
Simon Kelley
6c8f21e4a4 More useful DHCPv6 packet logging. 2012-03-12 15:06:55 +00:00
Simon Kelley
1d0f91c4a9 Don't trust the port in the source address of requests.
At least one client gets it wrong: always send to the client port for
clients, and the server port for relays.
2012-03-12 11:56:22 +00:00
Simon Kelley
2a82db4caf Supply zero preference in advertise and reply messages 2012-03-10 21:40:10 +00:00
Simon Kelley
dd88c17f15 Add status code containing "success" to all IA_TA and IA_NA
which have IAADDR options. This communicates zero information and
RFC3315 is unclear that it's needed, but at least one client seems
to require it.
2012-03-10 20:46:57 +00:00
Simon Kelley
8b37270410 Implement --dhcp-duid 2012-03-09 17:45:10 +00:00
Simon Kelley
760169fc43 Debian updates. 2012-03-09 14:27:49 +00:00
Simon Kelley
7023e38294 Docs changes for ra-names. 2012-03-09 12:05:49 +00:00
Simon Kelley
a7cf58cc47 Merge branch 'ra-names' 2012-03-09 11:37:42 +00:00
Simon Kelley
e25d1a2ea2 Fix prefix-map build code logic. 2012-03-08 13:24:17 +00:00
Simon Kelley
70969c1757 move #include for Solaris and Apple. 2012-03-07 20:46:28 +00:00
Simon Kelley
3803437dcc tidying 2012-03-07 20:39:40 +00:00
Simon Kelley
eabc6dd76a Use getifaddrs on *BSD. 2012-03-07 20:28:20 +00:00
Simon Kelley
e28d2e2b77 Merge branch 'getifaddrs' 2012-03-07 20:26:23 +00:00
Simon Kelley
96fafe2ed6 Fixed typos and tested. 2012-03-07 20:25:39 +00:00
Simon Kelley
c81d390f84 Update man page to reflect the existance of DHCPv6 and RA. 2012-03-07 19:10:19 +00:00
Simon Kelley
08456c61f6 Use getifaddrs to find interfaces on *BSD 2012-03-07 19:08:11 +00:00
Simon Kelley
bc26f9a03f Handle firewire and EUI-64 addresses in the SLAAC code. 2012-03-07 13:13:56 +00:00
Simon Kelley
6ffeff86be Teach emit_dbus_signal() about IPv6 DHCPv6 leases. 2012-03-07 10:32:35 +00:00
Simon Kelley
f444cddbaf Don't waste time calculating EUI-64 when a lease doesn't have a name. 2012-03-07 10:15:57 +00:00
Simon Kelley
d13191a46c Bump Debian version number. 2012-03-06 19:57:39 +00:00
Simon Kelley
801ca9a7b7 Add ra-names SLAAC-hostnames from DHCPv4 option. 2012-03-06 19:30:17 +00:00
Simon Kelley
df66e341de Update polish translation. 2012-03-04 20:04:22 +00:00
Simon Kelley
71ee7ee254 Update French translation. 2012-03-03 18:06:49 +00:00
Simon Kelley
a156cae901 Typos in man page. 2012-03-02 21:10:39 +00:00
Simon Kelley
22b135a116 Fix paretheses in ADD_RDLEN - it always returned 1 before. 2012-03-01 19:54:50 +00:00
Simon Kelley
0f08983d85 Be more picly about the MAC address we use for DUID-creation. 2012-03-01 13:43:39 +00:00
Simon Kelley
e3e86343fc Fix DUID generation with HAVE_BROKEN_RTC. 2012-03-01 10:35:34 +00:00
Simon Kelley
7b6dd880f7 Fix socklen_t/size_t confusion in radv.c 2012-03-01 10:26:16 +00:00
Simon Kelley
b7f4020133 Fix FTBFS when HAVE_BROKEN_RTC defined. 2012-02-29 21:43:37 +00:00
Simon Kelley
c46c7c7584 tweak portable get-cwd trick code to work on GNU-make 3.82 2012-02-29 21:37:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
552af8b988 Fix --localise-queries via interface lo bug. 2012-02-29 20:10:31 +00:00
Simon Kelley
4f8ff361dc Tiny makefile tweak. 2012-02-29 16:01:17 +00:00
Simon Kelley
0010b47439 RA configuration tweaks and documentation improvements. 2012-02-29 12:18:30 +00:00
Simon Kelley
4b86b65d07 Substitute local address for [::] DHCPv6 options, like DHCPv4. 2012-02-29 11:45:37 +00:00
Simon Kelley
248489401a Makefile cleanup - use lower case variables for internal use. 2012-02-29 11:23:41 +00:00
Simon Kelley
bc5992daf6 Merge messages files prior to rc1. 2012-02-28 18:07:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
fdacfb0119 Makefile: support absolute paths in BUILDDIR 2012-02-28 15:20:25 +00:00
Simon Kelley
0d5d35d052 RA lifetimes must be at least 2 hours 2012-02-27 20:24:40 +00:00
Simon Kelley
843c96b4b3 Make RA without DHCPv6 possible. 2012-02-27 17:42:38 +00:00
Simon Kelley
58dc02ebf2 Order of fields in DHCPv6 log lines now consistent with DHCPv4 2012-02-27 11:49:37 +00:00
Simon Kelley
c239f7de25 rename header files. 2012-02-27 10:56:18 +00:00
Simon Kelley
ac8540c3c5 CHANGELOG entry to RA. 2012-02-26 20:57:31 +00:00
Simon Kelley
22d904db95 Fix RA on *BSD (missing sa_len) 2012-02-26 20:13:45 +00:00
Simon Kelley
741c2952d4 Tidy up RA scheduling. 2012-02-25 13:09:18 +00:00
Simon Kelley
96f6979c4f OpenBSD-friendly bld/get-version script 2012-02-25 11:31:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
c5379c1ab6 Don't send hoplimit 1 when multicasting RAs 2012-02-24 20:05:52 +00:00
Simon Kelley
a4a5205fd7 Fix ordering problem in multicast setup. 2012-02-24 19:44:05 +00:00
Simon Kelley
c5ad4e7998 Router Advertisement 2012-02-24 16:06:20 +00:00
Simon Kelley
270dc2e199 Fix wrong fallback address in DHCPv6 2012-02-19 20:53:20 +00:00
Simon Kelley
948a0b6e81 don't use -m flag to grep - it's unavailable in OpenBSD 2012-02-19 20:25:01 +00:00
Simon Kelley
87b8ecb13a Fixed code passing tags to helper to work when there are no context tags.
Fixed call to sendto() in dhcp6.c. How did it every work before?
2012-02-18 21:23:16 +00:00
Simon Kelley
e44ddcac63 Fix hang at startup when DHCPv6 enabled on a complex network
configuration - we have to read all the MAC addresses from netlink,
not bail when we find a suitable one.

Fix thinko in dhcp_update_configs - thanks to Hartmut for spotting
that.

Get a sensible address for the default DNS server even when using a
relay.
2012-02-18 17:08:50 +00:00
Simon Kelley
00e9ad5217 Fixes for DHCPv6 tag system. 2012-02-16 21:53:11 +00:00
Simon Kelley
96c3879bed Change Debian rules file to relect the fact that we build DHCPv6 by default. 2012-02-16 20:07:17 +00:00
Simon Kelley
57f460de2f tweak Lua script argument passing and add --dhcp-luascript sectino to manpage. 2012-02-16 20:00:32 +00:00
Simon Kelley
6caacacf6d Putative fix to crash in IPv4 DHCP, introduced whilst
generalising the DHCP option filter code:
don't match options against context tag  when
context->netid.net == NULL, since there's no tag then.
2012-02-15 21:58:33 +00:00
Simon Kelley
60ac5af682 Remove extact-MAC address from DUID code. 2012-02-15 10:41:03 +00:00
Simon Kelley
caa94380ac bugs in IPv6 script calling - wrong DUID and lua relay_address 2012-02-15 10:29:50 +00:00
Simon Kelley
0793380b40 Implement dhcp-ignore-names and DNSMASQ_RELAY_ADDRESS for IPv6
Build DHCPv6 by default.
2012-02-14 20:55:25 +00:00
Simon Kelley
1adadf585d Tweak Makefile so it works again in BSD make.
First cut at man page changes for DHCPv6
2012-02-13 22:15:58 +00:00
Simon Kelley
e5ffdb9c77 BUILD_DIR -> BUILDDIR, for consistency. 2012-02-13 14:28:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
6da5201092 Merge branch 'makefile' 2012-02-13 12:55:33 +00:00
Simon Kelley
b36ae19434 Add BUILD_DIR variable to makefile. 2012-02-13 12:54:34 +00:00
Simon Kelley
2307eac613 Fix code parsing --domain, broken whilst added IPv6 stuff. 2012-02-13 10:13:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
127ea40ae7 Don't build DHCPv6 by default, except when build Debian package. 2012-02-11 22:14:52 +00:00
Simon Kelley
6aef600d48 Correct duid generate on FreeBSD 2012-02-11 22:01:50 +00:00
Simon Kelley
98d76a0326 Tweaks to fix compilation on FreeBSD. 2012-02-10 22:16:45 +00:00
Simon Kelley
6ea6dcf05b Update Debian readme for new build options and (belatedly) for the
introduction of dnsmasq-utils.
2012-02-10 21:26:52 +00:00
Simon Kelley
627797800d Report correct error if prefix in dhcp-range is less than 64
Update debian/rules to provide no_dhcp6 and use_lua build opts.
Log DHCPv6 information request packets.
2012-02-10 21:19:25 +00:00
Simon Kelley
c6cc03ed0c Merge branch 'dhcpv6' 2012-02-10 17:36:20 +00:00
Simon Kelley
3d7b550f52 missed DHCP6 conditional compilation. 2012-02-10 17:35:37 +00:00
Simon Kelley
751d6f4ae6 Allow the TFP server or boot server in --pxe-service, to
be a domain name instead of an IP address. This allows for
 round-robin to multiple servers, in the same way as
 --dhcp-boot.
2012-02-10 15:24:51 +00:00
Simon Kelley
a5c72ab51d DHCPv6 vendor class option includes an enterprise number. Handle that. 2012-02-10 13:42:47 +00:00
Simon Kelley
9bbc88762b Fix shell scripting bug in bug scripts. 2012-02-09 21:33:09 +00:00
Simon Kelley
ceae00dddf lease script should work with IPv6 now. 2012-02-09 21:28:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
3634c54e8d dhcp-ignore and dhcp-match implemented for DHCPv6 now. 2012-02-08 14:22:37 +00:00
Simon Kelley
d74942a03d IPv6 address range parsing for --domain.
Counted string DHCP option type printing
2012-02-07 20:51:56 +00:00
Simon Kelley
70c5e3e076 DHCPDECLINE handling, domain handling, more complete address selection. 2012-02-06 22:05:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
4cb1b32009 Clean compile, basic DHCPv6 functionality is there.
TODO
     hostname handling.
     update DHCP6 configs from dns
     parse domain=<domain>,<IPv6 range>
     pretty-print counted string options.
     DECLINE messages
     lease-script fro DHCPv6
2012-02-06 14:30:41 +00:00
Simon Kelley
3268e90f5e Make default NO_DHCP6 and remove compiler warning. 2012-01-22 16:15:02 +00:00
Simon Kelley
e98170816a Merge branch 'dhcpv6' 2012-01-22 16:07:22 +00:00
Simon Kelley
52b92f4db8 It compiles and it allocates a lease! No renewals yet. 2012-01-22 16:05:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
a2761754da Fix problem if dnsmasq is started without the stdin,
stdout and stderr file descriptors open. This can manifest
itself as 100% CPU use. Thanks to Chris Moore for finding
this.
2012-01-18 16:07:21 +00:00
Simon Kelley
805a11345c We don't need to check that a cache record is F_HOST in the
duplicate address code, since we're now searching a temporary hash
which holds only F_HOST records.
2012-01-13 11:51:46 +00:00
Simon Kelley
1ab62aec37 Further tuning of the fast hostfile reading code.
Use the packet buffer for hash-buckets, better hash function.
2012-01-12 11:33:16 +00:00
Simon Kelley
915363f976 Tweaks to hostfile performance work. 2012-01-11 22:00:48 +00:00
Simon Kelley
205fafa577 Improve performance when reading large hostfiles. 2012-01-11 21:31:51 +00:00
Simon Kelley
be2daf4ad5 Enable DHCPv6 compilation 2012-01-07 17:51:57 +00:00
Simon Kelley
8ecfaa4adf Tidied up usage strings. 2012-01-07 15:29:48 +00:00
Simon Kelley
03bfcf6462 FAQ and example config additions for Windows 7 WPAD problem. 2012-01-07 14:37:37 +00:00
Simon Kelley
39bec5ff32 Remove duplicate tags in data supplied to lease script. 2012-01-06 22:36:58 +00:00
Simon Kelley
246839d64a Minimal update of doc.html - remove broken links and add git info. 2012-01-06 20:39:54 +00:00
Simon Kelley
3862deb398 Debian bug #654897 2012-01-06 20:16:07 +00:00
Simon Kelley
5954608577 Updated copyright notices. Happy new year! 2012-01-06 20:02:04 +00:00
Simon Kelley
984d2fded6 CHANGELOG update 2012-01-06 14:34:32 +00:00
Simon Kelley
a4f04ed45a Generate version string from git automatically 2012-01-06 11:47:02 +00:00
Simon Kelley
07736e8dcb VERSION file 2012-01-05 22:00:08 +00:00
Simon Kelley
00fc082d68 bump version in config.h 2012-01-05 21:42:12 +00:00
Simon Kelley
c72daea868 Accumulated 2.60 changes going into git 2012-01-05 21:33:27 +00:00
Simon Kelley
74c95c2542 import of dnsmasq-2.59.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
7de060b08d import of dnsmasq-2.58.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
572b41eb50 import of dnsmasq-2.57.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
28866e9567 import of dnsmasq-2.56.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
c52e189734 import of dnsmasq-2.55.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
8ef5ada238 import of dnsmasq-2.53.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
316e2730ac import of dnsmasq-2.52.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:15 +00:00
Simon Kelley
1f15b81d61 import of dnsmasq-2.51.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
77e94da7bb import of dnsmasq-2.50.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
03a97b6170 import of dnsmasq-2.49.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
7622fc06ab import of dnsmasq-2.48.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
73a08a248d import of dnsmasq-2.47.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
9009d74652 import of dnsmasq-2.46.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
1ad24ae15c import of dnsmasq-2.45.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
3927da46aa import of dnsmasq-2.44.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:14 +00:00
Simon Kelley
1a6bca81f6 import of dnsmasq-2.43.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
9e038946a1 import of dnsmasq-2.42.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
824af85bdf import of dnsmasq-2.41.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
5aabfc78bc import of dnsmasq-2.40.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
f2621c7ff0 import of dnsmasq-2.39.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
6b01084f8e import of dnsmasq-2.38.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
1b7ecd111d import of dnsmasq-2.37.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
832af0bafb import of dnsmasq-2.36.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:13 +00:00
Simon Kelley
4011c4e05e import of dnsmasq-2.35.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:12 +00:00
Simon Kelley
1697269ce7 import of dnsmasq-2.34.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:12 +00:00
Simon Kelley
208b65c5cf import of dnsmasq-2.33.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:12 +00:00
Simon Kelley
849a8357ba import of dnsmasq-2.32.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:12 +00:00
Simon Kelley
7cebd20fe7 import of dnsmasq-2.31.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:12 +00:00
Simon Kelley
26d0dbaf24 import of dnsmasq-2.30.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:12 +00:00
Simon Kelley
309331f52c import of dnsmasq-2.29.tar.gz 2012-01-05 17:31:12 +00:00
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endif

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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 3, 29 June 2007
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/>
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
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<http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>.

128
FAQ
View File

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
Q: Why does dnsmasq open UDP ports >1024 as well as port 53.
Is this a security problem/trojan/backdoor?
A: The high ports that dnsmasq opens is for replies from the upstream
A: The high ports that dnsmasq opens are for replies from the upstream
nameserver(s). Queries from dnsmasq to upstream nameservers are sent
from these ports and replies received to them. The reason for doing this is
that most firewall setups block incoming packets _to_ port 53, in order
@@ -16,6 +16,14 @@ A: The high ports that dnsmasq opens is for replies from the upstream
you to specify the UDP port to be used for this purpose. If not
specified, the operating system will select an available port number
just as it did before.
Second addendum: following the discovery of a security flaw in the
DNS protocol, dnsmasq from version 2.43 has changed behavior. It
now uses a new, randomly selected, port for each query. The old
default behaviour (use one port allocated by the OS) is available by
setting --query-port=0, and setting the query port to a positive
value is still works. You should think hard and know what you are
doing before using either of these options.
Q: Why doesn't dnsmasq support DNS queries over TCP? Don't the RFC's specify
that?
@@ -39,16 +47,17 @@ A: They are negative entries: that's what the N flag means. Dnsmasq asked
Q: Will dnsmasq compile/run on non-Linux systems?
A: Yes, there is explicit support for *BSD and MacOS X. There are
start-up scripts for MacOS X Tiger and Panther in /contrib. Earlier
dnsmasq releases ran under Solaris, but that capability has
probably rotted. Dnsmasq will link with uclibc to provide small
A: Yes, there is explicit support for *BSD and MacOS X and Solaris.
There are start-up scripts for MacOS X Tiger and Panther
in /contrib. Dnsmasq will link with uclibc to provide small
binaries suitable for use in embedded systems such as
routers. (There's special code to support machines with flash
filesystems and no battery-backed RTC.)
If you encounter make errors with *BSD, try installing gmake from
ports and building dnsmasq with "make MAKE=gmake"
For other systems, try altering the settings in config.h.
Q: My companies' nameserver knows about some names which aren't in the
Q: My company's nameserver knows about some names which aren't in the
public DNS. Even though I put it first in /etc/resolv.conf, it
dosen't work: dnsmasq seems not to use the nameservers in the order
given. What am I doing wrong?
@@ -225,7 +234,7 @@ A: What is happening is this: The boot process sends a DHCP
Q: What network types are supported by the DHCP server?
A: Ethernet (and 802.11 wireless) are supported on all platforms. On
Linux Token Ring is also supported.
Linux all network types (including FireWire) are supported.
Q: What is this strange "bind-interface" option?
@@ -294,7 +303,7 @@ A: Yes, new releases of dnsmasq are always announced through
Q: What does the dhcp-authoritative option do?
A: See http://www.isc.org/index.pl?/sw/dhcp/authoritative.php - that's
A: See http://www.isc.org/files/auth.html - that's
for the ISC daemon, but the same applies to dnsmasq.
Q: Why does my Gentoo box pause for a minute before getting a new
@@ -309,7 +318,7 @@ A: Because when a Gentoo box shuts down, it releases its lease with
Q: My laptop has two network interfaces, a wired one and a wireless
one. I never use both interfaces at the same time, and I'd like the
same IP and configuration to be used irrespcetive of which
same IP and configuration to be used irrespective of which
interface is in use. How can I do that?
A: By default, the identity of a machine is determined by using the
@@ -323,6 +332,17 @@ A: By default, the identity of a machine is determined by using the
method for setting the client-id varies with DHCP client software,
dhcpcd uses the "-I" flag. Windows uses a registry setting,
see http://www.jsiinc.com/SUBF/TIP2800/rh2845.htm
Addendum:
From version 2.46, dnsmasq has a solution to this which doesn't
involve setting client-IDs. It's possible to put more than one MAC
address in a --dhcp-host configuration. This tells dnsmasq that it
should use the specified IP for any of the specified MAC addresses,
and furthermore it gives dnsmasq permission to sumarily abandon a
lease to one of the MAC addresses if another one comes along. Note
that this will work fine only as longer as only one interface is
up at any time. There is no way for dnsmasq to enforce this
constraint: if you configure multiple MAC addresses and violate
this rule, bad things will happen.
Q: Can dnsmasq do DHCP on IP-alias interfaces?
@@ -334,7 +354,7 @@ A: Yes, from version-2.21. The support is only available running under
If a physical interface has more than one IP address or aliases
with extra IP addresses, then any dhcp-ranges corresponding to
these addresses can be used for address allocation. So if an
interface has addresses 192.168.1.0/24 and 192.68.2.0/24 and there
interface has addresses 192.168.1.0/24 and 192.168.2.0/24 and there
are DHCP ranges 192.168.1.100-192.168.1.200 and
192.168.2.100-192.168.2.200 then both ranges would be used for host
connected to the physical interface. A more typical use might be to
@@ -361,7 +381,7 @@ A: Probably the nameserver is an authoritative nameserver for a
Q: Does the dnsmasq DHCP server probe addresses before allocating
them, as recommended in RFC2131?
A: Yes, dynmaically allocated IP addresses are checked by sending an
A: Yes, dynamically allocated IP addresses are checked by sending an
ICMP echo request (ping). If a reply is received, then dnsmasq
assumes that the address is in use, and attempts to allocate an
different address. The wait for a reply is between two and three
@@ -369,6 +389,7 @@ A: Yes, dynmaically allocated IP addresses are checked by sending an
other DHCP requests during this time. To avoid dropping requests,
the address probe may be skipped when dnsmasq is under heavy load.
Q: I'm using dnsmasq on a machine with the Firestarter firewall, and
DHCP doesn't work. What's the problem?
@@ -376,7 +397,92 @@ A: This a variant on the iptables problem. Explicit details on how to
proceed can be found at
http://lists.thekelleys.org.uk/pipermail/dnsmasq-discuss/2005q3/000431.html
Q: I'm using dnsmasq on a machine with the shorewall firewall, and
DHCP doesn't work. What's the problem?
A: This a variant on the iptables problem. Explicit details on how to
proceed can be found at
http://lists.thekelleys.org.uk/pipermail/dnsmasq-discuss/2007q4/001764.html
Q: Dnsmasq fails to start up with a message about capabilities.
Why did that happen and what can do to fix it?
A: Change your kernel configuration: either deselect CONFIG_SECURITY
_or_ select CONFIG_SECURITY_CAPABILITIES. Alternatively, you can
remove the need to set capabilities by running dnsmasq as root.
Q: Where can I get .rpms Suitable for openSUSE/SLES?
A: Dnsmasq is in openSUSE itself, and the latest releases are also
available at http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network/
Q: Can I run dnsmasq in a Linux vserver?
A: Yes, as a DNS server, dnsmasq will just work in a vserver.
To use dnsmasq's DHCP function you need to give the vserver
extra system capabilities. Please note that doing so will lesser
the overall security of your system. The capabilities
required are NET_ADMIN and NET_RAW. NET_ADMIN is essential, NET_RAW
is required to do an ICMP "ping" check on newly allocated
addresses. If you don't need this check, you can disable it with
--no-ping and omit the NET_RAW capability.
Adding the capabilities is done by adding them, one per line, to
either /etc/vservers/<vservername>/ccapabilities for a 2.4 kernel or
/etc/vservers/<vservername>/bcapabilities for a 2.6 kernel (please
refer to the vserver documentation for more information).
Q: What's the problem with syslog and dnsmasq?
A: In almost all cases: none. If you have the normal arrangement with
local daemons logging to a local syslog, which then writes to disk,
then there's never a problem. If you use network logging, then
there's a potential problem with deadlock: the syslog daemon will
do DNS lookups so that it can log the source of log messages,
these lookups will (depending on exact configuration) go through
dnsmasq, which also sends log messages. With bad timing, you can
arrive at a situation where syslog is waiting for dnsmasq, and
dnsmasq is waiting for syslog; they will both wait forever. This
problem is fixed from dnsmasq-2.39, which introduces asynchronous
logging: dnsmasq no longer waits for syslog and the deadlock is
broken. There is a remaining problem in 2.39, where "log-queries"
is in use. In this case most DNS queries generate two log lines, if
these go to a syslog which is doing a DNS lookup for each log line,
then those queries will in turn generate two more log lines, and a
chain reaction runaway will occur. To avoid this, use syslog-ng
and turn on syslog-ng's dns-cache function.
Q: DHCP doesn't work with windows Vista, but everything else is fine.
A: The DHCP client on windows Vista (and possibly later versions)
demands that the DHCP server send replies as broadcasts. Most other
clients don't do this. The broadcasts are send to
255.255.255.255. A badly configured firewall which blocks such
packets will show exactly these symptoms (Vista fails, others
work).
Q: DHCP doesn't work with windows 7 but everything else is fine.
A: There seems to be a problem if Windows 7 doesn't get a value for
DHCP option 252 in DHCP packets it gets from the server. The
symtoms have beeen variously reported as continual DHCPINFORM
requests in an attempt to get an option-252, or even ignoring DHCP
offers completely (and failing to get an IP address) if there is no
option-252 supplied. DHCP option 252 is for WPAD, WWW Proxy
Auto Detection and if you don't want or need to use that, then
simplest fix seems to be to supply an empty option with:
dhcp-option=252,"\n"

138
Makefile
View File

@@ -1,42 +1,134 @@
PREFIX?=/usr/local
BINDIR = ${PREFIX}/sbin
MANDIR = ${PREFIX}/share/man
LOCALEDIR = ${PREFIX}/share/locale
# dnsmasq is Copyright (c) 2000-2012 Simon Kelley
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991, or
# (at your option) version 3 dated 29 June, 2007.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# NOTE: Building the i18n targets requires GNU-make
# Variables you may well want to override.
PREFIX = /usr/local
BINDIR = $(PREFIX)/sbin
MANDIR = $(PREFIX)/share/man
LOCALEDIR = $(PREFIX)/share/locale
BUILDDIR = $(SRC)
DESTDIR =
CFLAGS = -Wall -W -O2
LDFLAGS =
COPTS =
RPM_OPT_FLAGS =
LIBS =
#################################################################
# Variables you might want to override.
PKG_CONFIG = pkg-config
INSTALL = install
MSGMERGE = msgmerge
MSGFMT = msgfmt
XGETTEXT = xgettext
SRC = src
PO = po
PO = po
MAN = man
CFLAGS?= -O2
#################################################################
all :
$(MAKE) I18N=-DNO_GETTEXT -f ../bld/Makefile -C $(SRC) dnsmasq
# pmake way. (NB no spaces to keep gmake 3.82 happy)
top!=pwd
# GNU make way.
top?=$(CURDIR)
dbus_cflags = `echo $(COPTS) | $(top)/bld/pkg-wrapper HAVE_DBUS $(PKG_CONFIG) --cflags dbus-1`
dbus_libs = `echo $(COPTS) | $(top)/bld/pkg-wrapper HAVE_DBUS $(PKG_CONFIG) --libs dbus-1`
idn_cflags = `echo $(COPTS) | $(top)/bld/pkg-wrapper HAVE_IDN $(PKG_CONFIG) --cflags libidn`
idn_libs = `echo $(COPTS) | $(top)/bld/pkg-wrapper HAVE_IDN $(PKG_CONFIG) --libs libidn`
ct_cflags = `echo $(COPTS) | $(top)/bld/pkg-wrapper HAVE_CONNTRACK $(PKG_CONFIG) --cflags libnetfilter_conntrack`
ct_libs = `echo $(COPTS) | $(top)/bld/pkg-wrapper HAVE_CONNTRACK $(PKG_CONFIG) --libs libnetfilter_conntrack`
lua_cflags = `echo $(COPTS) | $(top)/bld/pkg-wrapper HAVE_LUASCRIPT $(PKG_CONFIG) --cflags lua5.1`
lua_libs = `echo $(COPTS) | $(top)/bld/pkg-wrapper HAVE_LUASCRIPT $(PKG_CONFIG) --libs lua5.1`
sunos_libs = `if uname | grep SunOS >/dev/null 2>&1; then echo -lsocket -lnsl -lposix4; fi`
version = -DVERSION='\"`$(top)/bld/get-version $(top)`\"'
objs = cache.o rfc1035.o util.o option.o forward.o network.o \
dnsmasq.o dhcp.o lease.o rfc2131.o netlink.o dbus.o bpf.o \
helper.o tftp.o log.o conntrack.o dhcp6.o rfc3315.o \
dhcp-common.o outpacket.o radv.o slaac.o
hdrs = dnsmasq.h config.h dhcp-protocol.h dhcp6-protocol.h \
dns-protocol.h radv-protocol.h
all : $(BUILDDIR)
@cd $(BUILDDIR) && $(MAKE) \
top="$(top)" \
build_cflags="$(version) $(dbus_cflags) $(idn_cflags) $(ct_cflags) $(lua_cflags)" \
build_libs="$(dbus_libs) $(idn_libs) $(ct_libs) $(lua_libs) $(sunos_libs)" \
-f $(top)/Makefile dnsmasq
clean :
rm -f *~ $(SRC)/*.mo contrib/*/*~ */*~ $(SRC)/*.pot
rm -f $(SRC)/*.o $(SRC)/dnsmasq core */core
rm -f *~ $(BUILDDIR)/*.mo contrib/*/*~ */*~ $(BUILDDIR)/*.pot
rm -f $(BUILDDIR)/*.o $(BUILDDIR)/dnsmasq.a $(BUILDDIR)/dnsmasq core */core
install : all install-common
install-common :
install -d $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR) -d $(DESTDIR)$(MANDIR)/man8
install -m 644 $(MAN)/dnsmasq.8 $(DESTDIR)$(MANDIR)/man8
install -m 755 $(SRC)/dnsmasq $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR)
$(INSTALL) -d $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR) -d $(DESTDIR)$(MANDIR)/man8
$(INSTALL) -m 644 $(MAN)/dnsmasq.8 $(DESTDIR)$(MANDIR)/man8
$(INSTALL) -m 755 $(BUILDDIR)/dnsmasq $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR)
all-i18n :
$(MAKE) I18N=-DLOCALEDIR='\"$(LOCALEDIR)\"' -f ../bld/Makefile -C $(SRC) dnsmasq
cd $(PO); for f in *.po; do \
$(MAKE) -f ../bld/Makefile -C ../$(SRC) $${f/.po/.mo}; \
all-i18n : $(BUILDDIR)
@cd $(BUILDDIR) && $(MAKE) \
top="$(top)" \
i18n=-DLOCALEDIR=\'\"$(LOCALEDIR)\"\' \
build_cflags="$(version) $(dbus_cflags) $(ct_cflags) $(lua_cflags) `$(PKG_CONFIG) --cflags libidn`" \
build_libs="$(dbus_libs) $(ct_libs) $(lua_libs) $(sunos_libs) `$(PKG_CONFIG) --libs libidn`" \
-f $(top)/Makefile dnsmasq
for f in `cd $(PO); echo *.po`; do \
cd $(top) && cd $(BUILDDIR) && $(MAKE) top="$(top)" -f $(top)/Makefile $${f%.po}.mo; \
done
install-i18n : all-i18n install-common
cd $(SRC); ../bld/install-mo $(DESTDIR)$(LOCALEDIR)
cd $(MAN); ../bld/install-man $(DESTDIR)$(MANDIR)
cd $(BUILDDIR); $(top)/bld/install-mo $(DESTDIR)$(LOCALEDIR) $(INSTALL)
cd $(MAN); ../bld/install-man $(DESTDIR)$(MANDIR) $(INSTALL)
merge :
$(MAKE) I18N=-DLOCALEDIR='\"$(LOCALEDIR)\"' -f ../bld/Makefile -C $(SRC) dnsmasq.pot
cd $(PO); for f in *.po; do \
msgmerge -U $$f ../$(SRC)/dnsmasq.pot; \
merge :
@cd $(BUILDDIR) && $(MAKE) -f $(top)/Makefile dnsmasq.pot
for f in `cd $(PO); echo *.po`; do \
echo -n msgmerge $(PO)/$$f && $(MSGMERGE) --no-wrap -U $(PO)/$$f $(BUILDDIR)/dnsmasq.pot; \
done
$(BUILDDIR):
mkdir -p $(BUILDDIR)
# rules below are targets in recusive makes with cwd=$(SRC)
$(objs:.o=.c) $(hdrs):
ln -s $(top)/$(SRC)/$@ .
.c.o:
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(COPTS) $(i18n) $(build_cflags) $(RPM_OPT_FLAGS) -c $<
dnsmasq : $(hdrs) $(objs)
$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $(objs) $(build_libs) $(LIBS)
dnsmasq.pot : $(objs:.o=.c) $(hdrs)
$(XGETTEXT) -d dnsmasq --foreign-user --omit-header --keyword=_ -o $@ -i $(objs:.o=.c)
%.mo : $(top)/$(PO)/%.po dnsmasq.pot
$(MSGMERGE) -o - $(top)/$(PO)/$*.po dnsmasq.pot | $(MSGFMT) -o $*.mo -
.PHONY : all clean install install-common all-i18n install-i18n merge

View File

@@ -1,68 +0,0 @@
Upgrading to dnsmasq V2
-----------------------
Version 1.x of dnsmasq includes a facility for reading the dhcp.leases
file written by ISC dhcpd. This allows the names of machines which
have addresses allocated by DHCP to be included in the DNS.
Version 2.x of dnsmasq replaces the ISC dhcpd integration with a DHCP
server integrated into dnsmasq. Versions 2.0-2.5 removed the ISC
integration completely, but in version 2.6 it was re-enabled for
backwards compatibility purposes. The change to an integrated DHCP
server has the following advantages:
* Small. ISC dhcpd is a large and comprehensive DHCP solution. The
dnsmasq DHCP server adds about 15k to DNS-only dnsmasq and provides
all the facilities likely to be needed in the sort of networks
which are targeted by dnsmasq.
* Easy to configure. All configuration is in one file and there are
sensible defaults for common settings. Many applications will need
just one extra line in /etc/dnsmasq.conf which tells it the range of
addresses to allocate to DHCP.
* Support for static leases. When static leases are used with ISC DHCP
they don't appear in the dhcp.leases file (since that file is used
for storage of dynamic leases which aren't pre-configured.) Hence
static leases cannot be used with dnsmasq unless each machine with a
static lease is also inserted into /etc/hosts. This is not required
with the dnsmasq DHCP server.
DHCP configuration
------------------
To convert an installation which is currently using ISC dhcpd, remove
the ISC DHCP daemon. Unless you want dnsmasq to use the same file
to store its leases it is necessary to remove the configuration line in
/etc/dnsmasq.conf which specifies the dhcp.leases file.
To enable DHCP, simply add a line like this to /etc/dnsmasq.conf
dhcp-range=192.168.0.100,192.168.0.200,12h
which tells dnsmasq to us the addresses 192.168.0.100 to 192.168.0.200
for dynamic IP addresses, and to issue twelve hour leases.
Each host will have its default route and DNS server set to be the
address of the host running dnsmasq, and its netmask and broadcast
address set correctly, so nothing else at all is required for a
minimal system. Hosts which include a hostname in their DHCP request
will have that name and their allocated address inserted into the DNS,
in the same way as before.
Having started dnsmasq, tell any hosts on the network to renew their
DHCP lease, so that dnsmasq's DHCP server becomes aware of them. For
Linux, this is best done by killing-and-restarting the DHCP client
daemon or taking the network interface down and then back up. For
Windows 9x/Me, use the graphical tool "winipcfg". For Windows
NT/2000/XP, use the command-line "ipconfig /renew"
For more complex DHCP configuration, refer to the doc/setup.html, the
dnsmasq manpage and the annotated example configuration file. Also
note that for some ISC dhcpd to dnsmasq DHCP upgrades there may be
firewall issues: see the FAQ for details of this.

1
VERSION Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1 @@
$Format:%d$

20
bld/Android.mk Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
LOCAL_PATH := external/dnsmasq/src
#########################
include $(CLEAR_VARS)
LOCAL_SRC_FILES := bpf.c cache.c dbus.c dhcp.c dnsmasq.c \
forward.c helper.c lease.c log.c \
netlink.c network.c option.c rfc1035.c \
rfc2131.c tftp.c util.c conntrack.c \
dhcp6.c rfc3315.c dhcp-common.c outpacket.c \
radv.c slaac.c
LOCAL_MODULE := dnsmasq
LOCAL_C_INCLUDES := external/dnsmasq/src
LOCAL_CFLAGS := -O2 -g -W -Wall -D__ANDROID__ -DNO_IPV6 -DNO_TFTP -DNO_SCRIPT
LOCAL_SYSTEM_SHARED_LIBRARIES := libc libcutils
include $(BUILD_EXECUTABLE)

View File

@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
CFLAGS ?= -O2
PKG_CONFIG ?= pkg-config
OBJS = cache.o rfc1035.o util.o option.o forward.o isc.o network.o \
dnsmasq.o dhcp.o lease.o rfc2131.o netlink.o dbus.o bpf.o
.c.o:
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(I18N) `../bld/pkg-wrapper $(PKG_CONFIG) --cflags dbus-1` $(RPM_OPT_FLAGS) -Wall -W -c $<
dnsmasq : $(OBJS)
$(CC) -o $@ $(OBJS) `../bld/pkg-wrapper $(PKG_CONFIG) --libs dbus-1` $(LIBS)
dnsmasq.pot : $(OBJS:.o=.c) dnsmasq.h config.h
xgettext -d dnsmasq --foreign-user --keyword=_ -o dnsmasq.pot -i $(OBJS:.o=.c)
%.mo : ../po/%.po dnsmasq.pot
msgmerge -o - ../po/$*.po dnsmasq.pot | msgfmt -o $*.mo -

28
bld/get-version Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Determine the version string to build into a binary.
# When building in the git repository, we can use the output
# of "git describe" which gives an unequivocal answer.
#
# Failing that, we use the contents of the VERSION file
# which has a set of references substituted into it by git.
# If we can find one which matches $v[0-9].* then we assume it's
# a version-number tag, else we just use the whole string.
if which git >/dev/null 2>&1 && [ -d $1/.git ]; then
cd $1; git describe
elif grep '\$Format:%d\$' $1/VERSION >/dev/null 2>&1; then
# unsubstituted VERSION, but no git available.
echo UNKNOWN
else
vers=`cat $1/VERSION | sed 's/[(), ]/,/ g' | tr ',' '\n' | grep $v[0-9]`
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
echo "${vers}" | head -n 1 | tail -c +2
else
cat $1/VERSION
fi
fi
exit 0

View File

@@ -2,8 +2,8 @@
for f in *; do
if [ -d $f ]; then
install -d $1/$f/man8
install -m 644 $f/dnsmasq.8 $1/$f/man8
echo installing $1/$f/man8/dnsmasq.8
$2 -m 755 -d $1/$f/man8
$2 -m 644 $f/dnsmasq.8 $1/$f/man8
echo installing $f/man8/dnsmasq.8
fi
done

View File

@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
#!/bin/sh
for f in *.mo; do
install -d $1/${f/.mo/}/LC_MESSAGES
install -m 644 $f $1/${f/.mo/}/LC_MESSAGES/dnsmasq.mo
echo installing $1/${f/.mo/}/LC_MESSAGES/dnsmasq.mo
$2 -m 755 -d $1/${f%.mo}/LC_MESSAGES
$2 -m 644 $f $1/${f%.mo}/LC_MESSAGES/dnsmasq.mo
echo installing ${f%.mo}/LC_MESSAGES/dnsmasq.mo
done

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,10 @@
#!/bin/sh
if grep -q "^\#.*define.*HAVE_DBUS" config.h ; then
search=$1
shift
if grep "^\#[[:space:]]*define[[:space:]]*$search" config.h >/dev/null 2>&1 || \
grep $search >/dev/null 2>&1; then
exec $*
fi

36
contrib/CPE-WAN/README Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
Dnsmasq from version 2.52 has a couple of rather application-specific
features designed to allow for implementation of the DHCP part of CPE
WAN management protocol.
http://www.broadband-forum.org/technical/download/TR-069_Amendment-2.pdf
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TR-069
The relevant sections are F.2.1 "Gateway Requirements" and F.2.5 "DHCP
Vendor Options".
First, dnsmasq checks for DHCP requests which contain an option-125
vendor-class option which in turn holds a vendor section for IANA
enterprise number 3561 which contains sub-options codes 1 and 2. If
this is present then the network-tag "cpewan-id" is set.
This allows dnsmasq to be configured to reply with the correct
GatewayManufacturerOUI, GatewaySerialNumber and GatewayProductClass like this:
dhcp-option=cpewan-id,vi-encap:3561,4,"<GatewayManufacturerOUI>"
dhcp-option=cpewan-id,vi-encap:3561,5,"<SerialNumber>"
dhcp-option=cpewan-id,vi-encap:3561,6,"<ProductClass>"
Second, the received sub-options 1, 2, and 3 are passed to the DHCP
lease-change script as the environment variables DNSMASQ_CPEWAN_OUI,
DNSMASQ_CPEWAN_SERIAL, and DNSMASQ_CPEWAN_CLASS respectively. This allows
the script to be used to maintain a ManageableDevice table as
specified in F.2.1. Note that this data is not retained in dnsmasq's
internal DHCP lease database, so it is not available on every call to
the script (this is the same as some other data such as vendor and
user classes). It will however be available for at least the "add"
call, and should be stored then against the IP address as primary
key for future use.
This feature was added to dnsmasq under sponsorship from Ericsson.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
This is a launchd item for Mac OS X and Mac OS X Server.
For more information about launchd, the
"System wide and per-user daemon/agent manager", see the launchd
man page, or the wikipedia page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Launchd
This launchd item uses the following flags:
--keep-in-foreground - this is crucial for use with launchd
--log-queries - this is optional and you can remove it
--log-facility=/var/log/dnsmasq.log - again optional instead of system.log
To use this launchd item for dnsmasq:
If you don't already have a folder /Library/LaunchDaemons, then create one:
sudo mkdir /Library/LaunchDaemons
sudo chown root:admin /Library/LaunchDaemons
sudo chmod 775 /Library/LaunchDaemons
Copy uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq.plist there and then set ownership/permissions:
sudo cp uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq.plist /Library/LaunchDaemons/
sudo chown root:admin /Library/LaunchDaemons/uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq.plist
sudo chmod 644 /Library/LaunchDaemons/uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq.plist
Optionally, edit your dnsmasq configuration file to your liking.
To start the launchd job, which starts dnsmaq, reboot or use the command:
sudo launchctl load /Library/LaunchDaemons/uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq.plist
To stop the launchd job, which stops dnsmasq, use the command:
sudo launchctl unload /Library/LaunchDaemons/uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq.plist
If you want to permanently stop the launchd job, so it doesn't start the job even after a reboot, use the following command:
sudo launchctl unload -w /Library/LaunchDaemons/uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq.plist
If you make a change to the configuration file, you should relaunch dnsmasq;
to do this unload and then load again:
sudo launchctl unload /Library/LaunchDaemons/uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq.plist
sudo launchctl load /Library/LaunchDaemons/uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq.plist

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
<key>Label</key>
<string>uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq</string>
<key>ProgramArguments</key>
<array>
<string>/usr/local/sbin/dnsmasq</string>
<string>--keep-in-foreground</string>
</array>
<key>RunAtLoad</key>
<true/>
</dict>
</plist>

28
contrib/Solaris10/README Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
From: David Connelly <dconnelly@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 3:31 AM
Subject: Solaris 10 service manifest
To: dnsmasq-discuss@lists.thekelleys.org.uk
I've found dnsmasq much easier to set up on my home server running Solaris
10 than the stock dhcp/dns server, which is probably overkill anyway for my
simple home network needs. Since Solaris now uses SMF (Service Management
Facility) to manage services I thought I'd create a simple service manifest
for the dnsmasq service. The manifest currently assumes that dnsmasq has
been installed in '/usr/local/sbin/dnsmasq' and the configuration file in
'/usr/local/etc/dnsmasq.conf', so you may have to adjust these paths for
your local installation. Here are the steps I followed to install and enable
the dnsmasq service:
# svccfg import dnsmasq.xml
# svcadm enable dnsmasq
To confirm that the service is enabled and online:
# svcs -l dnsmasq
I've just started learning about SMF so if anyone has any
corrections/feedback they are more than welcome.
Thanks,
David

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
Hi Simon,
I just wanted to let you know that I have built a Solaris .pkg install package of your dnsmasq utility for people to use. Feel free to point them in my direction if you have people who want this sort of thing.
http://ejesconsulting.wordpress.com/2010/05/12/gnu-dnsmasq-for-opensolaris-sparc/
Thanks
-evan

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,25 @@
Ok, script attached ... seems to be working ok for me,
tried to install and remove a few times. It does the
right thing with the smf when installing, you can then
simply enable the service. Upon removal it cleans up the
files but won't clean up the services (I think until
a reboot) ... I've only started looking at the new
packages stuff in the last day or two, so I could be
missing something, but I can't find any way to force
a proper cleanup.
It requires that you have a writable repository setup
as per the docs on the opensolaris website and it will
create a dnsmasq package (package name is a variable
in the script). The script takes a version number for
the package and assumes that it's in the contrib/Solaris10
directory, it then works out the base tree directory
from $0.
i.e. $ contrib/Solaris10/create_package 2.52-1
or $ cd contrib/Solaris10; ./create_package 2.52-1
It's a bit more complex than it could be because I
prefer putting the daemon in /usr/sbin and the config
in /etc, so the script will actually create a new
version of the existing contrib dnsmasq.xml.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,87 @@
#!/bin/sh
#
# For our package, and for the SMF script, we need to define where we
# want things to go...
#
BIN_DIR="/usr/sbin"
CONF_DIR="/etc"
MAN_DIR="/usr/share/man/man8"
PACKAGE_NAME="dnsmasq"
#
# Since we know we are in the contrib directory we can work out where
# the rest of the tree is...
#
BASEDIR="`dirname $0`/../.."
#
# We need a version number to use for the package creation...
#
if [ $# != 1 ]; then
echo "Usage: $0 <package_version_number>" >&2
exit 1
fi
VERSION="$1"
#
# First thing we do is fix-up the smf file to use the paths we prefer...
#
if [ ! -f "${BASEDIR}/contrib/Solaris10/dnsmasq.xml" ]; then
echo "$0: unable to find contrib/Solaris10/dnsmasq.xml" >&2
exit 1
fi
echo "Fixing up smf file ... \c"
cat "${BASEDIR}/contrib/Solaris10/dnsmasq.xml" | \
sed -e "s%/usr/local/etc%${CONF_DIR}%" \
-e "s%/usr/local/sbin%${BIN_DIR}%" \
-e "s%/usr/local/man%${MAN_DIR}%" > ${BASEDIR}/contrib/Solaris10/dnsmasq-pkg.xml
echo "done."
echo "Creating packaging file ... \c"
cat <<EOF >${BASEDIR}/contrib/Solaris10/dnsmasq_package.inc
#
# header
#
set name=pkg.name value="dnsmasq"
set name=pkg.description value="dnsmasq daemon - dns, dhcp, tftp etc"
set name=pkg.detailed_url value="http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/doc.html"
set name=info.maintainer value="TBD (tbd@tbd.com)"
set name=info.upstream value="dnsmasq-discuss@lists.thekelleys.org.uk"
set name=info.upstream_url value="http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/doc.html"
#
# dependencies ... none?
#
#
# directories
#
dir mode=0755 owner=root group=bin path=${BIN_DIR}/
dir mode=0755 owner=root group=sys path=${CONF_DIR}/
dir mode=0755 owner=root group=sys path=${MAN_DIR}/
dir mode=0755 owner=root group=sys path=/var/
dir mode=0755 owner=root group=sys path=/var/svc
dir mode=0755 owner=root group=sys path=/var/svc/manifest
dir mode=0755 owner=root group=sys path=/var/svc/manifest/network
#
# files
#
file ${BASEDIR}/src/dnsmasq mode=0555 owner=root group=bin path=${BIN_DIR}/dnsmasq
file ${BASEDIR}/man/dnsmasq.8 mode=0555 owner=root group=bin path=${MAN_DIR}/dnsmasq.8
file ${BASEDIR}/dnsmasq.conf.example mode=0644 owner=root group=sys path=${CONF_DIR}/dnsmasq.conf preserve=strawberry
file ${BASEDIR}/contrib/Solaris10/dnsmasq-pkg.xml mode=0644 owner=root group=sys path=/var/svc/manifest/network/dnsmasq.xml restart_fmri=svc:/system/manifest-import:default
EOF
echo "done."
echo "Creating package..."
eval `pkgsend open ${PACKAGE_NAME}@${VERSION}`
pkgsend include ${BASEDIR}/contrib/Solaris10/dnsmasq_package.inc
if [ "$?" = 0 ]; then
pkgsend close
else
echo "Errors"
fi

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
<?xml version='1.0'?>
<!DOCTYPE service_bundle SYSTEM "/usr/share/lib/xml/dtd/service_bundle.dtd.1">
<!-- Service manifest for dnsmasq -->
<service_bundle type='manifest' name='dnsmasq'>
<service name='network/dnsmasq' type='service' version='1'>
<create_default_instance enabled='false'/>
<single_instance/>
<dependency name='multi-user'
grouping='require_all'
restart_on='refresh'
type='service'>
<service_fmri value='svc:/milestone/multi-user'/>
</dependency>
<dependency name='config'
grouping='require_all'
restart_on='restart'
type='path'>
<service_fmri value='file:///usr/local/etc/dnsmasq.conf'/>
</dependency>
<dependent name='dnsmasq_multi-user-server'
grouping='optional_all'
restart_on='none'>
<service_fmri value='svc:/milestone/multi-user-server' />
</dependent>
<exec_method type='method' name='start'
exec='/usr/local/sbin/dnsmasq -C /usr/local/etc/dnsmasq.conf'
timeout_seconds='60' >
<method_context>
<method_credential user='root' group='root' privileges='all'/>
</method_context>
</exec_method>
<exec_method type='method'
name='stop'
exec=':kill'
timeout_seconds='60'/>
<exec_method type='method'
name='refresh'
exec=':kill -HUP'
timeout_seconds='60' />
<template>
<common_name>
<loctext xml:lang='C'>dnsmasq server</loctext>
</common_name>
<description>
<loctext xml:lang='C'>
dnsmasq - A lightweight DHCP and caching DNS server.
</loctext>
</description>
<documentation>
<manpage title='dnsmasq' section='8' manpath='/usr/local/man'/>
</documentation>
</template>
</service>
</service_bundle>

6
contrib/Suse/README Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
This packaging is now unmaintained in the dnsmasq source: dnsmasq is
included in Suse proper, and up-to-date packages are now available
from
ftp://ftp.suse.com/pub/people/ug/

View File

@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
#define CHUSER "nobody"
-#define CHGRP "dip"
+#define CHGRP "dialout"
#define IP6INTERFACES "/proc/net/if_inet6"
#define UPTIME "/proc/uptime"
#define DHCP_SERVER_PORT 67
#define DHCP_CLIENT_PORT 68

View File

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
###############################################################################
Name: dnsmasq
Version: 2.28
Version: 2.33
Release: 1
Copyright: GPL
Group: Productivity/Networking/DNS/Servers
@@ -106,6 +106,6 @@ rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT
/usr/sbin/dnsmasq
/usr/share/locale/*/LC_MESSAGES/*
%doc %{_mandir}/man8/dnsmasq.8.gz
%doc %{_mandir}/*/man8/dnsmasq.8.gz

54
contrib/conntrack/README Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,54 @@
Linux iptables includes that ability to mark individual network packets
with a "firewall mark". Additionally there is a component called
"conntrack" which tries to string sequences of related packets together
into a "connection" (it even relates sequences of UDP and ICMP packets).
There is a related mark for a connection called a "connection mark".
Marks can be copied freely between the firewall and connection marks
Using these two features it become possible to tag all related traffic
in arbitrary ways, eg authenticated users, traffic from a particular IP,
port, etc. Unfortunately any kind of "proxy" breaks this relationship
because network packets go in one side of the proxy and a completely new
connection comes out of the other side. However, sometimes, we want to
maintain that relationship through the proxy and continue the connection
mark on packets upstream of our proxy
DNSMasq includes such a feature enabled by the --conntrack
option. This allows, for example, using iptables to mark traffic from
a particular IP, and that mark to be persisted to requests made *by*
DNSMasq. Such a feature could be useful for bandwidth accounting,
captive portals and the like. Note a similar feature has been
implemented in Squid 2.2
As an example consider the following iptables rules:
1) iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -j CONNMARK --restore-mark
2) iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -m mark --mark 0 -s 192.168.111.137
-j MARK --set-mark 137
3) iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -j CONNMARK --save-mark
4) iptables -t mangle -A OUTPUT -m mark ! --mark 0 -j CONNMARK --save-mark
1-3) are all applied to the PREROUTING table and affect all packets
entering the firewall.
1) copies any existing connection mark into the firewall mark. 2) Checks
the packet not already marked and if not applies an arbitrary mark based
on IP address. 3) Saves the firewall mark back to the connection mark
(which will persist it across related packets)
4) is applied to the OUTPUT table, which is where we first see packets
generated locally. DNSMasq will have already copied the firewall mark
from the request, across to the new packet, and so all that remains is
for iptables to copy it to the connection mark so it's persisted across
packets.
Note: iptables can be quite confusing to the beginner. The following
diagram is extremely helpful in understanding the flows
http://linux-ip.net/nf/nfk-traversal.png
Additionally the following URL contains a useful "starting guide" on
linux connection tracking/marking
http://home.regit.org/netfilter-en/netfilter-connmark/

12
contrib/dns-loc/README Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
Hi Simon
Here is a patch against dnsmasq 2.39 which provides support for LOC
entries in order to assign location information to dns records
(rfc1876). I tested it on OSX and on OpenWRT.
Cheers
Lorenz
More info:
http://www.ckdhr.com/dns-loc/
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1876.html

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,522 @@
diff -Nur dnsmasq-2.39-orig/bld/Makefile dnsmasq-2.39/bld/Makefile
--- dnsmasq-2.39-orig/bld/Makefile 2007-02-17 14:37:06.000000000 +0100
+++ dnsmasq-2.39/bld/Makefile 2007-05-20 18:23:44.000000000 +0200
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
PKG_CONFIG ?= pkg-config
-OBJS = cache.o rfc1035.o util.o option.o forward.o isc.o network.o \
+OBJS = cache.o rfc1035.o rfc1876.o util.o option.o forward.o isc.o network.o \
dnsmasq.o dhcp.o lease.o rfc2131.o netlink.o dbus.o bpf.o \
helper.o tftp.o log.o
diff -Nur dnsmasq-2.39-orig/src/dnsmasq.h dnsmasq-2.39/src/dnsmasq.h
--- dnsmasq-2.39-orig/src/dnsmasq.h 2007-04-20 12:53:38.000000000 +0200
+++ dnsmasq-2.39/src/dnsmasq.h 2007-05-20 19:50:37.000000000 +0200
@@ -162,6 +162,12 @@
struct interface_name *next;
};
+struct loc_record {
+ char *name, loc[16];
+ unsigned short class;
+ struct loc_record *next;
+};
+
union bigname {
char name[MAXDNAME];
union bigname *next; /* freelist */
@@ -476,6 +482,7 @@
struct mx_srv_record *mxnames;
struct txt_record *txt;
struct ptr_record *ptr;
+ struct loc_record *loc;
struct interface_name *int_names;
char *mxtarget;
char *lease_file;
@@ -725,3 +732,6 @@
void tftp_request(struct listener *listen, struct daemon *daemon, time_t now);
void check_tftp_listeners(struct daemon *daemon, fd_set *rset, time_t now);
#endif
+
+/* rfc1876 */
+u_int32_t loc_aton(const char *ascii, u_char *binary);
diff -Nur dnsmasq-2.39-orig/src/option.c dnsmasq-2.39/src/option.c
--- dnsmasq-2.39-orig/src/option.c 2007-04-19 23:34:49.000000000 +0200
+++ dnsmasq-2.39/src/option.c 2007-05-20 20:15:15.000000000 +0200
@@ -43,6 +43,7 @@
#define LOPT_REMOTE 269
#define LOPT_SUBSCR 270
#define LOPT_INTNAME 271
+#define LOPT_LOC 272
#ifdef HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
static const struct option opts[] =
@@ -122,6 +123,7 @@
{"tftp-root", 1, 0, LOPT_PREFIX },
{"tftp-max", 1, 0, LOPT_TFTP_MAX },
{"ptr-record", 1, 0, LOPT_PTR },
+ {"loc-record", 1, 0, LOPT_LOC },
#if defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__DragonFly__)
{"bridge-interface", 1, 0 , LOPT_BRIDGE },
#endif
@@ -235,6 +237,7 @@
{ "-y, --localise-queries", gettext_noop("Answer DNS queries based on the interface a query was sent to."), NULL },
{ "-Y --txt-record=name,txt....", gettext_noop("Specify TXT DNS record."), NULL },
{ " --ptr-record=name,target", gettext_noop("Specify PTR DNS record."), NULL },
+ { " --loc-record=name,lat lon alt", gettext_noop("Specify LOC DNS record."), NULL },
{ " --interface-name=name,interface", gettext_noop("Give DNS name to IPv4 address of interface."), NULL },
{ "-z, --bind-interfaces", gettext_noop("Bind only to interfaces in use."), NULL },
{ "-Z, --read-ethers", gettext_noop("Read DHCP static host information from %s."), ETHERSFILE },
@@ -1835,6 +1838,37 @@
new->intr = safe_string_alloc(comma);
break;
}
+
+ case LOPT_LOC:
+ {
+ struct loc_record *new;
+ unsigned char *p, *q;
+
+ comma = split(arg);
+
+ if (!canonicalise_opt(arg))
+ {
+ option = '?';
+ problem = _("bad LOC record");
+ break;
+ }
+
+ new = safe_malloc(sizeof(struct loc_record));
+ new->next = daemon->loc;
+ daemon->loc = new;
+ new->class = C_IN;
+ if (!comma || loc_aton(comma,new->loc)!=16)
+ {
+ option = '?';
+ problem = _("bad LOC record");
+ break;
+ }
+
+ if (comma)
+ *comma = 0;
+ new->name = safe_string_alloc(arg);
+ break;
+ }
case LOPT_PTR: /* --ptr-record */
{
diff -Nur dnsmasq-2.39-orig/src/rfc1035.c dnsmasq-2.39/src/rfc1035.c
--- dnsmasq-2.39-orig/src/rfc1035.c 2007-04-20 12:54:26.000000000 +0200
+++ dnsmasq-2.39/src/rfc1035.c 2007-05-20 18:22:46.000000000 +0200
@@ -1112,6 +1112,27 @@
}
}
+ if (qtype == T_LOC || qtype == T_ANY)
+ {
+ struct loc_record *t;
+ for(t = daemon->loc; t ; t = t->next)
+ {
+ if (t->class == qclass && hostname_isequal(name, t->name))
+ {
+ ans = 1;
+ if (!dryrun)
+ {
+ log_query(F_CNAME | F_FORWARD | F_CONFIG | F_NXDOMAIN, name, NULL, 0, NULL, 0);
+ if (add_resource_record(header, limit, &trunc, nameoffset, &ansp,
+ daemon->local_ttl, NULL,
+ T_LOC, t->class, "t", 16, t->loc))
+ anscount++;
+
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
if (qclass == C_IN)
{
if (qtype == T_PTR || qtype == T_ANY)
diff -Nur dnsmasq-2.39-orig/src/rfc1876.c dnsmasq-2.39/src/rfc1876.c
--- dnsmasq-2.39-orig/src/rfc1876.c 1970-01-01 01:00:00.000000000 +0100
+++ dnsmasq-2.39/src/rfc1876.c 2007-05-20 19:50:10.000000000 +0200
@@ -0,0 +1,379 @@
+/*
+ * routines to convert between on-the-wire RR format and zone file
+ * format. Does not contain conversion to/from decimal degrees;
+ * divide or multiply by 60*60*1000 for that.
+ */
+
+#include "dnsmasq.h"
+
+static unsigned int poweroften[10] = {1, 10, 100, 1000, 10000, 100000,
+ 1000000,10000000,100000000,1000000000};
+
+/* takes an XeY precision/size value, returns a string representation.*/
+static const char *
+precsize_ntoa(u_int8_t prec)
+{
+ static char retbuf[sizeof("90000000.00")];
+ unsigned long val;
+ int mantissa, exponent;
+
+ mantissa = (int)((prec >> 4) & 0x0f) % 10;
+ exponent = (int)((prec >> 0) & 0x0f) % 10;
+
+ val = mantissa * poweroften[exponent];
+
+ (void) sprintf(retbuf,"%d.%.2d", val/100, val%100);
+ return (retbuf);
+}
+
+/* converts ascii size/precision X * 10**Y(cm) to 0xXY. moves pointer.*/
+static u_int8_t
+precsize_aton(char **strptr)
+{
+ unsigned int mval = 0, cmval = 0;
+ u_int8_t retval = 0;
+ register char *cp;
+ register int exponent;
+ register int mantissa;
+
+ cp = *strptr;
+
+ while (isdigit(*cp))
+ mval = mval * 10 + (*cp++ - '0');
+
+ if (*cp == '.') { /* centimeters */
+ cp++;
+ if (isdigit(*cp)) {
+ cmval = (*cp++ - '0') * 10;
+ if (isdigit(*cp)) {
+ cmval += (*cp++ - '0');
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ cmval = (mval * 100) + cmval;
+
+ for (exponent = 0; exponent < 9; exponent++)
+ if (cmval < poweroften[exponent+1])
+ break;
+
+ mantissa = cmval / poweroften[exponent];
+ if (mantissa > 9)
+ mantissa = 9;
+
+ retval = (mantissa << 4) | exponent;
+
+ *strptr = cp;
+
+ return (retval);
+}
+
+/* converts ascii lat/lon to unsigned encoded 32-bit number.
+ * moves pointer. */
+static u_int32_t
+latlon2ul(char **latlonstrptr,int *which)
+{
+ register char *cp;
+ u_int32_t retval;
+ int deg = 0, min = 0, secs = 0, secsfrac = 0;
+
+ cp = *latlonstrptr;
+
+ while (isdigit(*cp))
+ deg = deg * 10 + (*cp++ - '0');
+
+ while (isspace(*cp))
+ cp++;
+
+ if (!(isdigit(*cp)))
+ goto fndhemi;
+
+ while (isdigit(*cp))
+ min = min * 10 + (*cp++ - '0');
+ while (isspace(*cp))
+ cp++;
+
+ if (!(isdigit(*cp)))
+ goto fndhemi;
+
+ while (isdigit(*cp))
+ secs = secs * 10 + (*cp++ - '0');
+
+ if (*cp == '.') { /* decimal seconds */
+ cp++;
+ if (isdigit(*cp)) {
+ secsfrac = (*cp++ - '0') * 100;
+ if (isdigit(*cp)) {
+ secsfrac += (*cp++ - '0') * 10;
+ if (isdigit(*cp)) {
+ secsfrac += (*cp++ - '0');
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ while (!isspace(*cp)) /* if any trailing garbage */
+ cp++;
+
+ while (isspace(*cp))
+ cp++;
+
+ fndhemi:
+ switch (*cp) {
+ case 'N': case 'n':
+ case 'E': case 'e':
+ retval = ((unsigned)1<<31)
+ + (((((deg * 60) + min) * 60) + secs) * 1000)
+ + secsfrac;
+ break;
+ case 'S': case 's':
+ case 'W': case 'w':
+ retval = ((unsigned)1<<31)
+ - (((((deg * 60) + min) * 60) + secs) * 1000)
+ - secsfrac;
+ break;
+ default:
+ retval = 0; /* invalid value -- indicates error */
+ break;
+ }
+
+ switch (*cp) {
+ case 'N': case 'n':
+ case 'S': case 's':
+ *which = 1; /* latitude */
+ break;
+ case 'E': case 'e':
+ case 'W': case 'w':
+ *which = 2; /* longitude */
+ break;
+ default:
+ *which = 0; /* error */
+ break;
+ }
+
+ cp++; /* skip the hemisphere */
+
+ while (!isspace(*cp)) /* if any trailing garbage */
+ cp++;
+
+ while (isspace(*cp)) /* move to next field */
+ cp++;
+
+ *latlonstrptr = cp;
+
+ return (retval);
+}
+
+/* converts a zone file representation in a string to an RDATA
+ * on-the-wire representation. */
+u_int32_t
+loc_aton(const char *ascii, u_char *binary)
+{
+ const char *cp, *maxcp;
+ u_char *bcp;
+
+ u_int32_t latit = 0, longit = 0, alt = 0;
+ u_int32_t lltemp1 = 0, lltemp2 = 0;
+ int altmeters = 0, altfrac = 0, altsign = 1;
+ u_int8_t hp = 0x16; /* default = 1e6 cm = 10000.00m = 10km */
+ u_int8_t vp = 0x13; /* default = 1e3 cm = 10.00m */
+ u_int8_t siz = 0x12; /* default = 1e2 cm = 1.00m */
+ int which1 = 0, which2 = 0;
+
+ cp = ascii;
+ maxcp = cp + strlen(ascii);
+
+ lltemp1 = latlon2ul(&cp, &which1);
+ lltemp2 = latlon2ul(&cp, &which2);
+
+ switch (which1 + which2) {
+ case 3: /* 1 + 2, the only valid combination */
+ if ((which1 == 1) && (which2 == 2)) { /* normal case */
+ latit = lltemp1;
+ longit = lltemp2;
+ } else if ((which1 == 2) && (which2 == 1)) {/*reversed*/
+ longit = lltemp1;
+ latit = lltemp2;
+ } else { /* some kind of brokenness */
+ return 0;
+ }
+ break;
+ default: /* we didn't get one of each */
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+ /* altitude */
+ if (*cp == '-') {
+ altsign = -1;
+ cp++;
+ }
+
+ if (*cp == '+')
+ cp++;
+
+ while (isdigit(*cp))
+ altmeters = altmeters * 10 + (*cp++ - '0');
+
+ if (*cp == '.') { /* decimal meters */
+ cp++;
+ if (isdigit(*cp)) {
+ altfrac = (*cp++ - '0') * 10;
+ if (isdigit(*cp)) {
+ altfrac += (*cp++ - '0');
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ alt = (10000000 + (altsign * (altmeters * 100 + altfrac)));
+
+ while (!isspace(*cp) && (cp < maxcp))
+ /* if trailing garbage or m */
+ cp++;
+
+ while (isspace(*cp) && (cp < maxcp))
+ cp++;
+ if (cp >= maxcp)
+ goto defaults;
+
+ siz = precsize_aton(&cp);
+
+ while (!isspace(*cp) && (cp < maxcp))/*if trailing garbage or m*/
+ cp++;
+
+ while (isspace(*cp) && (cp < maxcp))
+ cp++;
+
+ if (cp >= maxcp)
+ goto defaults;
+
+ hp = precsize_aton(&cp);
+
+ while (!isspace(*cp) && (cp < maxcp))/*if trailing garbage or m*/
+ cp++;
+
+ while (isspace(*cp) && (cp < maxcp))
+ cp++;
+
+ if (cp >= maxcp)
+ goto defaults;
+
+ vp = precsize_aton(&cp);
+
+ defaults:
+
+ bcp = binary;
+ *bcp++ = (u_int8_t) 0; /* version byte */
+ *bcp++ = siz;
+ *bcp++ = hp;
+ *bcp++ = vp;
+ PUTLONG(latit,bcp);
+ PUTLONG(longit,bcp);
+ PUTLONG(alt,bcp);
+
+ return (16); /* size of RR in octets */
+}
+
+/* takes an on-the-wire LOC RR and prints it in zone file
+ * (human readable) format. */
+char *
+loc_ntoa(const u_char *binary,char *ascii)
+{
+ static char tmpbuf[255*3];
+
+ register char *cp;
+ register const u_char *rcp;
+
+ int latdeg, latmin, latsec, latsecfrac;
+ int longdeg, longmin, longsec, longsecfrac;
+ char northsouth, eastwest;
+ int altmeters, altfrac, altsign;
+
+ const int referencealt = 100000 * 100;
+
+ int32_t latval, longval, altval;
+ u_int32_t templ;
+ u_int8_t sizeval, hpval, vpval, versionval;
+
+ char *sizestr, *hpstr, *vpstr;
+
+ rcp = binary;
+ if (ascii)
+ cp = ascii;
+ else {
+ cp = tmpbuf;
+ }
+
+ versionval = *rcp++;
+
+ if (versionval) {
+ sprintf(cp,"; error: unknown LOC RR version");
+ return (cp);
+ }
+
+ sizeval = *rcp++;
+
+ hpval = *rcp++;
+ vpval = *rcp++;
+
+ GETLONG(templ,rcp);
+ latval = (templ - ((unsigned)1<<31));
+
+ GETLONG(templ,rcp);
+ longval = (templ - ((unsigned)1<<31));
+
+ GETLONG(templ,rcp);
+ if (templ < referencealt) { /* below WGS 84 spheroid */
+ altval = referencealt - templ;
+ altsign = -1;
+ } else {
+ altval = templ - referencealt;
+ altsign = 1;
+ }
+
+ if (latval < 0) {
+ northsouth = 'S';
+ latval = -latval;
+ }
+ else
+ northsouth = 'N';
+
+ latsecfrac = latval % 1000;
+ latval = latval / 1000;
+ latsec = latval % 60;
+ latval = latval / 60;
+ latmin = latval % 60;
+ latval = latval / 60;
+ latdeg = latval;
+
+ if (longval < 0) {
+ eastwest = 'W';
+ longval = -longval;
+ }
+ else
+ eastwest = 'E';
+
+ longsecfrac = longval % 1000;
+ longval = longval / 1000;
+ longsec = longval % 60;
+ longval = longval / 60;
+ longmin = longval % 60;
+ longval = longval / 60;
+ longdeg = longval;
+
+ altfrac = altval % 100;
+ altmeters = (altval / 100) * altsign;
+
+ sizestr = strdup(precsize_ntoa(sizeval));
+ hpstr = strdup(precsize_ntoa(hpval));
+ vpstr = strdup(precsize_ntoa(vpval));
+
+ sprintf(cp,
+ "%d %.2d %.2d.%.3d %c %d %.2d %.2d.%.3d %c %d.%.2dm %sm %sm %sm",
+ latdeg, latmin, latsec, latsecfrac, northsouth,
+ longdeg, longmin, longsec, longsecfrac, eastwest,
+ altmeters, altfrac, sizestr, hpstr, vpstr);
+ free(sizestr);
+ free(hpstr);
+ free(vpstr);
+
+ return (cp);
+}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
Hello,
For some specific application I needed to deny access to a MAC address
to a lease. For this reason I modified the dhcp-script behavior and is
called with an extra parameter "access" once a dhcp request or discover
is received. In that case if the exit code of the script is zero,
dnsmasq continues normally, and if non-zero the packet is ignored.
This was not added as a security feature but as a mean to handle
differently some addresses. It is also quite intrusive since it requires
changes in several other subsystems.
It attach the patch in case someone is interested.
regards,
Nikos
nmav@gennetsa.com

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,578 @@
Index: src/dnsmasq.c
===================================================================
--- src/dnsmasq.c (revision 696)
+++ src/dnsmasq.c (revision 821)
@@ -59,7 +59,6 @@
static int set_dns_listeners(time_t now, fd_set *set, int *maxfdp);
static void check_dns_listeners(fd_set *set, time_t now);
static void sig_handler(int sig);
-static void async_event(int pipe, time_t now);
static void fatal_event(struct event_desc *ev);
static void poll_resolv(void);
@@ -275,7 +274,7 @@
piperead = pipefd[0];
pipewrite = pipefd[1];
/* prime the pipe to load stuff first time. */
- send_event(pipewrite, EVENT_RELOAD, 0);
+ send_event(pipewrite, EVENT_RELOAD, 0, 0);
err_pipe[1] = -1;
@@ -340,7 +339,7 @@
}
else if (getuid() == 0)
{
- send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_PIDFILE, errno);
+ send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_PIDFILE, errno, 0);
_exit(0);
}
}
@@ -372,7 +371,7 @@
(setgroups(0, &dummy) == -1 ||
setgid(gp->gr_gid) == -1))
{
- send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_GROUP_ERR, errno);
+ send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_GROUP_ERR, errno, 0);
_exit(0);
}
@@ -415,14 +414,14 @@
if (bad_capabilities != 0)
{
- send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_CAP_ERR, bad_capabilities);
+ send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_CAP_ERR, bad_capabilities, 0);
_exit(0);
}
/* finally drop root */
if (setuid(ent_pw->pw_uid) == -1)
{
- send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_USER_ERR, errno);
+ send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_USER_ERR, errno, 0);
_exit(0);
}
@@ -434,7 +433,7 @@
/* lose the setuid and setgid capbilities */
if (capset(hdr, data) == -1)
{
- send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_CAP_ERR, errno);
+ send_event(err_pipe[1], EVENT_CAP_ERR, errno, 0);
_exit(0);
}
#endif
@@ -647,7 +646,7 @@
}
if (FD_ISSET(piperead, &rset))
- async_event(piperead, now);
+ async_event(piperead, now, NULL, 0);
#ifdef HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
if (FD_ISSET(daemon->netlinkfd, &rset))
@@ -674,7 +673,7 @@
#endif
if (daemon->dhcp && FD_ISSET(daemon->dhcpfd, &rset))
- dhcp_packet(now);
+ dhcp_packet(piperead, now);
#ifndef NO_FORK
if (daemon->helperfd != -1 && FD_ISSET(daemon->helperfd, &wset))
@@ -719,17 +718,18 @@
else
return;
- send_event(pipewrite, event, 0);
+ send_event(pipewrite, event, 0, 0);
errno = errsave;
}
}
-void send_event(int fd, int event, int data)
+void send_event(int fd, int event, int data, int priv)
{
struct event_desc ev;
ev.event = event;
ev.data = data;
+ ev.priv = priv;
/* error pipe, debug mode. */
if (fd == -1)
@@ -771,14 +771,17 @@
die(_("cannot open %s: %s"), daemon->log_file ? daemon->log_file : "log", EC_FILE);
}
}
-
-static void async_event(int pipe, time_t now)
+
+/* returns the private data of the event
+ */
+int async_event(int pipe, time_t now, struct event_desc* event, unsigned int secs)
{
pid_t p;
struct event_desc ev;
int i;
- if (read_write(pipe, (unsigned char *)&ev, sizeof(ev), 1))
+ if (read_timeout(pipe, (unsigned char *)&ev, sizeof(ev), now, secs) > 0)
+ {
switch (ev.event)
{
case EVENT_RELOAD:
@@ -872,6 +875,14 @@
flush_log();
exit(EC_GOOD);
}
+ }
+ else
+ return -1; /* timeout */
+
+ if (event)
+ memcpy( event, &ev, sizeof(ev));
+
+ return 0;
}
static void poll_resolv()
Index: src/config.h
===================================================================
--- src/config.h (revision 696)
+++ src/config.h (revision 821)
@@ -51,6 +51,8 @@
#define TFTP_MAX_CONNECTIONS 50 /* max simultaneous connections */
#define LOG_MAX 5 /* log-queue length */
#define RANDFILE "/dev/urandom"
+#define SCRIPT_TIMEOUT 6
+#define LEASE_CHECK_TIMEOUT 10
/* DBUS interface specifics */
#define DNSMASQ_SERVICE "uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"
Index: src/dnsmasq.h
===================================================================
--- src/dnsmasq.h (revision 696)
+++ src/dnsmasq.h (revision 821)
@@ -116,6 +116,7 @@
/* Async event queue */
struct event_desc {
int event, data;
+ unsigned int priv;
};
#define EVENT_RELOAD 1
@@ -390,6 +391,7 @@
#define ACTION_OLD_HOSTNAME 2
#define ACTION_OLD 3
#define ACTION_ADD 4
+#define ACTION_ACCESS 5
#define DHCP_CHADDR_MAX 16
@@ -709,6 +711,7 @@
char *print_mac(char *buff, unsigned char *mac, int len);
void bump_maxfd(int fd, int *max);
int read_write(int fd, unsigned char *packet, int size, int rw);
+int read_timeout(int fd, unsigned char *packet, int size, time_t now, int secs);
/* log.c */
void die(char *message, char *arg1, int exit_code);
@@ -748,7 +751,7 @@
/* dhcp.c */
void dhcp_init(void);
-void dhcp_packet(time_t now);
+void dhcp_packet(int piperead, time_t now);
struct dhcp_context *address_available(struct dhcp_context *context,
struct in_addr addr,
@@ -792,14 +795,16 @@
void rerun_scripts(void);
/* rfc2131.c */
-size_t dhcp_reply(struct dhcp_context *context, char *iface_name, int int_index,
+size_t dhcp_reply(int pipefd, struct dhcp_context *context, char *iface_name, int int_index,
size_t sz, time_t now, int unicast_dest, int *is_inform);
/* dnsmasq.c */
int make_icmp_sock(void);
int icmp_ping(struct in_addr addr);
-void send_event(int fd, int event, int data);
+void send_event(int fd, int event, int data, int priv);
void clear_cache_and_reload(time_t now);
+int wait_for_child(int pipe);
+int async_event(int pipe, time_t now, struct event_desc*, unsigned int timeout);
/* isc.c */
#ifdef HAVE_ISC_READER
@@ -832,9 +837,9 @@
/* helper.c */
#ifndef NO_FORK
int create_helper(int event_fd, int err_fd, uid_t uid, gid_t gid, long max_fd);
-void helper_write(void);
+int helper_write(void);
void queue_script(int action, struct dhcp_lease *lease,
- char *hostname, time_t now);
+ char *hostname, time_t now, unsigned int uid);
int helper_buf_empty(void);
#endif
Index: src/util.c
===================================================================
--- src/util.c (revision 696)
+++ src/util.c (revision 821)
@@ -444,3 +444,38 @@
return 1;
}
+int read_timeout(int fd, unsigned char *packet, int size, time_t now, int secs)
+{
+ ssize_t n, done;
+ time_t expire;
+
+ expire = now + secs;
+
+ for (done = 0; done < size; done += n)
+ {
+ retry:
+ if (secs > 0) alarm(secs);
+ n = read(fd, &packet[done], (size_t)(size - done));
+
+ if (n == 0)
+ return 0;
+ else if (n == -1)
+ {
+ if (errno == EINTR) {
+ my_syslog(LOG_INFO, _("read timed out (errno %d)"), errno);
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+ if (retry_send() || errno == ENOMEM || errno == ENOBUFS || errno == EAGAIN)
+ {
+ if (secs == 0 || (secs > 0 && dnsmasq_time() < expire))
+ goto retry;
+ }
+
+ my_syslog(LOG_INFO, _("error in read (timeout %d, errno %d)"), secs, errno);
+ return 0;
+ }
+ }
+ return 1;
+}
+
Index: src/dhcp.c
===================================================================
--- src/dhcp.c (revision 696)
+++ src/dhcp.c (revision 821)
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@
daemon->dhcp_packet.iov_base = safe_malloc(daemon->dhcp_packet.iov_len);
}
-void dhcp_packet(time_t now)
+void dhcp_packet(int piperead, time_t now)
{
struct dhcp_packet *mess;
struct dhcp_context *context;
@@ -239,7 +239,8 @@
if (!iface_enumerate(&parm, complete_context, NULL))
return;
lease_prune(NULL, now); /* lose any expired leases */
- iov.iov_len = dhcp_reply(parm.current, ifr.ifr_name, iface_index, (size_t)sz,
+
+ iov.iov_len = dhcp_reply(piperead, parm.current, ifr.ifr_name, iface_index, (size_t)sz,
now, unicast_dest, &is_inform);
lease_update_file(now);
lease_update_dns();
Index: src/helper.c
===================================================================
--- src/helper.c (revision 696)
+++ src/helper.c (revision 821)
@@ -45,6 +45,7 @@
#endif
unsigned char hwaddr[DHCP_CHADDR_MAX];
char interface[IF_NAMESIZE];
+ unsigned int uid;
};
static struct script_data *buf = NULL;
@@ -60,7 +61,7 @@
then fork our process. */
if (pipe(pipefd) == -1 || !fix_fd(pipefd[1]) || (pid = fork()) == -1)
{
- send_event(err_fd, EVENT_PIPE_ERR, errno);
+ send_event(err_fd, EVENT_PIPE_ERR, errno, 0);
_exit(0);
}
@@ -87,13 +88,13 @@
{
if (daemon->options & OPT_NO_FORK)
/* send error to daemon process if no-fork */
- send_event(event_fd, EVENT_HUSER_ERR, errno);
+ send_event(event_fd, EVENT_HUSER_ERR, errno, 0);
else
{
/* kill daemon */
- send_event(event_fd, EVENT_DIE, 0);
+ send_event(event_fd, EVENT_DIE, 0, 0);
/* return error */
- send_event(err_fd, EVENT_HUSER_ERR, errno);;
+ send_event(err_fd, EVENT_HUSER_ERR, errno, 0);
}
_exit(0);
}
@@ -122,6 +123,8 @@
action_str = "del";
else if (data.action == ACTION_ADD)
action_str = "add";
+ else if (data.action == ACTION_ACCESS)
+ action_str = "access";
else if (data.action == ACTION_OLD || data.action == ACTION_OLD_HOSTNAME)
action_str = "old";
else
@@ -178,9 +181,11 @@
{
/* On error send event back to main process for logging */
if (WIFSIGNALED(status))
- send_event(event_fd, EVENT_KILLED, WTERMSIG(status));
- else if (WIFEXITED(status) && WEXITSTATUS(status) != 0)
- send_event(event_fd, EVENT_EXITED, WEXITSTATUS(status));
+ send_event(event_fd, EVENT_KILLED, WTERMSIG(status), data.uid);
+ else if (WIFEXITED(status))
+ send_event(event_fd, EVENT_EXITED, WEXITSTATUS(status), data.uid);
+ else
+ send_event(event_fd, EVENT_EXITED, -1, data.uid);
break;
}
@@ -263,7 +268,7 @@
err = errno;
}
/* failed, send event so the main process logs the problem */
- send_event(event_fd, EVENT_EXEC_ERR, err);
+ send_event(event_fd, EVENT_EXEC_ERR, err, data.uid);
_exit(0);
}
}
@@ -295,7 +300,7 @@
}
/* pack up lease data into a buffer */
-void queue_script(int action, struct dhcp_lease *lease, char *hostname, time_t now)
+void queue_script(int action, struct dhcp_lease *lease, char *hostname, time_t now, unsigned int uid)
{
unsigned char *p;
size_t size;
@@ -332,6 +337,7 @@
buf_size = size;
}
+ buf->uid = uid;
buf->action = action;
buf->hwaddr_len = lease->hwaddr_len;
buf->hwaddr_type = lease->hwaddr_type;
@@ -393,12 +399,15 @@
return bytes_in_buf == 0;
}
-void helper_write(void)
+/* returns -1 if write failed for a reason, 1 if no data exist
+ * and 0 if everything was ok.
+ */
+int helper_write(void)
{
ssize_t rc;
if (bytes_in_buf == 0)
- return;
+ return 1;
if ((rc = write(daemon->helperfd, buf, bytes_in_buf)) != -1)
{
@@ -409,9 +418,11 @@
else
{
if (errno == EAGAIN || errno == EINTR)
- return;
+ return -1;
bytes_in_buf = 0;
}
+
+ return 0;
}
#endif
Index: src/rfc2131.c
===================================================================
--- src/rfc2131.c (revision 696)
+++ src/rfc2131.c (revision 821)
@@ -100,8 +100,49 @@
int clid_len, unsigned char *clid, int *len_out);
static void match_vendor_opts(unsigned char *opt, struct dhcp_opt *dopt);
+static int check_access_script( int piperead, struct dhcp_lease *lease, struct dhcp_packet *mess, time_t now)
+{
+#ifndef NO_FORK
+unsigned int uid;
+struct event_desc ev;
+int ret;
+struct dhcp_lease _lease;
+
+ if (daemon->lease_change_command == NULL) return 0; /* ok */
+
+ if (!lease) { /* if host has not been seen before lease is NULL */
+ memset(&_lease, 0, sizeof(_lease));
+ lease = &_lease;
+ lease_set_hwaddr(lease, mess->chaddr, NULL, mess->hlen, mess->htype, 0);
+ }
+
+ uid = rand16();
+ queue_script(ACTION_ACCESS, lease, NULL, now, uid);
+
+ /* send all data to helper process */
+ do
+ {
+ helper_write();
+ } while (helper_buf_empty() == 0);
+
+ /* wait for our event */
+ ret = 0;
+ do
+ {
+ ret = async_event( piperead, now, &ev, SCRIPT_TIMEOUT);
+ }
+ while(ev.priv != uid && ret >= 0);
+
+ if (ret < 0 || ev.data != 0) /* timeout or error */
+ {
+ return -1;
+ }
+
+#endif
+ return 0; /* ok */
+}
-size_t dhcp_reply(struct dhcp_context *context, char *iface_name, int int_index,
+size_t dhcp_reply(int piperead, struct dhcp_context *context, char *iface_name, int int_index,
size_t sz, time_t now, int unicast_dest, int *is_inform)
{
unsigned char *opt, *clid = NULL;
@@ -252,7 +293,7 @@
mac->netid.next = netid;
netid = &mac->netid;
}
-
+
/* Determine network for this packet. Our caller will have already linked all the
contexts which match the addresses of the receiving interface but if the
machine has an address already, or came via a relay, or we have a subnet selector,
@@ -329,7 +370,7 @@
my_syslog(LOG_INFO, _("Available DHCP range: %s -- %s"), daemon->namebuff, inet_ntoa(context_tmp->end));
}
}
-
+
mess->op = BOOTREPLY;
config = find_config(daemon->dhcp_conf, context, clid, clid_len,
@@ -418,7 +459,7 @@
else
mess->yiaddr = lease->addr;
}
-
+
if (!message &&
!lease &&
(!(lease = lease_allocate(mess->yiaddr))))
@@ -641,7 +682,14 @@
memcpy(req_options, option_ptr(opt, 0), option_len(opt));
req_options[option_len(opt)] = OPTION_END;
}
-
+
+ if (mess_type == DHCPREQUEST || mess_type == DHCPDISCOVER)
+ if (check_access_script(piperead, lease, mess, now) < 0)
+ {
+ my_syslog(LOG_INFO, _("Ignoring client due to access script"));
+ return 0;
+ }
+
switch (mess_type)
{
case DHCPDECLINE:
Index: src/log.c
===================================================================
--- src/log.c (revision 696)
+++ src/log.c (revision 821)
@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@
if (!log_reopen(daemon->log_file))
{
- send_event(errfd, EVENT_LOG_ERR, errno);
+ send_event(errfd, EVENT_LOG_ERR, errno, 0);
_exit(0);
}
Index: src/lease.c
===================================================================
--- src/lease.c (revision 696)
+++ src/lease.c (revision 821)
@@ -511,7 +511,7 @@
if (lease->old_hostname)
{
#ifndef NO_FORK
- queue_script(ACTION_OLD_HOSTNAME, lease, lease->old_hostname, now);
+ queue_script(ACTION_OLD_HOSTNAME, lease, lease->old_hostname, now, 0);
#endif
free(lease->old_hostname);
lease->old_hostname = NULL;
@@ -520,7 +520,7 @@
else
{
#ifndef NO_FORK
- queue_script(ACTION_DEL, lease, lease->hostname, now);
+ queue_script(ACTION_DEL, lease, lease->hostname, now, 0);
#endif
old_leases = lease->next;
@@ -540,7 +540,7 @@
if (lease->old_hostname)
{
#ifndef NO_FORK
- queue_script(ACTION_OLD_HOSTNAME, lease, lease->old_hostname, now);
+ queue_script(ACTION_OLD_HOSTNAME, lease, lease->old_hostname, now, 0);
#endif
free(lease->old_hostname);
lease->old_hostname = NULL;
@@ -552,7 +552,7 @@
(lease->aux_changed && (daemon->options & OPT_LEASE_RO)))
{
#ifndef NO_FORK
- queue_script(lease->new ? ACTION_ADD : ACTION_OLD, lease, lease->hostname, now);
+ queue_script(lease->new ? ACTION_ADD : ACTION_OLD, lease, lease->hostname, now, 0);
#endif
lease->new = lease->changed = lease->aux_changed = 0;
Index: man/dnsmasq.8
===================================================================
--- man/dnsmasq.8 (revision 696)
+++ man/dnsmasq.8 (revision 821)
@@ -724,12 +724,15 @@
.B \-6 --dhcp-script=<path>
Whenever a new DHCP lease is created, or an old one destroyed, the
binary specified by this option is run. The arguments to the process
-are "add", "old" or "del", the MAC
+are "add", "old", "access" or "del", the MAC
address of the host (or "<null>"), the IP address, and the hostname,
if known. "add" means a lease has been created, "del" means it has
been destroyed, "old" is a notification of an existing lease when
dnsmasq starts or a change to MAC address or hostname of an existing
lease (also, lease length or expiry and client-id, if leasefile-ro is set).
+The "access" keyword means that a request was just received and depending
+on the script exit status request for address will be granted, if exit status
+is zero or not if it is non-zero.
The process is run as root (assuming that dnsmasq was originally run as
root) even if dnsmasq is configured to change UID to an unprivileged user.
The environment is inherited from the invoker of dnsmasq, and if the

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,78 @@
#!/bin/bash
#
# /usr/sbin/dnsmasq-portforward
#
# A script which gets run when the dnsmasq DHCP lease database changes.
# It logs to $LOGFILE, if it exists, and maintains port-forwards using
# IP-tables so that they always point to the correct host. See
# $PORTSFILE for details on configuring this. dnsmasq must be version 2.34
# or later.
#
# To enable this script, add
# dhcp-script=/usr/sbin/dnsmasq-portforward
# to /etc/dnsmasq.conf
#
# To enable logging, touch $LOGFILE
#
PORTSFILE=/etc/portforward
LOGFILE=/var/log/dhcp.log
IPTABLES=/sbin/iptables
action=${1:-0}
hostname=${4}
# log what's going on.
if [ -f ${LOGFILE} ] ; then
date +"%D %T $*" >>${LOGFILE}
fi
# If a lease gets stripped of a name, we see that as an "old" action
# with DNSMASQ_OLD_HOSTNAME set, convert it into a "del"
if [ ${DNSMASQ_OLD_HOSTNAME} ] && [ ${action} = old ] ; then
action=del
hostname=${DNSMASQ_OLD_HOSTNAME}
fi
# IPv6 leases are not our concern. no NAT there!
if [ ${DNSMASQ_IAID} ] ; then
exit 0
fi
# action init is not relevant, and will only be seen when leasefile-ro is set.
if [ ${action} = init ] ; then
exit 0
fi
# action tftp is not relevant.
if [ ${action} = tftp ] ; then
exit 0
fi
if [ ${hostname} ]; then
ports=$(sed -n -e "/^${hostname}\ .*/ s/^.* //p" ${PORTSFILE})
for port in $ports; do
verb=removed
protocol=tcp
if [ ${port:0:1} = u ] ; then
protocol=udp
port=${port/u/}
fi
src=${port/:*/}
dst=${port/*:/}
# delete first, to avoid multiple copies of rules.
${IPTABLES} -t nat -D PREROUTING -p $protocol --destination-port $src -j DNAT --to-destination ${3}:$dst
if [ ${action} != del ] ; then
${IPTABLES} -t nat -A PREROUTING -p $protocol --destination-port $src -j DNAT --to-destination ${3}:$dst
verb=added
fi
if [ -f ${LOGFILE} ] ; then
echo " DNAT $protocol $src to ${3}:$dst ${verb}." >>${LOGFILE}
fi
done
fi
exit 0

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
# This file is read by /usr/sbin/dnsmasq-portforward and used to set up port
# forwarding to hostnames. If the dnsmasq-determined hostname matches the
# first column of this file, then a DNAT port-forward will be set up
# to the address which has just been allocated by DHCP . The second field
# is port number(s). If there is only one, then the port-forward goes to
# the same port on the DHCP-client, if there are two seperated with a
# colon, then the second number is the port to which the connection
# is forwarded on the DHCP-client. By default, forwarding is set up
# for TCP, but it can done for UDP instead by prefixing the port to "u".
# To forward both TCP and UDP, two lines are required.
#
# eg.
# wwwserver 80
# will set up a port forward from port 80 on this host to port 80
# at the address allocated to wwwserver whenever wwwserver gets a DHCP lease.
#
# wwwserver 8080:80
# will set up a port forward from port 8080 on this host to port 80
# on the DHCP-client.
#
# dnsserver 53
# dnsserver u53
# will port forward port 53 UDP and TCP from this host to port 53 on dnsserver.
#
# Port forwards will recreated when dnsmasq restarts after a reboot, and
# removed when DHCP leases expire. After editing this file, send
# SIGHUP to dnsmasq to install new iptables entries in the kernel.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Contributed by Darren Hoo <darren.hoo@gmail.com>
# If you use dnsmasq as DHCP server on a router, you may have
# met with attackers trying ARP Poison Routing (APR) on your
# local area network. This script will setup a 'permanent' entry
# in the router's ARP table upon each DHCP transaction so as to
# make the attacker's efforts less successful.
# Usage:
# edit /etc/dnsmasq.conf and specify the path of this script
# to dhcp-script, for example:
# dhcp-script=/usr/sbin/static-arp
# if $1 is add or old, update the static arp table entry.
# if $1 is del, then delete the entry from the table
# if $1 is init which is called by dnsmasq at startup, it's ignored
ARP=/usr/sbin/arp
# Arguments.
# $1 is action (add, del, old)
# $2 is MAC
# $3 is address
# $4 is hostname (optional, may be unset)
if [ ${1} = del ] ; then
${ARP} -d $3
fi
if [ ${1} = old ] || [ ${1} = add ] ; then
${ARP} -s $3 $2
fi

16
contrib/systemd/README Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
Hello,
I created a systemd service file for dnsmasq.
systemd is a sysvinit replacement (see [1] for more information).
One of the goals of systemd is to encourage standardization between different
distributions. This means, while I also submitted a ticket in Debian GNU/Linux,
I would like to ask you to accept this service file as the upstream
distributor, so that other distributions can use the same service file and
dont have to ship their own.
Please include this file in your next release (just like in init script).
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemd

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
[Unit]
Description=A lightweight DHCP and caching DNS server
[Service]
Type=dbus
BusName=uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq
ExecStartPre=/usr/sbin/dnsmasq --test
ExecStart=/usr/sbin/dnsmasq -k
ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

19
contrib/try-all-ns/README Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 00:41:43 -0500
From: Bob Carroll <bob.carroll@rit.edu>
Subject: dnsmasq suggestion
To: simon@thekelleys.org.uk
Hello,
I recently needed a feature in dnsmasq for a very bizarre situation. I
placed a list of name servers in a special resolve file and told dnsmasq
to use that. But I wanted it to try requests in order and treat NXDOMAIN
requests as a failed tcp connection. I wrote the feature into dnsmasq
and it seems to work. I prepared a patch in the event that others might
find it useful as well.
Thanks and keep up the good work.
--Bob

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
A remake of patch Bob Carroll had posted to dnsmasq,
now compatible with version 2.47. Hopefully he doesn't
mind (sending a copy of this mail to him too).
Maybe the patch in question is not acceptible
as it doesn't add new switch, rather it binds itself to "strict-order".
What it does is: if you have strict-order in the
dnsmasq config file and query a domain that would result
in NXDOMAIN, it iterates the whole given nameserver list
until the last one says NXDOMAIN.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,61 @@
diff -Nau dnsmasq-2.35/src/dnsmasq.h dnsmasq/src/dnsmasq.h
--- dnsmasq-2.35/src/dnsmasq.h 2006-10-18 16:24:50.000000000 -0400
+++ dnsmasq/src/dnsmasq.h 2006-11-16 22:06:31.000000000 -0500
@@ -112,6 +112,7 @@
#define OPT_NO_PING 2097152
#define OPT_LEASE_RO 4194304
#define OPT_RELOAD 8388608
+#define OPT_TRY_ALL_NS 16777216
struct all_addr {
union {
diff -Nau dnsmasq-2.35/src/forward.c dnsmasq/src/forward.c
--- dnsmasq-2.35/src/forward.c 2006-10-18 16:24:50.000000000 -0400
+++ dnsmasq/src/forward.c 2006-11-16 22:08:19.000000000 -0500
@@ -445,6 +445,10 @@
{
struct server *server = forward->sentto;
+ // If strict-order and try-all-ns are set, treat NXDOMAIN as a failed request
+ if( (daemon->options & OPT_ORDER) && (daemon->options && OPT_TRY_ALL_NS)
+ && header->rcode == NXDOMAIN ) header->rcode = SERVFAIL;
+
if ((header->rcode == SERVFAIL || header->rcode == REFUSED) && forward->forwardall == 0)
/* for broken servers, attempt to send to another one. */
{
diff -Nau dnsmasq-2.35/src/option.c dnsmasq/src/option.c
--- dnsmasq-2.35/src/option.c 2006-10-18 16:24:50.000000000 -0400
+++ dnsmasq/src/option.c 2006-11-16 22:10:36.000000000 -0500
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@
/* options which don't have a one-char version */
#define LOPT_RELOAD 256
-
+#define LOPT_TRY_ALL_NS 257
#ifdef HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
static const struct option opts[] =
@@ -102,6 +102,7 @@
{"leasefile-ro", 0, 0, '9'},
{"dns-forward-max", 1, 0, '0'},
{"clear-on-reload", 0, 0, LOPT_RELOAD },
+ {"try-all-ns", 0, 0, LOPT_TRY_ALL_NS },
{ NULL, 0, 0, 0 }
};
@@ -134,6 +135,7 @@
{ '5', OPT_NO_PING },
{ '9', OPT_LEASE_RO },
{ LOPT_RELOAD, OPT_RELOAD },
+ { LOPT_TRY_ALL_NS,OPT_TRY_ALL_NS },
{ 'v', 0},
{ 'w', 0},
{ 0, 0 }
@@ -208,6 +210,7 @@
{ "-9, --leasefile-ro", gettext_noop("Read leases at startup, but never write the lease file."), NULL },
{ "-0, --dns-forward-max=<queries>", gettext_noop("Maximum number of concurrent DNS queries. (defaults to %s)"), "!" },
{ " --clear-on-reload", gettext_noop("Clear DNS cache when reloading %s."), RESOLVFILE },
+ { " --try-all-ns", gettext_noop("Try all name servers in tandem on NXDOMAIN replies (use with strict-order)."), NULL },
{ NULL, NULL, NULL }
};

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
diff -ur dnsmasq-2.47/src/forward.c dnsmasq-2.47-patched/src/forward.c
--- dnsmasq-2.47/src/forward.c 2009-02-01 17:59:48.000000000 +0200
+++ dnsmasq-2.47-patched/src/forward.c 2009-03-18 19:10:22.000000000 +0200
@@ -488,9 +488,12 @@
return;
server = forward->sentto;
+
+ if ( (header->rcode == NXDOMAIN) && ((daemon->options & OPT_ORDER) != 0) && (server->next != NULL) )
+ header->rcode = SERVFAIL;
if ((header->rcode == SERVFAIL || header->rcode == REFUSED) &&
- !(daemon->options & OPT_ORDER) &&
+ ((daemon->options & OPT_ORDER) != 0) &&
forward->forwardall == 0)
/* for broken servers, attempt to send to another one. */
{

54
contrib/webmin/README Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,54 @@
This is the README for the DNSmasq webmin module.
Problems:
1) There's only basic error checking - if you enter some bad
addresses or names, they will go straight into the config file
although we do check for things like IP addresses being of
the correct form (no letters, 4 groups of up to 3 digits
separated by dots etc). One thing that ISN'T CHECKED FOR is
that IP dotted quads are all numbers < 256. Another is that
netmasks are logical (you could enter a netmask of 255.0.255.0
for example). Essentially, if it'll pass the config file
regex scanner (and the above examples will), it won't be
flagged as "bad" even if it is a big no-no for dnsmasq itself.
2) Code is ugly and a kludge - I ain't a programmer! There are probably
a lot of things that could be done to tidy up the code - eg,
it probably wouldn't hurt to move some common stuff into the lib file.
3) I've used the %text hash and written an english lang file, but
I am mono-lingual so no other language support as yet.
4) for reasons unknown to me, the icon does not appear properly
on the servers page of webmin (at least it doesn't for me!)
5) icons have been shamelessly stolen from the ipfilter module,
specifically the up and down arrows.
6) if you delete an item, the config file will contain
an otherwise empty, but commented line. This means that if
you add some new stuff, then delete it, the config file
will have a number of lines at the end that are just comments.
Therefore, the config file could possibly grow quite large.
7) NO INCLUDE FILES!
if you use an include file, it'll be flagged as an error.
OK if the include file line is commented out though.
8) deprecated lines not supported (eg user and group) - they
may produce an error! (user and group don't, but you can't change
them)
IOW, it works, it's just not very elegant and not very robust.
Hope you find it useful though - I do, as I prevents me having to ever
wade through the config file and man pages again.
If you modify it, or add a language file, and you have a spare moment,
please e-mail me - I won't be upset at all if you fix my poor coding!
(rather the opposite - I'd be pleased someone found it usefull)
Cheers,
Neil Fisher <neil@magnecor.com.au>

BIN
contrib/webmin/dnsmasq.wbm Normal file

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6
contrib/wrt/Makefile Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
CFLAGS?= -O2 -Wall -W
all: dhcp_release dhcp_lease_time
clean:
rm -f *~ *.o core dhcp_release dhcp_lease_time

81
contrib/wrt/README Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,81 @@
This script can be used to implement persistent leases on openWRT, DD-WRT
etc. Persistent leases are good: if the lease database is lost on a
reboot, then it will eventually be restored as hosts renew their
leases. Until a host renews (which may take hours/days) it will
not exist in the DNS if dnsmasq's DDNS function is in use.
*WRT systems remount all non-volatile fileystems read-only after boot,
so the normal leasefile will not work. They do, however have NV
storage, accessed with the nvram command:
/usr/lib # nvram
usage: nvram [get name] [set name=value] [unset name] [show]
The principle is that leases are kept in NV variable with data
corresponding to the line in a leasefile:
dnsmasq_lease_192.168.1.56=3600 00:41:4a:05:80:74 192.168.1.56 * *
By giving dnsmasq the leasefile-ro command, it no longer creates or writes a
leasefile; responsibility for maintaining the lease database transfers
to the lease change script. At startup, in leasefile-ro mode,
dnsmasq will run
"<lease_change_script> init"
and read whatever that command spits out, expecting it to
be in dnsmasq leasefile format.
So the lease change script, given "init" as argv[1] will
suck existing leases out of the NVRAM and emit them from
stdout in the correct format.
The second part of the problem is keeping the NVRAM up-to-date: this
is done by the lease-change script which dnsmasq runs when a lease is
updated. When it is called with argv[1] as "old", "add", or "del"
it updates the relevant nvram entry.
So, dnsmasq should be run as :
dnsmasq --leasefile-ro --dhcp-script=/path/to/lease_update.sh
or the same flags added to /etc/dnsmasq.conf
Notes:
This needs dnsmasq-2.33 or later to work.
This technique will work with, or without, compilation with
HAVE_BROKEN_RTC. Compiling with HAVE_BROKEN_RTC is
_highly_recommended_ for this application since is avoids problems
with the system clock being warped by NTP, and it vastly reduces the
number of writes to the NVRAM. With HAVE_BROKEN_RTC, NVRAM is updated
only when a lease is created or destroyed; without it, a write occurs
every time a lease is renewed.
It probably makes sense to restrict the number of active DHCP leases
to an appropriate number using dhcp-lease-max. On a new DD_WRT system,
there are about 10K bytes free in the NVRAM. Each lease record is
about 100 bytes, so restricting the number of leases to 50 will limit
use to half that. (The default limit in the distributed source is 150)
Any UI script which reads the dnsmasq leasefile will have to be
ammended, probably by changing it to read the output of
`lease_update init` instead.
Thanks:
To Steve Horbachuk for checks on the script and debugging beyond the
call of duty.
Simon Kelley
Fri Jul 28 11:51:13 BST 2006

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
.TH DHCP_LEASE_TIME 1
.SH NAME
dhcp_lease_time \- Query remaining time of a lease on a the local dnsmasq DHCP server.
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B dhcp_lease_time <address>
.SH "DESCRIPTION"
Send a DHCPINFORM message to a dnsmasq server running on the local host
and print (to stdout) the time remaining in any lease for the given
address. The time is given as string printed to stdout.
If an error occurs or no lease exists for the given address,
nothing is sent to stdout a message is sent to stderr and a
non-zero error code is returned.
Requires dnsmasq 2.40 or later and may not work with other DHCP servers.
The address argument is a dotted-quad IP addresses and mandatory.
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR dnsmasq (8)
.SH AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Simon Kelley <simon@thekelleys.org.uk>.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,214 @@
/* Copyright (c) 2007 Simon Kelley
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
*/
/* dhcp_lease_time <address> */
/* Send a DHCPINFORM message to a dnsmasq server running on the local host
and print (to stdout) the time remaining in any lease for the given
address. The time is given as string printed to stdout.
If an error occurs or no lease exists for the given address,
nothing is sent to stdout a message is sent to stderr and a
non-zero error code is returned.
Requires dnsmasq 2.40 or later.
*/
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <net/if_arp.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/netlink.h>
#include <linux/rtnetlink.h>
#include <errno.h>
#define DHCP_CHADDR_MAX 16
#define BOOTREQUEST 1
#define DHCP_COOKIE 0x63825363
#define OPTION_PAD 0
#define OPTION_LEASE_TIME 51
#define OPTION_OVERLOAD 52
#define OPTION_MESSAGE_TYPE 53
#define OPTION_END 255
#define DHCPINFORM 8
#define DHCP_SERVER_PORT 67
#define option_len(opt) ((int)(((unsigned char *)(opt))[1]))
#define option_ptr(opt) ((void *)&(((unsigned char *)(opt))[2]))
typedef unsigned char u8;
typedef unsigned short u16;
typedef unsigned int u32;
struct dhcp_packet {
u8 op, htype, hlen, hops;
u32 xid;
u16 secs, flags;
struct in_addr ciaddr, yiaddr, siaddr, giaddr;
u8 chaddr[DHCP_CHADDR_MAX], sname[64], file[128];
u32 cookie;
unsigned char options[308];
};
static unsigned char *option_find1(unsigned char *p, unsigned char *end, int opt, int minsize)
{
while (*p != OPTION_END)
{
if (p >= end)
return NULL; /* malformed packet */
else if (*p == OPTION_PAD)
p++;
else
{
int opt_len;
if (p >= end - 2)
return NULL; /* malformed packet */
opt_len = option_len(p);
if (p >= end - (2 + opt_len))
return NULL; /* malformed packet */
if (*p == opt && opt_len >= minsize)
return p;
p += opt_len + 2;
}
}
return opt == OPTION_END ? p : NULL;
}
static unsigned char *option_find(struct dhcp_packet *mess, size_t size, int opt_type, int minsize)
{
unsigned char *ret, *overload;
/* skip over DHCP cookie; */
if ((ret = option_find1(&mess->options[0], ((unsigned char *)mess) + size, opt_type, minsize)))
return ret;
/* look for overload option. */
if (!(overload = option_find1(&mess->options[0], ((unsigned char *)mess) + size, OPTION_OVERLOAD, 1)))
return NULL;
/* Can we look in filename area ? */
if ((overload[2] & 1) &&
(ret = option_find1(&mess->file[0], &mess->file[128], opt_type, minsize)))
return ret;
/* finally try sname area */
if ((overload[2] & 2) &&
(ret = option_find1(&mess->sname[0], &mess->sname[64], opt_type, minsize)))
return ret;
return NULL;
}
static unsigned int option_uint(unsigned char *opt, int size)
{
/* this worries about unaligned data and byte order */
unsigned int ret = 0;
int i;
unsigned char *p = option_ptr(opt);
for (i = 0; i < size; i++)
ret = (ret << 8) | *p++;
return ret;
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
struct in_addr lease;
struct dhcp_packet packet;
unsigned char *p = packet.options;
struct sockaddr_in dest;
int fd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, IPPROTO_UDP);
ssize_t rc;
if (argc < 2)
{
fprintf(stderr, "usage: dhcp_lease_time <address>\n");
exit(1);
}
if (fd == -1)
{
perror("cannot create socket");
exit(1);
}
lease.s_addr = inet_addr(argv[1]);
memset(&packet, 0, sizeof(packet));
packet.hlen = 0;
packet.htype = 0;
packet.op = BOOTREQUEST;
packet.ciaddr = lease;
packet.cookie = htonl(DHCP_COOKIE);
*(p++) = OPTION_MESSAGE_TYPE;
*(p++) = 1;
*(p++) = DHCPINFORM;
*(p++) = OPTION_END;
dest.sin_family = AF_INET;
dest.sin_addr.s_addr = inet_addr("127.0.0.1");
dest.sin_port = ntohs(DHCP_SERVER_PORT);
if (sendto(fd, &packet, sizeof(packet), 0,
(struct sockaddr *)&dest, sizeof(dest)) == -1)
{
perror("sendto failed");
exit(1);
}
alarm(3); /* noddy timeout. */
rc = recv(fd, &packet, sizeof(packet), 0);
if (rc < (ssize_t)(sizeof(packet) - sizeof(packet.options)))
{
perror("recv failed");
exit(1);
}
if ((p = option_find(&packet, (size_t)rc, OPTION_LEASE_TIME, 4)))
{
unsigned int t = option_uint(p, 4);
if (t == 0xffffffff)
printf("infinite");
else
{
unsigned int x;
if ((x = t/86400))
printf("%dd", x);
if ((x = (t/3600)%24))
printf("%dh", x);
if ((x = (t/60)%60))
printf("%dm", x);
if ((x = t%60))
printf("%ds", x);
}
return 0;
}
return 1; /* no lease */
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
.TH DHCP_RELEASE 1
.SH NAME
dhcp_release \- Release a DHCP lease on a the local dnsmasq DHCP server.
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B dhcp_release <interface> <address> <MAC address> <client_id>
.SH "DESCRIPTION"
A utility which forces the DHCP server running on this machine to release a
DHCP lease.
.PP
Send a DHCPRELEASE message via the specified interface to tell the
local DHCP server to delete a particular lease.
The interface argument is the interface in which a DHCP
request _would_ be received if it was coming from the client,
rather than being faked up here.
The address argument is a dotted-quad IP addresses and mandatory.
The MAC address is colon separated hex, and is mandatory. It may be
prefixed by an address-type byte followed by -, eg
10-11:22:33:44:55:66
but if the address-type byte is missing it is assumed to be 1, the type
for ethernet. This encoding is the one used in dnsmasq lease files.
The client-id is optional. If it is "*" then it treated as being missing.
.SH NOTES
MUST be run as root - will fail otherwise.
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR dnsmasq (8)
.SH AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Simon Kelley <simon@thekelleys.org.uk>.

331
contrib/wrt/dhcp_release.c Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,331 @@
/* Copyright (c) 2006 Simon Kelley
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
*/
/* dhcp_release <interface> <address> <MAC address> <client_id>
MUST be run as root - will fail otherwise. */
/* Send a DHCPRELEASE message via the specified interface
to tell the local DHCP server to delete a particular lease.
The interface argument is the interface in which a DHCP
request _would_ be received if it was coming from the client,
rather than being faked up here.
The address argument is a dotted-quad IP addresses and mandatory.
The MAC address is colon separated hex, and is mandatory. It may be
prefixed by an address-type byte followed by -, eg
10-11:22:33:44:55:66
but if the address-type byte is missing it is assumed to be 1, the type
for ethernet. This encoding is the one used in dnsmasq lease files.
The client-id is optional. If it is "*" then it treated as being missing.
*/
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <net/if_arp.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/netlink.h>
#include <linux/rtnetlink.h>
#include <errno.h>
#define DHCP_CHADDR_MAX 16
#define BOOTREQUEST 1
#define DHCP_COOKIE 0x63825363
#define OPTION_SERVER_IDENTIFIER 54
#define OPTION_CLIENT_ID 61
#define OPTION_MESSAGE_TYPE 53
#define OPTION_END 255
#define DHCPRELEASE 7
#define DHCP_SERVER_PORT 67
typedef unsigned char u8;
typedef unsigned short u16;
typedef unsigned int u32;
struct dhcp_packet {
u8 op, htype, hlen, hops;
u32 xid;
u16 secs, flags;
struct in_addr ciaddr, yiaddr, siaddr, giaddr;
u8 chaddr[DHCP_CHADDR_MAX], sname[64], file[128];
u32 cookie;
unsigned char options[308];
};
static struct iovec iov;
static int expand_buf(struct iovec *iov, size_t size)
{
void *new;
if (size <= iov->iov_len)
return 1;
if (!(new = malloc(size)))
{
errno = ENOMEM;
return 0;
}
if (iov->iov_base)
{
memcpy(new, iov->iov_base, iov->iov_len);
free(iov->iov_base);
}
iov->iov_base = new;
iov->iov_len = size;
return 1;
}
static ssize_t netlink_recv(int fd)
{
struct msghdr msg;
ssize_t rc;
msg.msg_control = NULL;
msg.msg_controllen = 0;
msg.msg_name = NULL;
msg.msg_namelen = 0;
msg.msg_iov = &iov;
msg.msg_iovlen = 1;
while (1)
{
msg.msg_flags = 0;
while ((rc = recvmsg(fd, &msg, MSG_PEEK)) == -1 && errno == EINTR);
/* 2.2.x doesn't suport MSG_PEEK at all, returning EOPNOTSUPP, so we just grab a
big buffer and pray in that case. */
if (rc == -1 && errno == EOPNOTSUPP)
{
if (!expand_buf(&iov, 2000))
return -1;
break;
}
if (rc == -1 || !(msg.msg_flags & MSG_TRUNC))
break;
if (!expand_buf(&iov, iov.iov_len + 100))
return -1;
}
/* finally, read it for real */
while ((rc = recvmsg(fd, &msg, 0)) == -1 && errno == EINTR);
return rc;
}
static int parse_hex(char *in, unsigned char *out, int maxlen, int *mac_type)
{
int i = 0;
char *r;
if (mac_type)
*mac_type = 0;
while (maxlen == -1 || i < maxlen)
{
for (r = in; *r != 0 && *r != ':' && *r != '-'; r++);
if (*r == 0)
maxlen = i;
if (r != in )
{
if (*r == '-' && i == 0 && mac_type)
{
*r = 0;
*mac_type = strtol(in, NULL, 16);
mac_type = NULL;
}
else
{
*r = 0;
out[i] = strtol(in, NULL, 16);
i++;
}
}
in = r+1;
}
return i;
}
static int is_same_net(struct in_addr a, struct in_addr b, struct in_addr mask)
{
return (a.s_addr & mask.s_addr) == (b.s_addr & mask.s_addr);
}
static struct in_addr find_interface(struct in_addr client, int fd, unsigned int index)
{
struct sockaddr_nl addr;
struct nlmsghdr *h;
ssize_t len;
struct {
struct nlmsghdr nlh;
struct rtgenmsg g;
} req;
addr.nl_family = AF_NETLINK;
addr.nl_pad = 0;
addr.nl_groups = 0;
addr.nl_pid = 0; /* address to kernel */
req.nlh.nlmsg_len = sizeof(req);
req.nlh.nlmsg_type = RTM_GETADDR;
req.nlh.nlmsg_flags = NLM_F_ROOT | NLM_F_MATCH | NLM_F_REQUEST | NLM_F_ACK;
req.nlh.nlmsg_pid = 0;
req.nlh.nlmsg_seq = 1;
req.g.rtgen_family = AF_INET;
if (sendto(fd, (void *)&req, sizeof(req), 0,
(struct sockaddr *)&addr, sizeof(addr)) == -1)
{
perror("sendto failed");
exit(1);
}
while (1)
{
if ((len = netlink_recv(fd)) == -1)
{
perror("netlink");
exit(1);
}
for (h = (struct nlmsghdr *)iov.iov_base; NLMSG_OK(h, (size_t)len); h = NLMSG_NEXT(h, len))
if (h->nlmsg_type == NLMSG_DONE)
exit(0);
else if (h->nlmsg_type == RTM_NEWADDR)
{
struct ifaddrmsg *ifa = NLMSG_DATA(h);
struct rtattr *rta;
unsigned int len1 = h->nlmsg_len - NLMSG_LENGTH(sizeof(*ifa));
if (ifa->ifa_index == index && ifa->ifa_family == AF_INET)
{
struct in_addr netmask, addr;
netmask.s_addr = htonl(0xffffffff << (32 - ifa->ifa_prefixlen));
addr.s_addr = 0;
for (rta = IFA_RTA(ifa); RTA_OK(rta, len1); rta = RTA_NEXT(rta, len1))
if (rta->rta_type == IFA_LOCAL)
addr = *((struct in_addr *)(rta+1));
if (addr.s_addr && is_same_net(addr, client, netmask))
return addr;
}
}
}
exit(0);
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
struct in_addr server, lease;
int mac_type;
struct dhcp_packet packet;
unsigned char *p = packet.options;
struct sockaddr_in dest;
struct ifreq ifr;
int fd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, IPPROTO_UDP);
int nl = socket(AF_NETLINK, SOCK_RAW, NETLINK_ROUTE);
struct iovec iov;
iov.iov_len = 200;
iov.iov_base = malloc(iov.iov_len);
if (argc < 4 || argc > 5)
{
fprintf(stderr, "usage: dhcp_release <interface> <addr> <mac> [<client_id>]\n");
exit(1);
}
if (fd == -1 || nl == -1)
{
perror("cannot create socket");
exit(1);
}
/* This voodoo fakes up a packet coming from the correct interface, which really matters for
a DHCP server */
strcpy(ifr.ifr_name, argv[1]);
if (setsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_BINDTODEVICE, &ifr, sizeof(ifr)) == -1)
{
perror("cannot setup interface");
exit(1);
}
lease.s_addr = inet_addr(argv[2]);
server = find_interface(lease, nl, if_nametoindex(argv[1]));
memset(&packet, 0, sizeof(packet));
packet.hlen = parse_hex(argv[3], packet.chaddr, DHCP_CHADDR_MAX, &mac_type);
if (mac_type == 0)
packet.htype = ARPHRD_ETHER;
else
packet.htype = mac_type;
packet.op = BOOTREQUEST;
packet.ciaddr = lease;
packet.cookie = htonl(DHCP_COOKIE);
*(p++) = OPTION_MESSAGE_TYPE;
*(p++) = 1;
*(p++) = DHCPRELEASE;
*(p++) = OPTION_SERVER_IDENTIFIER;
*(p++) = sizeof(server);
memcpy(p, &server, sizeof(server));
p += sizeof(server);
if (argc == 5 && strcmp(argv[4], "*") != 0)
{
unsigned int clid_len = parse_hex(argv[4], p+2, 255, NULL);
*(p++) = OPTION_CLIENT_ID;
*(p++) = clid_len;
p += clid_len;
}
*(p++) = OPTION_END;
dest.sin_family = AF_INET;
dest.sin_port = ntohs(DHCP_SERVER_PORT);
dest.sin_addr = server;
if (sendto(fd, &packet, sizeof(packet), 0,
(struct sockaddr *)&dest, sizeof(dest)) == -1)
{
perror("sendto failed");
exit(1);
}
return 0;
}

54
contrib/wrt/lease_update.sh Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,54 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Copyright (c) 2006 Simon Kelley
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
# if $1 is add del or old, this is a dnsmasq-called lease-change
# script, update the nvram database. if $1 is init, emit a
# dnsmasq-format lease file to stdout representing the current state of the
# database, this is called by dnsmasq at startup.
NVRAM=/usr/sbin/nvram
PREFIX=dnsmasq_lease_
# Arguments.
# $1 is action (add, del, old)
# $2 is MAC
# $3 is address
# $4 is hostname (optional, may be unset)
# env.
# DNSMASQ_LEASE_LENGTH or DNSMASQ_LEASE_EXPIRES (which depends on HAVE_BROKEN_RTC)
# DNSMASQ_CLIENT_ID (optional, may be unset)
# File.
# length|expires MAC addr hostname|* CLID|*
# Primary key is address.
if [ ${1} = init ] ; then
${NVRAM} show | sed -n -e "/^${PREFIX}.*/ s/^.*=//p"
else
if [ ${1} = del ] ; then
${NVRAM} unset ${PREFIX}${3}
fi
if [ ${1} = old ] || [ ${1} = add ] ; then
${NVRAM} set ${PREFIX}${3}="${DNSMASQ_LEASE_LENGTH:-}${DNSMASQ_LEASE_EXPIRES:-} ${2} ${3} ${4:-*} ${DNSMASQ_CLIENT_ID:-*}"
fi
${NVRAM} commit
fi

View File

@@ -21,6 +21,9 @@ and avoids startup races with the provider of nameserver information.
Dnsmasq provides one service on the DBus: uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq
and a single object: /uk/org/thekelleys/dnsmasq
1. METHODS
----------
Methods are of the form
uk.org.thekelleys.<method>
@@ -91,4 +94,38 @@ Each call to SetServers completely replaces the set of servers
specified by via the DBus, but it leaves any servers specified via the
command line or /etc/dnsmasq.conf or /etc/resolv.conf alone.
2. SIGNALS
----------
If dnsmasq's DHCP server is active, it will send signals over DBUS whenever
the DHCP lease database changes. Think of these signals as transactions on
a database with the IP address acting as the primary key.
Signals are of the form:
uk.org.thekelleys.<signal>
and their parameters are:
STRING "192.168.1.115"
STRING "01:23:45:67:89:ab"
STRING "hostname.or.fqdn"
Available signals are:
DhcpLeaseAdded
---------------
This signal is emitted when a DHCP lease for a given IP address is created.
DhcpLeaseDeleted
----------------
This signal is emitted when a DHCP lease for a given IP address is deleted.
DhcpLeaseUpdated
----------------
This signal is emitted when a DHCP lease for a given IP address is updated.

14
dbus/dnsmasq.conf Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
<!DOCTYPE busconfig PUBLIC
"-//freedesktop//DTD D-BUS Bus Configuration 1.0//EN"
"http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/busconfig.dtd">
<busconfig>
<policy user="root">
<allow own="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
<allow send_destination="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
</policy>
<policy context="default">
<deny own="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
<deny send_destination="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
</policy>
</busconfig>

1026
debian/changelog vendored Normal file

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

6
debian/conffiles vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
/etc/init.d/dnsmasq
/etc/default/dnsmasq
/etc/dnsmasq.conf
/etc/resolvconf/update.d/dnsmasq
/etc/dbus-1/system.d/dnsmasq.conf
/etc/insserv.conf.d/dnsmasq

41
debian/control vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
Source: dnsmasq
Section: net
Priority: optional
Build-depends: gettext, libnetfilter-conntrack-dev [linux-any], libidn11-dev, libdbus-1-dev (>=0.61)
Maintainer: Simon Kelley <simon@thekelleys.org.uk>
Standards-Version: 3.9.3
Package: dnsmasq
Architecture: all
Depends: netbase, adduser, dnsmasq-base(>= ${source:Version})
Suggests: resolvconf
Conflicts: resolvconf (<<1.15)
Description: Small caching DNS proxy and DHCP/TFTP server
Dnsmasq is a lightweight, easy to configure, DNS forwarder and DHCP
server. It is designed to provide DNS and optionally, DHCP, to a
small network. It can serve the names of local machines which are
not in the global DNS. The DHCP server integrates with the DNS
server and allows machines with DHCP-allocated addresses
to appear in the DNS with names configured either in each host or
in a central configuration file. Dnsmasq supports static and dynamic
DHCP leases and BOOTP/TFTP for network booting of diskless machines.
Package: dnsmasq-base
Architecture: any
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}
Conflicts: dnsmasq (<<2.41)
Description: Small caching DNS proxy and DHCP/TFTP server
This package contains the dnsmasq executable and documentation, but
not the infrastructure required to run it as a system daemon. For
that, install the dnsmasq package.
Package: dnsmasq-utils
Architecture: linux-any
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}
Conflicts: dnsmasq (<<2.40)
Description: Utilities for manipulating DHCP leases
Small utilities to query a DHCP server's lease database and
remove leases from it. These programs are distributed with dnsmasq
and may not work correctly with other DHCP servers.

21
debian/copyright vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
dnsmasq is Copyright (c) 2000-2012 Simon Kelley
It was downloaded from: http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991, or
(at your option) version 3 dated 29 June, 2007.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
On Debian GNU/Linux systems, the text of the GNU general public license is
available in the file /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-2 or
/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-3
The Debian package of dnsmasq was created by Simon Kelley with assistance
from Lars Bahner.

18
debian/dbus.conf vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
<!DOCTYPE busconfig PUBLIC
"-//freedesktop//DTD D-BUS Bus Configuration 1.0//EN"
"http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/busconfig.dtd">
<busconfig>
<policy user="root">
<allow own="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
<allow send_destination="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
</policy>
<policy user="dnsmasq">
<allow own="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
<allow send_destination="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
</policy>
<policy context="default">
<deny own="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
<deny send_destination="uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"/>
</policy>
</busconfig>

33
debian/default vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
# This file has five functions:
# 1) to completely disable starting dnsmasq,
# 2) to set DOMAIN_SUFFIX by running `dnsdomainname`
# 3) to select an alternative config file
# by setting DNSMASQ_OPTS to --conf-file=<file>
# 4) to tell dnsmasq to read the files in /etc/dnsmasq.d for
# more configuration variables.
# 5) to stop the resolvconf package from controlling dnsmasq's
# idea of which upstream nameservers to use.
# For upgraders from very old versions, all the shell variables set
# here in previous versions are still honored by the init script
# so if you just keep your old version of this file nothing will break.
#DOMAIN_SUFFIX=`dnsdomainname`
#DNSMASQ_OPTS="--conf-file=/etc/dnsmasq.alt"
# Whether or not to run the dnsmasq daemon; set to 0 to disable.
ENABLED=1
# By default search this drop directory for configuration options.
# Libvirt leaves a file here to make the system dnsmasq play nice.
# Comment out this line if you don't want this. The dpkg-* are file
# endings which cause dnsmasq to skip that file. This avoids pulling
# in backups made by dpkg.
CONFIG_DIR=/etc/dnsmasq.d,.dpkg-dist,.dpkg-old,.dpkg-new
# If the resolvconf package is installed, dnsmasq will use its output
# rather than the contents of /etc/resolv.conf to find upstream
# nameservers. Uncommenting this line inhibits this behaviour.
# Not that including a "resolv-file=<filename>" line in
# /etc/dnsmasq.conf is not enough to override resolvconf if it is
# installed: the line below must be uncommented.
#IGNORE_RESOLVCONF=yes

269
debian/init vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,269 @@
#!/bin/sh
### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides: dnsmasq
# Required-Start: $network $remote_fs $syslog
# Required-Stop: $network $remote_fs $syslog
# Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
# Default-Stop: 0 1 6
# Description: DHCP and DNS server
### END INIT INFO
set +e # Don't exit on error status
PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
DAEMON=/usr/sbin/dnsmasq
NAME=dnsmasq
DESC="DNS forwarder and DHCP server"
# Most configuration options in /etc/default/dnsmasq are deprecated
# but still honoured.
ENABLED=1
if [ -r /etc/default/$NAME ]; then
. /etc/default/$NAME
fi
# Get the system locale, so that messages are in the correct language, and the
# charset for IDN is correct
if [ -r /etc/default/locale ]; then
. /etc/default/locale
export LANG
fi
test -x $DAEMON || exit 0
# Provide skeleton LSB log functions for backports which don't have LSB functions.
if [ -f /lib/lsb/init-functions ]; then
. /lib/lsb/init-functions
else
log_warning_msg () {
echo "${@}."
}
log_success_msg () {
echo "${@}."
}
log_daemon_msg () {
echo -n "${1}: $2"
}
log_end_msg () {
if [ $1 -eq 0 ]; then
echo "."
elif [ $1 -eq 255 ]; then
/bin/echo -e " (warning)."
else
/bin/echo -e " failed!"
fi
}
fi
# RESOLV_CONF:
# If the resolvconf package is installed then use the resolv conf file
# that it provides as the default. Otherwise use /etc/resolv.conf as
# the default.
#
# If IGNORE_RESOLVCONF is set in /etc/default/dnsmasq or an explicit
# filename is set there then this inhibits the use of the resolvconf-provided
# information.
#
# Note that if the resolvconf package is installed it is not possible to
# override it just by configuration in /etc/dnsmasq.conf, it is necessary
# to set IGNORE_RESOLVCONF=yes in /etc/default/dnsmasq.
if [ ! "$RESOLV_CONF" ] &&
[ "$IGNORE_RESOLVCONF" != "yes" ] &&
[ -x /sbin/resolvconf ]
then
RESOLV_CONF=/var/run/dnsmasq/resolv.conf
fi
for INTERFACE in $DNSMASQ_INTERFACE; do
DNSMASQ_INTERFACES="$DNSMASQ_INTERFACES -i $INTERFACE"
done
for INTERFACE in $DNSMASQ_EXCEPT; do
DNSMASQ_INTERFACES="$DNSMASQ_INTERFACES -I $INTERFACE"
done
if [ ! "$DNSMASQ_USER" ]; then
DNSMASQ_USER="dnsmasq"
fi
start()
{
# Return
# 0 if daemon has been started
# 1 if daemon was already running
# 2 if daemon could not be started
# /var/run may be volatile, so we need to ensure that
# /var/run/dnsmasq exists here as well as in postinst
if [ ! -d /var/run/dnsmasq ]; then
mkdir /var/run/dnsmasq || return 2
chown dnsmasq:nogroup /var/run/dnsmasq || return 2
fi
start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile /var/run/dnsmasq/$NAME.pid --exec $DAEMON --test > /dev/null || return 1
start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile /var/run/dnsmasq/$NAME.pid --exec $DAEMON -- \
-x /var/run/dnsmasq/$NAME.pid \
${MAILHOSTNAME:+ -m $MAILHOSTNAME} \
${MAILTARGET:+ -t $MAILTARGET} \
${DNSMASQ_USER:+ -u $DNSMASQ_USER} \
${DNSMASQ_INTERFACES:+ $DNSMASQ_INTERFACES} \
${DHCP_LEASE:+ -l $DHCP_LEASE} \
${DOMAIN_SUFFIX:+ -s $DOMAIN_SUFFIX} \
${RESOLV_CONF:+ -r $RESOLV_CONF} \
${CACHESIZE:+ -c $CACHESIZE} \
${CONFIG_DIR:+ -7 $CONFIG_DIR} \
${DNSMASQ_OPTS:+ $DNSMASQ_OPTS} \
|| return 2
}
start_resolvconf()
{
# If interface "lo" is explicitly disabled in /etc/default/dnsmasq
# Then dnsmasq won't be providing local DNS, so don't add it to
# the resolvconf server set.
for interface in $DNSMASQ_EXCEPT
do
[ $interface = lo ] && return
done
if [ -x /sbin/resolvconf ] ; then
echo "nameserver 127.0.0.1" | /sbin/resolvconf -a lo.$NAME
fi
return 0
}
stop()
{
# Return
# 0 if daemon has been stopped
# 1 if daemon was already stopped
# 2 if daemon could not be stopped
# other if a failure occurred
start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --retry=TERM/30/KILL/5 --pidfile /var/run/dnsmasq/$NAME.pid --name $NAME
RETVAL="$?"
[ "$RETVAL" = 2 ] && return 2
return "$RETVAL"
}
stop_resolvconf()
{
if [ -x /sbin/resolvconf ] ; then
/sbin/resolvconf -d lo.$NAME
fi
return 0
}
status()
{
# Return
# 0 if daemon is running
# 1 if daemon is dead and pid file exists
# 3 if daemon is not running
# 4 if daemon status is unknown
start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile /var/run/dnsmasq/$NAME.pid --exec $DAEMON --test > /dev/null
case "$?" in
0) [ -e "/var/run/dnsmasq/$NAME.pid" ] && return 1 ; return 3 ;;
1) return 0 ;;
*) return 4 ;;
esac
}
case "$1" in
start)
test "$ENABLED" != "0" || exit 0
log_daemon_msg "Starting $DESC" "$NAME"
start
case "$?" in
0)
log_end_msg 0
start_resolvconf
exit 0
;;
1)
log_success_msg "(already running)"
exit 0
;;
*)
log_end_msg 1
exit 1
;;
esac
;;
stop)
stop_resolvconf
if [ "$ENABLED" != "0" ]; then
log_daemon_msg "Stopping $DESC" "$NAME"
fi
stop
RETVAL="$?"
if [ "$ENABLED" = "0" ]; then
case "$RETVAL" in
0) log_daemon_msg "Stopping $DESC" "$NAME"; log_end_msg 0 ;;
esac
exit 0
fi
case "$RETVAL" in
0) log_end_msg 0 ; exit 0 ;;
1) log_warning_msg "(not running)" ; exit 0 ;;
*) log_end_msg 1; exit 1 ;;
esac
;;
restart|force-reload)
test "$ENABLED" != "0" || exit 1
$DAEMON --test ${CONFIG_DIR:+ -7 $CONFIG_DIR} ${DNSMASQ_OPTS:+ $DNSMASQ_OPTS} >/dev/null 2>&1
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
NAME="configuration syntax check"
RETVAL="2"
else
stop_resolvconf
stop
RETVAL="$?"
fi
log_daemon_msg "Restarting $DESC" "$NAME"
case "$RETVAL" in
0|1)
sleep 2
start
case "$?" in
0)
log_end_msg 0
start_resolvconf
exit 0
;;
*)
log_end_msg 1
exit 1
;;
esac
;;
*)
log_end_msg 1
exit 1
;;
esac
;;
status)
log_daemon_msg "Checking $DESC" "$NAME"
status
case "$?" in
0) log_success_msg "(running)" ; exit 0 ;;
1) log_success_msg "(dead, pid file exists)" ; exit 1 ;;
3) log_success_msg "(not running)" ; exit 3 ;;
*) log_success_msg "(unknown)" ; exit 4 ;;
esac
;;
dump-stats)
kill -s USR1 `cat /var/run/dnsmasq/$NAME.pid`
;;
*)
echo "Usage: /etc/init.d/$NAME {start|stop|restart|force-reload|dump-stats|status}" >&2
exit 3
;;
esac
exit 0

1
debian/insserv vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1 @@
$named dnsmasq

49
debian/postinst vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
#!/bin/sh
set -e
# create a user to run as (code stolen from dovecot-common)
if [ "$1" = "configure" ]; then
if [ -z "`id -u dnsmasq 2> /dev/null`" ]; then
adduser --system --home /var/lib/misc --gecos "dnsmasq" \
--no-create-home --disabled-password \
--quiet dnsmasq || true
fi
# Make the directory where we keep the pid file - this
# has to be owned by "dnsmasq" do that the file can be unlinked.
if [ ! -d /var/run/dnsmasq ]; then
mkdir /var/run/dnsmasq
chown dnsmasq:nogroup /var/run/dnsmasq
fi
# handle new location of pidfile during an upgrade
if [ -e /var/run/dnsmasq.pid ]; then
mv /var/run/dnsmasq.pid /var/run/dnsmasq
fi
fi
if [ -x /etc/init.d/dnsmasq ]; then
update-rc.d dnsmasq defaults 15 85 >/dev/null
if [ "$1" = "configure" ] || [ "$1" = "abort-upgrade" ]; then
if [ -e /var/run/dnsmasq/dnsmasq.pid ]; then
ACTION=restart
else
ACTION=start
fi
if [ -x /usr/sbin/invoke-rc.d ] ; then
invoke-rc.d dnsmasq $ACTION || true
else
/etc/init.d/dnsmasq $ACTION || true
fi
fi
fi
# dpkg can botch the change of /usr/share/doc/dnsmasq from
# directory to symlink. Fix up here.
if [ ! -h /usr/share/doc/dnsmasq ] && { rmdir /usr/share/doc/dnsmasq; }; then
cd /usr/share/doc/
ln -s /usr/share/doc/dnsmasq-base dnsmasq
fi

12
debian/postrm vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
#!/bin/sh
set -e
if [ purge = "$1" ]; then
update-rc.d dnsmasq remove >/dev/null
if [ -x "$(command -v deluser)" ]; then
deluser --quiet --system dnsmasq > /dev/null || true
else
echo >&2 "not removing dnsmasq system account because deluser command was not found"
fi
rm -rf /var/run/dnsmasq
fi

14
debian/prerm vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
#!/bin/sh
set -e
if [ "$1" = "remove" ]; then
if [ -x /usr/sbin/invoke-rc.d ] ; then
invoke-rc.d dnsmasq stop || true
else
/etc/init.d/dnsmasq stop || true
fi
fi
exit 0

76
debian/readme vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,76 @@
Notes on configuring dnsmasq as packaged for Debian.
(1) To configure dnsmasq edit /etc/dnsmasq.conf. The file is well
commented; see also the dnsmasq.8 man page for explanation of
the options. The file /etc/default/dnsmasq also exists but it
shouldn't need to be touched in most cases. To set up DHCP
options you might need to refer to a copy of RFC 2132. This is
available on Debian systems in the package doc-rfc-std as the file
/usr/share/doc/RFC/draft-standard/rfc2132.txt.gz .
(2) Installing the dnsmasq package also creates the directory
/etc/dnsmasq.d which is searched by dnsmasq for configuration file
fragments. This behaviour can be disabled by editing
/etc/default/dnsmasq.
(3) If the Debian resolvconf package is installed then, regardless
of what interface configuration daemons are employed, the list of
nameservers to which dnsmasq should forward queries can be found
in /var/run/dnsmasq/resolv.conf; also, 127.0.0.1 is listed as the
first nameserver address in /etc/resolv.conf. This works using the
default configurations of resolvconf and dnsmasq.
(4) In the absence of resolvconf, if you are using dhcpcd then
dnsmasq should read the list of nameservers from the automatically
generated file /etc/dhcpc/resolv.conf. You should list 127.0.0.1
as the first nameserver address in /etc/resolv.conf.
(5) In the absence of resolvconf, if you are using pppd then
dnsmasq should read the list of nameservers from the automatically
generated file /etc/ppp/resolv.conf. You should list 127.0.0.1
as the first nameserver address in /etc/resolv.conf.
(6) In the absence of resolvconf, dns-nameservers lines in
/etc/network/interfaces are ignored. If you do do not use
resolvconf, list 127.0.0.1 as the first nameserver address
in /etc/resolv.conf and configure your nameservers using
"server=<IP-address>" lines in /etc/dnsmasq.conf.
(7) If you run multiple DNS servers on a single machine, each
listening on a different interface, then it is necessary to use
the bind-interfaces option by uncommenting "bind-interfaces" in
/etc/dnsmasq.conf. This option stops dnsmasq from binding the
wildcard address and allows servers listening on port 53 on
interfaces not in use by dnsmasq to work. The Debian
libvirt package will add a configuration file in /etc/dnsmasq.d
which does this so that the "system" dnsmasq and "private" dnsmasq
instances started by libvirt do not clash.
(8) The following options are supported in DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
noopt : compile without optimisation.
nostrip : don't remove symbols from binary.
nodocs : omit documentation.
notftp : omit TFTP support.
nodhcp : omit DHCP support.
nodhcp6 : omit DHCPv6 support.
noscript : omit lease-change script support.
use_lua : provide support for lease-change scripts written
in Lua.
noipv6 : omit IPv6 support.
nodbus : omit DBus support.
noconntrack : omit connection tracking support.
nortc : compile alternate mode suitable for systems without an RTC.
noi18n : omit translations and internationalisation support.
noidn : omit international domain name support, must be
combined with noi18n to be effective.
(9) Dnsmasq comes as three packages - dnsmasq-utils, dnsmasq-base and
dnsmasq. Dnsmasq-base provides the dnsmasq executable and
documentation (including this file). Dnsmasq, which depends on
dnsmasq-base, provides the init script and configuration
infrastructure. This file assumes that both are installed. It is
possible to install only dnsmasq-base and use dnsmasq as a
non-"system" daemon. Libvirt, for instance, does this.
Dnsmasq-utils provides the utilities dhcp_release and
dhcp_lease_time.

7
debian/readme.dnsmasq.d vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
# All files in this directory will be read by dnsmasq as
# configuration files, except if their names end in
# ".dpkg-dist",".dpkg-old" or ".dpkg-new"
#
# This can be changed by editing /etc/default/dnsmasq

70
debian/resolvconf vendored Normal file
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#!/bin/bash
#
# Script to update the resolver list for dnsmasq
#
# N.B. Resolvconf may run us even if dnsmasq is not running.
# If dnsmasq is installed then we go ahead and update
# the resolver list in case dnsmasq is started later.
#
# Assumption: On entry, PWD contains the resolv.conf-type files
#
# Requires bash because it uses a non-POSIX printf extension.
#
# Licensed under the GNU GPL. See /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL.
#
set -e
RUN_DIR="/var/run/dnsmasq"
RSLVRLIST_FILE="${RUN_DIR}/resolv.conf"
TMP_FILE="${RSLVRLIST_FILE}_new.$$"
[ -x /usr/sbin/dnsmasq ] || exit 0
[ -x /lib/resolvconf/list-records ] || exit 1
PATH=/bin:/sbin
report_err() { echo "$0: Error: $*" >&2 ; }
# Stores arguments (minus duplicates) in RSLT, separated by spaces
# Doesn't work properly if an argument itself contain whitespace
uniquify()
{
RSLT=""
while [ "$1" ] ; do
for E in $RSLT ; do
[ "$1" = "$E" ] && { shift ; continue 2 ; }
done
RSLT="${RSLT:+$RSLT }$1"
shift
done
}
if [ ! -d "$RUN_DIR" ] && ! mkdir --parents --mode=0755 "$RUN_DIR" ; then
report_err "Failed trying to create directory $RUN_DIR"
exit 1
fi
RSLVCNFFILES="$(/lib/resolvconf/list-records | sed -e '/^lo.dnsmasq$/d')"
NMSRVRS=""
if [ "$RSLVCNFFILES" ] ; then
uniquify $(sed -n -e 's/^[[:space:]]*nameserver[[:space:]]\+//p' $RSLVCNFFILES)
NMSRVRS="$RSLT"
fi
# Dnsmasq uses the mtime of $RSLVRLIST_FILE, with a resolution of one second,
# to detect changes in the file. This means that if a resolvconf update occurs
# within one second of the previous one then dnsmasq may fail to notice the
# more recent change. To work around this problem we sleep here to ensure
# that the new mtime is different.
if [ -f "$RSLVRLIST_FILE" ] && [ "$(ls -go --time-style='+%s' "$RSLVRLIST_FILE" | { read p h s t n ; echo "$t" ; })" = "$(date +%s)" ] ; then
sleep 1
fi
clean_up() { rm -f "$TMP_FILE" ; }
trap clean_up EXIT
: >| "$TMP_FILE"
for N in $NMSRVRS ; do echo "nameserver $N" >> "$TMP_FILE" ; done
mv -f "$TMP_FILE" "$RSLVRLIST_FILE"

13
debian/resolvconf-package vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Resolvconf packaging event hook script for the dnsmasq package
restart_dnsmasq() {
if which invoke-rc.d >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
invoke-rc.d dnsmasq restart
elif [ -x /etc/init.d/dnsmasq ] ; then
/etc/init.d/dnsmasq restart
fi
}
case "$1" in
install) restart_dnsmasq ;;
esac

197
debian/rules vendored Executable file
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@@ -0,0 +1,197 @@
#!/usr/bin/make -f
# debian/rules file - for dnsmasq.
# Copyright 2001-2011 by Simon Kelley
# Based on the sample in the debian hello package which carries the following:
# Copyright 1994,1995 by Ian Jackson.
# I hereby give you perpetual unlimited permission to copy,
# modify and relicense this file, provided that you do not remove
# my name from the file itself. (I assert my moral right of
# paternity under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.)
# This file may have to be extensively modified
package=dnsmasq-base
# policy manual, section 10.1
ifneq (,$(filter noopt,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
CFLAGS = -g -O0 -Wall -W
else
CFLAGS = -g -O2 -Wall -W
endif
COPTS =
TARGET = install-i18n
DEB_BUILD_ARCH_OS := $(shell dpkg-architecture -qDEB_BUILD_ARCH_OS)
ifeq (,$(filter nodbus,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
COPTS += -DHAVE_DBUS
endif
ifeq (,$(filter noconntrack,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
ifeq ($(DEB_BUILD_ARCH_OS),linux)
COPTS += -DHAVE_CONNTRACK
endif
endif
ifneq (,$(filter nodhcp6,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
COPTS += -DNO_DHCP6
endif
ifneq (,$(filter noipv6,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
COPTS += -DNO_IPV6
endif
ifneq (,$(filter notftp,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
COPTS += -DNO_TFTP
endif
ifneq (,$(filter nodhcp,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
COPTS += -DNO_DHCP
endif
ifneq (,$(filter noscript,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
COPTS += -DNO_SCRIPT
endif
ifneq (,$(filter nortc,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
COPTS += -DHAVE_BROKEN_RTC
endif
ifneq (,$(filter noi18n,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
TARGET = install
ifeq (,$(filter noidn, $(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
COPTS += -DHAVE_IDN
endif
endif
ifneq (,$(filter uselua,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
COPTS += -DHAVE_LUASCRIPT
endif
clean:
$(checkdir)
rm -rf debian/daemon debian/base debian/utils debian/*~ debian/files debian/substvars debian/utils-substvars
make clean
make -C contrib/wrt clean
binary-indep: checkroot
$(checkdir)
rm -rf debian/daemon
install -m 755 \
-d debian/daemon/DEBIAN \
-d debian/daemon/usr/share/doc \
-d debian/daemon/etc/init.d \
-d debian/daemon/etc/dnsmasq.d \
-d debian/daemon/etc/resolvconf/update.d \
-d debian/daemon/usr/lib/resolvconf/dpkg-event.d \
-d debian/daemon/etc/default \
-d debian/daemon/etc/dbus-1/system.d \
-d debian/daemon/lib/systemd/system \
-d debian/daemon/etc/insserv.conf.d
install -m 644 debian/conffiles debian/daemon/DEBIAN
install -m 755 debian/postinst debian/postrm debian/prerm debian/daemon/DEBIAN
install -m 755 debian/init debian/daemon/etc/init.d/dnsmasq
install -m 755 debian/resolvconf debian/daemon/etc/resolvconf/update.d/dnsmasq
install -m 755 debian/resolvconf-package debian/daemon/usr/lib/resolvconf/dpkg-event.d/dnsmasq
install -m 644 debian/default debian/daemon/etc/default/dnsmasq
install -m 644 dnsmasq.conf.example debian/daemon/etc/dnsmasq.conf
install -m 644 debian/readme.dnsmasq.d debian/daemon/etc/dnsmasq.d/README
install -m 644 debian/dbus.conf debian/daemon/etc/dbus-1/system.d/dnsmasq.conf
install -m 644 debian/systemd.service debian/daemon/lib/systemd/system/dnsmasq.service
install -m 644 debian/insserv debian/daemon/etc/insserv.conf.d/dnsmasq
ln -s $(package) debian/daemon/usr/share/doc/dnsmasq
cd debian/daemon && find . -type f ! -regex '.*DEBIAN/.*' -printf '%P\0' | xargs -r0 md5sum > DEBIAN/md5sums
dpkg-gencontrol -pdnsmasq -Pdebian/daemon
chown -R root.root debian/daemon
chmod -R g-ws debian/daemon
dpkg --build debian/daemon ..
binary-arch: checkroot
$(checkdir)
rm -rf debian/base
install -m 755 \
-d debian/base/DEBIAN \
-d debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package) \
-d debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/examples \
-d debian/base/var/run \
-d debian/base/var/lib/misc
make $(TARGET) PREFIX=/usr DESTDIR=`pwd`/debian/base CFLAGS="$(CFLAGS)" COPTS="$(COPTS)" CC=gcc
ifeq (,$(findstring nodocs,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
install -m 644 doc.html debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/.
install -m 644 setup.html debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/.
install -m 644 dnsmasq.conf.example debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/examples/.
install -m 644 FAQ debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/.
gzip -9 debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/FAQ
install -m 644 CHANGELOG debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/changelog
gzip -9 debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/changelog
install -m 644 CHANGELOG.archive debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/changelog.archive
gzip -9 debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/changelog.archive
install -m 644 dbus/DBus-interface debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/.
gzip -9 debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/DBus-interface
endif
install -m 644 debian/changelog debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/changelog.Debian
gzip -9 debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/changelog.Debian
install -m 644 debian/readme debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/README.Debian
install -m 644 debian/copyright debian/base/usr/share/doc/$(package)/copyright
gzip -9 debian/base/usr/share/man/man8/dnsmasq.8
for f in debian/base/usr/share/man/*; do \
if [ -f $$f/man8/dnsmasq.8 ]; then \
gzip -9 $$f/man8/dnsmasq.8 ; \
fi \
done
ifeq (,$(findstring nostrip,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
strip -R .note -R .comment debian/base/usr/sbin/dnsmasq
endif
cd debian/base && find . -type f ! -regex '.*DEBIAN/.*' -printf '%P\0' | xargs -r0 md5sum > DEBIAN/md5sums
dpkg-shlibdeps debian/base/usr/sbin/dnsmasq
dpkg-gencontrol -pdnsmasq-base -Pdebian/base
chown -R root.root debian/base
chmod -R g-ws debian/base
dpkg --build debian/base ..
ifeq ($(DEB_BUILD_ARCH_OS),linux)
rm -rf debian/utils
install -m 755 -d debian/utils/DEBIAN \
-d debian/utils/usr/share/man/man1 \
-d debian/utils/usr/bin \
-d debian/utils/usr/share/doc/dnsmasq-utils
make -C contrib/wrt PREFIX=/usr DESTDIR=`pwd`/debian/utils CFLAGS="$(CFLAGS)" COPTS="$(COPTS)" CC=gcc
install -m 755 contrib/wrt/dhcp_release debian/utils/usr/bin/dhcp_release
install -m 644 contrib/wrt/dhcp_release.1 debian/utils/usr/share/man/man1/dhcp_release.1
gzip -9 debian/utils/usr/share/man/man1/dhcp_release.1
install -m 755 contrib/wrt/dhcp_lease_time debian/utils/usr/bin/dhcp_lease_time
install -m 644 contrib/wrt/dhcp_lease_time.1 debian/utils/usr/share/man/man1/dhcp_lease_time.1
install -m 644 debian/copyright debian/utils/usr/share/doc/dnsmasq-utils/copyright
install -m 644 debian/changelog debian/utils/usr/share/doc/dnsmasq-utils/changelog.Debian
gzip -9 debian/utils/usr/share/doc/dnsmasq-utils/changelog.Debian
gzip -9 debian/utils/usr/share/man/man1/dhcp_lease_time.1
ifeq (,$(findstring nostrip,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
strip -R .note -R .comment debian/utils/usr/bin/dhcp_release
strip -R .note -R .comment debian/utils/usr/bin/dhcp_lease_time
endif
cd debian/utils && find . -type f ! -regex '.*DEBIAN/.*' -printf '%P\0' | xargs -r0 md5sum > DEBIAN/md5sums
dpkg-shlibdeps -Tdebian/utils-substvars debian/utils/usr/bin/dhcp_release debian/utils/usr/bin/dhcp_lease_time
dpkg-gencontrol -Tdebian/utils-substvars -pdnsmasq-utils -Pdebian/utils
chown -R root.root debian/utils
chmod -R g-ws debian/utils
dpkg --build debian/utils ..
endif
define checkdir
test -f Makefile -a -f debian/rules
endef
# Below here is fairly generic really
binary: binary-arch binary-indep
build:
build-arch:
build-indep:
checkroot:
test root = "`whoami`"
.PHONY: binary binary-arch binary-indep clean checkroot

1
debian/source/format vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
1.0

31
debian/systemd.service vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
[Unit]
Description=A lightweight DHCP and caching DNS server
[Service]
Type=dbus
BusName=uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq
# Test the config file and refuse starting if it is not valid.
ExecStartPre=/usr/sbin/dnsmasq --test
# Enable DBus by default because we use DBus activation.
#
# Drop privileges and become the 'dnsmasq' user. It is recommended by dnsmasq
# upstream to run dnsmasq as an isolated user that does not run any other
# processes, owns no files and has no shell. The default 'nobody' user has a
# shell and might be used for other processes.
#
# Debian-specific: add /etc/dnsmasq.d to config search path (with the exception
# of .dpkg-*). Packages such as libvirt leave config files there.
#
# --pid-file without argument disables writing a PIDfile, we don't need one.
ExecStart=/usr/sbin/dnsmasq -k \
--enable-dbus \
--user=dnsmasq \
-7 /etc/dnsmasq.d,.dpkg-dist,.dpkg-old,.dpkg-new \
--pid-file
ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

View File

@@ -1,133 +0,0 @@
###############################################################################
#
# General mumbojumbo
#
###############################################################################
Name: dnsmasq
Version: 2.28
Release: 1
License: GPL
Group: System Environment/Daemons
Vendor: Simon Kelley
Packager: Simon Kelley
Distribution: Red Hat Linux
URL: http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq
Source0: %{name}-%{version}.tar.gz
Requires: chkconfig
BuildRoot: /var/tmp/%{name}-%{version}
Summary: A lightweight caching nameserver
%description
Dnsmasq is lightweight, easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP server. It
is designed to provide DNS and, optionally, DHCP, to a small network. It can
serve the names of local machines which are not in the global DNS. The DHCP
server integrates with the DNS server and allows machines with DHCP-allocated
addresses to appear in the DNS with names configured either in each host or
in a central configuration file. Dnsmasq supports static and dynamic DHCP
leases and BOOTP for network booting of diskless machines.
###############################################################################
#
# Build
#
###############################################################################
%prep
%setup -q
%build
make all-i18n PREFIX=/usr
###############################################################################
#
# Install
#
###############################################################################
%install
rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT
mkdir -p -m 755 $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/usr/sbin
mkdir -p -m 755 $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/rc.d/init.d
mkdir -p -m 755 $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/usr/share/man/man8
cp rpm/dnsmasq.rh $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/rc.d/init.d/dnsmasq
make install-i18n DESTDIR=$RPM_BUILD_ROOT PREFIX=/usr
strip $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/usr/sbin/dnsmasq
cp src/dnsmasq $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/usr/sbin
cp dnsmasq.conf.example $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/dnsmasq.conf
###############################################################################
#
# Clean up
#
###############################################################################
%clean
rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT
###############################################################################
#
# Post-install scriptlet
#
###############################################################################
%post
/sbin/chkconfig --add dnsmasq
###############################################################################
#
# Pre-uninstall scriptlet
#
# If there's a time when your package needs to have one last look around before
# the user erases it, the place to do it is in the %preun script. Anything that
# a package needs to do immediately prior to RPM taking any action to erase the
# package, can be done here.
#
###############################################################################
%preun
if [ $1 = 0 ]; then # execute this only if we are NOT doing an upgrade
service dnsmasq stop >/dev/null 2>&1
/sbin/chkconfig --del dnsmasq
fi
###############################################################################
#
# Post-uninstall scriptlet
#
# The %postun script executes after the package has been removed. It is the
# last chance for a package to clean up after itself.
#
###############################################################################
%postun
if [ "$1" -ge "1" ]; then
service dnsmasq restart >/dev/null 2>&1
fi
###############################################################################
#
# File list
#
###############################################################################
%files
%defattr(-,root,root)
%doc CHANGELOG COPYING FAQ doc.html setup.html UPGRADING_to_2.0
%config /etc/rc.d/init.d/dnsmasq
%config /etc/dnsmasq.conf
%attr(0755,root,root) /etc/rc.d/init.d/dnsmasq
%attr(0664,root,root) /etc/dnsmasq.conf
%attr(0755,root,root) /usr/sbin/dnsmasq
#%attr(0644,root,root) /usr/share/man/*/man8/dnsmasq*
%attr(0644,root,root) /usr/share/man/man8/dnsmasq*
%attr(0644,root,root) /usr/share/locale/*/LC_MESSAGES/*

View File

@@ -7,19 +7,19 @@
# The following two options make you a better netizen, since they
# tell dnsmasq to filter out queries which the public DNS cannot
# answer, and which load the servers (especially the root servers)
# uneccessarily. If you have a dial-on-demand link they also stop
# these requests from bringing up the link uneccessarily.
# unnecessarily. If you have a dial-on-demand link they also stop
# these requests from bringing up the link unnecessarily.
# Never forward plain names (without a dot or domain part)
domain-needed
#domain-needed
# Never forward addresses in the non-routed address spaces.
bogus-priv
#bogus-priv
# Uncomment this to filter useless windows-originated DNS requests
# which can trigger dial-on-demand links needlessly.
# Note that (amongst other things) this blocks all SRV requests,
# so don't use it if you use eg Kerberos.
# so don't use it if you use eg Kerberos, SIP, XMMP or Google-talk.
# This option only affects forwarding, SRV records originating for
# dnsmasq (via srv-host= lines) are not suppressed by it.
#filterwin2k
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ bogus-priv
# If you don't want dnsmasq to read /etc/resolv.conf or any other
# file, getting its servers from this file instead (see below), then
# uncomment this
# uncomment this.
#no-resolv
# If you don't want dnsmasq to poll /etc/resolv.conf or other resolv
@@ -48,14 +48,30 @@ bogus-priv
# non-public domains.
#server=/localnet/192.168.0.1
# Example of routing PTR queries to nameservers: this will send all
# address->name queries for 192.168.3/24 to nameserver 10.1.2.3
#server=/3.168.192.in-addr.arpa/10.1.2.3
# Add local-only domains here, queries in these domains are answered
# from /etc/hosts or DHCP only.
#local=/localnet/
# Add domains which you want to force to an IP address here.
# The example below send any host in doubleclick.net to a local
# webserver.
#address=/doubleclick.net/127.0.0.1
# The example below send any host in double-click.net to a local
# web-server.
#address=/double-click.net/127.0.0.1
# --address (and --server) work with IPv6 addresses too.
#address=/www.thekelleys.org.uk/fe80::20d:60ff:fe36:f83
# You can control how dnsmasq talks to a server: this forces
# queries to 10.1.2.3 to be routed via eth1
# server=10.1.2.3@eth1
# and this sets the source (ie local) address used to talk to
# 10.1.2.3 to 192.168.1.1 port 55 (there must be a interface with that
# IP on the machine, obviously).
# server=10.1.2.3@192.168.1.1#55
# If you want dnsmasq to change uid and gid to something other
# than the default, edit the following lines.
@@ -74,7 +90,7 @@ bogus-priv
#listen-address=
# If you want dnsmasq to provide only DNS service on an interface,
# configure it as shown above, and then use the following line to
# disable DHCP on it.
# disable DHCP and TFTP on it.
#no-dhcp-interface=
# On systems which support it, dnsmasq binds the wildcard address,
@@ -106,6 +122,12 @@ bogus-priv
# 3) Provides the domain part for "expand-hosts"
#domain=thekelleys.org.uk
# Set a different domain for a particular subnet
#domain=wireless.thekelleys.org.uk,192.168.2.0/24
# Same idea, but range rather then subnet
#domain=reserved.thekelleys.org.uk,192.68.3.100,192.168.3.200
# Uncomment this to enable the integrated DHCP server, you need
# to supply the range of addresses available for lease and optionally
# a lease time. If you have more than one network, you will need to
@@ -119,17 +141,68 @@ bogus-priv
# don't need to worry about this.
#dhcp-range=192.168.0.50,192.168.0.150,255.255.255.0,12h
# This is an example of a DHCP range with a network-id, so that
# This is an example of a DHCP range which sets a tag, so that
# some DHCP options may be set only for this network.
#dhcp-range=red,192.168.0.50,192.168.0.150
#dhcp-range=set:red,192.168.0.50,192.168.0.150
# Use this DHCP range only when the tag "green" is set.
#dhcp-range=tag:green,192.168.0.50,192.168.0.150,12h
# Specify a subnet which can't be used for dynamic address allocation,
# is available for hosts with matching --dhcp-host lines. Note that
# dhcp-host declarations will be ignored unless there is a dhcp-range
# of some type for the subnet in question.
# In this case the netmask is implied (it comes from the network
# configuration on the machine running dnsmasq) it is possible to give
# an explicit netmask instead.
#dhcp-range=192.168.0.0,static
# Enable DHCPv6. Note that the prefix-length does not need to be specified
# and defaults to 64 if missing/
#dhcp-range=1234::2, 1234::500, 64, 12h
# Do Router Advertisements, BUT NOT DHCP for this subnet.
#dhcp-range=1234::, ra-only
# Do Router Advertisements, BUT NOT DHCP for this subnet, also try and
# add names to the DNS for the IPv6 address of SLAAC-configured dual-stack
# hosts. Use the DHCPv4 lease to derive the name, network segment and
# MAC address and assume that the host will also have an
# IPv6 address calculated using the SLAAC alogrithm.
#dhcp-range=1234::, ra-names
# Do Router Advertisements, BUT NOT DHCP for this subnet.
# Set the lifetime to 46 hours. (Note: minimum lifetime is 2 hours.)
#dhcp-range=1234::, ra-only, 48h
# Do DHCP and Router Advertisements for this subnet. Set the A bit in the RA
# so that clients can use SLAAC addresses as well as DHCP ones.
#dhcp-range=1234::2, 1234::500, slaac
# Do Router Advertisements and stateless DHCP for this subnet. Clients will
# not get addresses from DHCP, but they will get other configuration information.
# They will use SLAAC for addresses.
#dhcp-range=1234::, ra-stateless
# Do stateless DHCP, SLAAC, and generate DNS names for SLAAC addresses
# from DHCPv4 leases.
#dhcp-range=1234::, ra-stateless, ra-names
# Do router advertisements for all subnets where we're doing DHCPv6
# Unless overriden by ra-stateless, ra-names, et al, the router
# advertisements will have the M and O bits set, so that the clients
# get addresses and configuration from DHCPv6, and the A bit reset, so the
# clients don't use SLAAC addresses.
#enable-ra
# Supply parameters for specified hosts using DHCP. There are lots
# of valid alternatives, so we will give examples of each. Note that
# IP addresses DO NOT have to be in the range given above, they just
# need to be on the same network. The order of the parameters in these
# do not matter, it's permissble to give name,adddress and MAC in any order
# do not matter, it's permissible to give name, address and MAC in any
# order.
# Always allocate the host with ethernet address 11:22:33:44:55:66
# Always allocate the host with Ethernet address 11:22:33:44:55:66
# The IP address 192.168.0.60
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,192.168.0.60
@@ -137,11 +210,19 @@ bogus-priv
# 11:22:33:44:55:66 to be "fred"
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,fred
# Always give the host with ethernet address 11:22:33:44:55:66
# Always give the host with Ethernet address 11:22:33:44:55:66
# the name fred and IP address 192.168.0.60 and lease time 45 minutes
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,fred,192.168.0.60,45m
# Give the machine which says it's name is "bert" IP address
# Give a host with Ethernet address 11:22:33:44:55:66 or
# 12:34:56:78:90:12 the IP address 192.168.0.60. Dnsmasq will assume
# that these two Ethernet interfaces will never be in use at the same
# time, and give the IP address to the second, even if it is already
# in use by the first. Useful for laptops with wired and wireless
# addresses.
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,12:34:56:78:90:12,192.168.0.60
# Give the machine which says its name is "bert" IP address
# 192.168.0.70 and an infinite lease
#dhcp-host=bert,192.168.0.70,infinite
@@ -158,35 +239,47 @@ bogus-priv
# it asks for a DHCP lease.
#dhcp-host=judge
# Never offer DHCP service to a machine whose ethernet
# Never offer DHCP service to a machine whose Ethernet
# address is 11:22:33:44:55:66
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,ignore
# Ignore any client-id presented by the machine with ethernet
# Ignore any client-id presented by the machine with Ethernet
# address 11:22:33:44:55:66. This is useful to prevent a machine
# being treated differently when running under different OS's or
# between PXE boot and OS boot.
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,id:*
# Send extra options which are tagged as "red" to
# the machine with ethernet address 11:22:33:44:55:66
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,net:red
# the machine with Ethernet address 11:22:33:44:55:66
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,set:red
# Send extra options which are tagged as "red" to
# any machine with ethernet address starting 11:22:33:
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:*:*:*,net:red
# any machine with Ethernet address starting 11:22:33:
#dhcp-host=11:22:33:*:*:*,set:red
# Give a fixed IPv6 address and name to client with
# DUID 00:01:00:01:16:d2:83:fc:92:d4:19:e2:d8:b2
# Note the MAC addresses CANNOT be used to identify DHCPv6 clients.
# Note also the they [] around the IPv6 address are obilgatory.
#dhcp-host=id:00:01:00:01:16:d2:83:fc:92:d4:19:e2:d8:b2, fred, [1234::5]
# Ignore any clients which are not specified in dhcp-host lines
# or /etc/ethers. Equivalent to ISC "deny unknown-clients".
# This relies on the special "known" tag which is set when
# a host is matched.
#dhcp-ignore=tag:!known
# Send extra options which are tagged as "red" to any machine whose
# DHCP vendorclass string includes the substring "Linux"
#dhcp-vendorclass=red,Linux
#dhcp-vendorclass=set:red,Linux
# Send extra options which are tagged as "red" to any machine one
# of whose DHCP userclass strings includes the substring "accounts"
#dhcp-userclass=red,accounts
#dhcp-userclass=set:red,accounts
# Send extra options which are tagged as "red" to any machine whose
# MAC address matches the pattern.
#dhcp-mac=red,00:60:8C:*:*:*
#dhcp-mac=set:red,00:60:8C:*:*:*
# If this line is uncommented, dnsmasq will read /etc/ethers and act
# on the ethernet-address/IP pairs found there just as if they had
@@ -196,24 +289,37 @@ bogus-priv
# Send options to hosts which ask for a DHCP lease.
# See RFC 2132 for details of available options.
# Common options can be given to dnsmasq by name:
# run "dnsmasq --help dhcp" to get a list.
# Note that all the common settings, such as netmask and
# broadcast address, DNS server and default route, are given
# sane defaults by dnsmasq. You very likely will not need any
# sane defaults by dnsmasq. You very likely will not need
# any dhcp-options. If you use Windows clients and Samba, there
# are some options which are recommended, they are detailed at the
# end of this section.
# For reference, the common options are:
# subnet mask - 1
# default router - 3
# DNS server - 6
# broadcast address - 28
# Override the default route supplied by dnsmasq, which assumes the
# router is the same machine as the one running dnsmasq.
#dhcp-option=3,1.2.3.4
# Do the same thing, but using the option name
#dhcp-option=option:router,1.2.3.4
# Override the default route supplied by dnsmasq and send no default
# route at all. Note that this only works for the options sent by
# default (1, 3, 6, 12, 28) the same line will send a zero-length option
# for all other option numbers.
#dhcp-option=3
# Set the NTP time server addresses to 192.168.0.4 and 10.10.0.5
#dhcp-option=42,192.168.0.4,10.10.0.5
#dhcp-option=option:ntp-server,192.168.0.4,10.10.0.5
# Send DHCPv6 option. Note [] around IPv6 addresses.
#dhcp-option=option6:dns-server,[1234::77],[1234::88]
# Send DHCPv6 option for namservers as the machine running
# dnsmasq and another.
#dhcp-option=option6:dns-server,[::],[1234::88]
# Set the NTP time server address to be the same machine as
# is running dnsmasq
@@ -234,39 +340,153 @@ bogus-priv
# Specify an option which will only be sent to the "red" network
# (see dhcp-range for the declaration of the "red" network)
#dhcp-option=red,42,192.168.1.1
# Note that the tag: part must precede the option: part.
#dhcp-option = tag:red, option:ntp-server, 192.168.1.1
# The following DHCP options set up dnsmasq in the same way as is specified
# for the ISC dhcpcd in
# http://www.samba.org/samba/ftp/docs/textdocs/DHCP-Server-Configuration.txt
# adapted for a typical dnsmasq installation where the host running
# dnsmasq is also the host running samba.
# you may want to uncomment them if you use Windows clients and Samba.
# you may want to uncomment some or all of them if you use
# Windows clients and Samba.
#dhcp-option=19,0 # option ip-forwarding off
#dhcp-option=44,0.0.0.0 # set netbios-over-TCP/IP nameserver(s) aka WINS server(s)
#dhcp-option=45,0.0.0.0 # netbios datagram distribution server
#dhcp-option=46,8 # netbios node type
#dhcp-option=47 # empty netbios scope.
# Send an empty WPAD option. This may be REQUIRED to get windows 7 to behave.
#dhcp-option=252,"\n"
# Send RFC-3397 DNS domain search DHCP option. WARNING: Your DHCP client
# probably doesn't support this......
#dhcp-option=119,eng.apple.com,marketing.apple.com
#dhcp-option=option:domain-search,eng.apple.com,marketing.apple.com
# Send RFC-3442 classless static routes (note the netmask encoding)
#dhcp-option=121,192.168.1.0/24,1.2.3.4,10.0.0.0/8,5.6.7.8
# Send encapsulated vendor-class specific options. The vendor-class
# is sent as DHCP option 60, and all the options marked with the
# vendor class are send encapsulated in DHCP option 43. The meaning of
# the options is defined by the vendor-class. This example sets the
# mtftp address to 0.0.0.0 for PXEClients
# Send vendor-class specific options encapsulated in DHCP option 43.
# The meaning of the options is defined by the vendor-class so
# options are sent only when the client supplied vendor class
# matches the class given here. (A substring match is OK, so "MSFT"
# matches "MSFT" and "MSFT 5.0"). This example sets the
# mtftp address to 0.0.0.0 for PXEClients.
#dhcp-option=vendor:PXEClient,1,0.0.0.0
# Set the boot filename and tftpd server name and address
# for BOOTP. You will only need this is you want to
# boot machines over the network.
# Send microsoft-specific option to tell windows to release the DHCP lease
# when it shuts down. Note the "i" flag, to tell dnsmasq to send the
# value as a four-byte integer - that's what microsoft wants. See
# http://technet2.microsoft.com/WindowsServer/en/library/a70f1bb7-d2d4-49f0-96d6-4b7414ecfaae1033.mspx?mfr=true
#dhcp-option=vendor:MSFT,2,1i
# Send the Encapsulated-vendor-class ID needed by some configurations of
# Etherboot to allow is to recognise the DHCP server.
#dhcp-option=vendor:Etherboot,60,"Etherboot"
# Send options to PXELinux. Note that we need to send the options even
# though they don't appear in the parameter request list, so we need
# to use dhcp-option-force here.
# See http://syslinux.zytor.com/pxe.php#special for details.
# Magic number - needed before anything else is recognised
#dhcp-option-force=208,f1:00:74:7e
# Configuration file name
#dhcp-option-force=209,configs/common
# Path prefix
#dhcp-option-force=210,/tftpboot/pxelinux/files/
# Reboot time. (Note 'i' to send 32-bit value)
#dhcp-option-force=211,30i
# Set the boot filename for netboot/PXE. You will only need
# this is you want to boot machines over the network and you will need
# a TFTP server; either dnsmasq's built in TFTP server or an
# external one. (See below for how to enable the TFTP server.)
#dhcp-boot=pxelinux.0
# The same as above, but use custom tftp-server instead machine running dnsmasq
#dhcp-boot=pxelinux,server.name,192.168.1.100
# Boot for Etherboot gPXE. The idea is to send two different
# filenames, the first loads gPXE, and the second tells gPXE what to
# load. The dhcp-match sets the gpxe tag for requests from gPXE.
#dhcp-match=set:gpxe,175 # gPXE sends a 175 option.
#dhcp-boot=tag:!gpxe,undionly.kpxe
#dhcp-boot=mybootimage
# Encapsulated options for Etherboot gPXE. All the options are
# encapsulated within option 175
#dhcp-option=encap:175, 1, 5b # priority code
#dhcp-option=encap:175, 176, 1b # no-proxydhcp
#dhcp-option=encap:175, 177, string # bus-id
#dhcp-option=encap:175, 189, 1b # BIOS drive code
#dhcp-option=encap:175, 190, user # iSCSI username
#dhcp-option=encap:175, 191, pass # iSCSI password
# Test for the architecture of a netboot client. PXE clients are
# supposed to send their architecture as option 93. (See RFC 4578)
#dhcp-match=peecees, option:client-arch, 0 #x86-32
#dhcp-match=itanics, option:client-arch, 2 #IA64
#dhcp-match=hammers, option:client-arch, 6 #x86-64
#dhcp-match=mactels, option:client-arch, 7 #EFI x86-64
# Do real PXE, rather than just booting a single file, this is an
# alternative to dhcp-boot.
#pxe-prompt="What system shall I netboot?"
# or with timeout before first available action is taken:
#pxe-prompt="Press F8 for menu.", 60
# Available boot services. for PXE.
#pxe-service=x86PC, "Boot from local disk"
# Loads <tftp-root>/pxelinux.0 from dnsmasq TFTP server.
#pxe-service=x86PC, "Install Linux", pxelinux
# Loads <tftp-root>/pxelinux.0 from TFTP server at 1.2.3.4.
# Beware this fails on old PXE ROMS.
#pxe-service=x86PC, "Install Linux", pxelinux, 1.2.3.4
# Use bootserver on network, found my multicast or broadcast.
#pxe-service=x86PC, "Install windows from RIS server", 1
# Use bootserver at a known IP address.
#pxe-service=x86PC, "Install windows from RIS server", 1, 1.2.3.4
# If you have multicast-FTP available,
# information for that can be passed in a similar way using options 1
# to 5. See page 19 of
# http://download.intel.com/design/archives/wfm/downloads/pxespec.pdf
# Enable dnsmasq's built-in TFTP server
#enable-tftp
# Set the root directory for files available via FTP.
#tftp-root=/var/ftpd
# Make the TFTP server more secure: with this set, only files owned by
# the user dnsmasq is running as will be send over the net.
#tftp-secure
# This option stops dnsmasq from negotiating a larger blocksize for TFTP
# transfers. It will slow things down, but may rescue some broken TFTP
# clients.
#tftp-no-blocksize
# Set the boot file name only when the "red" tag is set.
#dhcp-boot=net:red,pxelinux.red-net
# An example of dhcp-boot with an external TFTP server: the name and IP
# address of the server are given after the filename.
# Can fail with old PXE ROMS. Overridden by --pxe-service.
#dhcp-boot=/var/ftpd/pxelinux.0,boothost,192.168.0.3
# If there are multiple external tftp servers having a same name
# (using /etc/hosts) then that name can be specified as the
# tftp_servername (the third option to dhcp-boot) and in that
# case dnsmasq resolves this name and returns the resultant IP
# addresses in round robin fasion. This facility can be used to
# load balance the tftp load among a set of servers.
#dhcp-boot=/var/ftpd/pxelinux.0,boothost,tftp_server_name
# Set the limit on DHCP leases, the default is 150
#dhcp-lease-max=150
@@ -279,12 +499,18 @@ bogus-priv
# and take over the lease for any client which broadcasts on the network,
# whether it has a record of the lease or not. This avoids long timeouts
# when a machine wakes up on a new network. DO NOT enable this if there's
# the slighest chance that you might end up accidentally configuring a DHCP
# server for your campus/company accidentally. The ISC server uses the same
# the slightest chance that you might end up accidentally configuring a DHCP
# server for your campus/company accidentally. The ISC server uses
# the same option, and this URL provides more information:
# http://www.isc.org/index.pl?/sw/dhcp/authoritative.php
# http://www.isc.org/files/auth.html
#dhcp-authoritative
# Run an executable when a DHCP lease is created or destroyed.
# The arguments sent to the script are "add" or "del",
# then the MAC address, the IP address and finally the hostname
# if there is one.
#dhcp-script=/bin/echo
# Set the cachesize here.
#cache-size=150
@@ -311,7 +537,8 @@ bogus-priv
#alias=1.2.3.4,5.6.7.8
# and this maps 1.2.3.x to 5.6.7.x
#alias=1.2.3.0,5.6.7.0,255.255.255.0
# and this maps 192.168.0.10->192.168.0.40 to 10.0.0.10->10.0.0.40
#alias=192.168.0.10-192.168.0.40,10.0.0.0,255.255.255.0
# Change these lines if you want dnsmasq to serve MX records.
@@ -341,11 +568,11 @@ bogus-priv
# set for this to work.)
# A SRV record sending LDAP for the example.com domain to
# ldapserver.example.com port 289
# ldapserver.example.com port 389
#srv-host=_ldap._tcp.example.com,ldapserver.example.com,389
# A SRV record sending LDAP for the example.com domain to
# ldapserver.example.com port 289 (using domain=)
# ldapserver.example.com port 389 (using domain=)
#domain=example.com
#srv-host=_ldap._tcp,ldapserver.example.com,389
@@ -357,6 +584,11 @@ bogus-priv
# example.com
#srv-host=_ldap._tcp.example.com
# The following line shows how to make dnsmasq serve an arbitrary PTR
# record. This is useful for DNS-SD. (Note that the
# domain-name expansion done for SRV records _does_not
# occur for PTR records.)
#ptr-record=_http._tcp.dns-sd-services,"New Employee Page._http._tcp.dns-sd-services"
# Change the following lines to enable dnsmasq to serve TXT records.
# These are used for things like SPF and zeroconf. (Note that the
@@ -364,15 +596,23 @@ bogus-priv
# occur for TXT records.)
#Example SPF.
#txt-record=example.com,v=spf1 a -all
#txt-record=example.com,"v=spf1 a -all"
#Example zeroconf
#txt-record=_http._tcp.example.com,name=value,paper=A4
# Provide an alias for a "local" DNS name. Note that this _only_ works
# for targets which are names from DHCP or /etc/hosts. Give host
# "bert" another name, bertrand
#cname=bertand,bert
# For debugging purposes, log each DNS query as it passes through
# dnsmasq.
#log-queries
# Log lots of extra information about DHCP transactions.
#log-dhcp
# Include a another lot of configuration options.
#conf-file=/etc/dnsmasq.more.conf
#conf-dir=/etc/dnsmasq.d

View File

@@ -1,9 +1,17 @@
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE> Dnsmasq - a DNS forwarder for NAT firewalls.</TITLE>
<link rel="icon"
href="http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/images/favicon.ico">
</HEAD>
<BODY BGCOLOR="WHITE">
<H1 ALIGN=center>Dnsmasq</H1>
<table width="100%" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
<tr>
<td align="left" valign="middle"><img border="0" src="http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/images/icon.png" /></td>
<td align="middle" valign="middle"><h1>Dnsmasq</h1></td>
<td align="right" valign="middle"><img border="0" src="http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/images/icon.png" /></td></tr>
</table>
Dnsmasq is a lightweight, easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP
server. It is designed to provide DNS and, optionally, DHCP, to a
small network. It can serve the names of local machines which are
@@ -11,20 +19,22 @@ Dnsmasq is a lightweight, easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP
server and allows machines with DHCP-allocated addresses
to appear in the DNS with names configured either in each host or
in a central configuration file. Dnsmasq supports static and dynamic
DHCP leases and BOOTP for network booting of diskless machines.
DHCP leases and BOOTP/TFTP/PXE for network booting of diskless machines.
<P>
Dnsmasq is targeted at home networks using NAT and
connected to the internet via a modem, cable-modem or ADSL
connection but would be a good choice for any small network where low
connection but would be a good choice for any smallish network (up to
1000 clients is known to work) where low
resource use and ease of configuration are important.
<P>
Supported platforms include Linux (with glibc and uclibc), *BSD and
Mac OS X.
Supported platforms include Linux (with glibc and uclibc), Android, *BSD,
Solaris and Mac OS X.
Dnsmasq is included in at least the following Linux distributions:
Gentoo, Debian, Slackware, Suse,
Smoothwall, IP-Cop, floppyfw, Firebox, LEAF, Freesco, fli4l, CoyoteLinux and
Clarkconnect. It is also available as a FreeBSD port and is used in
Linksys wireless routers and the m0n0wall project.
Gentoo, Debian, Slackware, Suse, Fedora,
Smoothwall, IP-Cop, floppyfw, Firebox, LEAF, Freesco, fli4l,
CoyoteLinux, Endian Firewall and
Clarkconnect. It is also available as FreeBSD, OpenBSD and NetBSD ports and is used in
Linksys wireless routers (dd-wrt, openwrt and the stock firmware) and the m0n0wall project.
<P>
Dnsmasq provides the following features:
<DIR>
@@ -57,7 +67,7 @@ improving performance (especially on modem connections).
</LI>
<LI>
Dnsmasq can be configured to automatically pick up the addresses of
it's upstream nameservers from ppp or dhcp configuration. It will
its upstream nameservers from ppp or dhcp configuration. It will
automatically reload this information if it changes. This facility
will be of particular interest to maintainers of Linux firewall
distributions since it allows dns configuration to be made automatic.
@@ -73,42 +83,24 @@ upstream servers handling only those domains. This makes integration
with private DNS systems easy.
</LI>
<LI>
Dnsmasq supports MX records and can be configured to return MX records
Dnsmasq supports MX and SRV records and can be configured to return MX records
for any or all local machines.
</LI>
</DIR>
<H2>Download.</H2>
<H2>Get code.</H2>
<A HREF="http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/"> Download</A> dnsmasq here.
The tarball includes this documentation, source, manpage and control files for building .rpms.
There are also pre-built i386 .rpms, and a
<A HREF="CHANGELOG"> CHANGELOG</A>.
Dnsmasq is part of the Debian distribution, it can be downloaded from
<A HREF="http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/d/dnsmasq/"> here</A> or installed using <TT>apt</TT>.
<A HREF="http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/">Download</A> dnsmasq here.
The tarball includes this documentation, source, and manpage.
There is also a <A HREF="CHANGELOG"> CHANGELOG</A> and a <A HREF="FAQ">FAQ</A>.
Dnsmasq has a git repository which contains the complete release
history of version 2 and development history from 2.60. You can
<A HREF="http://thekelleys.org.uk/gitweb/?p=dnsmasq.git;a=summary">browse</A>
the repo, or get a copy using git protocol with the command
<H2>Building rpms.</H2>
Assuming you have the relevant tools installed, you can rebuild .rpms simply by running (as root)
<PRE><TT>git clone git://thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq.git </TT></PRE>
<PRE>
rpmbuild -ta dnsmasq-xxx.tar.gz
</PRE>
Note for Suse users: you will need to re-compress the tar file as
bzip2 before building using the commands
<PRE>
gunzip dnsmasq-xxx.tar.gz
bzip2 dnsmasq-zzz.tar
</PRE>
<H2>Links.</H2>
There is an article in German on dnsmasq at <A
HREF="http://www.linuxnetmag.com/de/issue7/m7dnsmasq1.html">http://www.linuxnetmag.com/de/issue7/m7dnsmasq1.html</A>
and Damien Raude-Morvan has one in French at <A HREF="http://www.drazzib.com/docs-dnsmasq.html">http://www.drazzib.com/docs-dnsmasq.html</A>
There is a good article about dnsmasq at <A
HREF="http://www.enterprisenetworkingplanet.com/netos/article.php/3377351">http://www.enterprisenetworkingplanet.com/netos/article.php/3377351</A>
and Ilya Evseev has an article in Russian about dnsmasq to be found at <A HREF="http://ilya-evseev.narod.ru/articles/dnsmasq"> http://ilya-evseev.narod.ru/articles/dnsmasq</A>
<H2>License.</H2>
Dnsmasq is distributed under the GPL. See the file COPYING in the distribution
for details.

12
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@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
Dnsmasq logo, contributed by Justin Clift.
The source format is Inkscape SVG vector format, which is scalable and
easy to export to other formats. For convenience I've included a 56x31
png export and a 16x16 ico suitable for use as a web favicon.
Simon Kelley, 22/10/2010

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@@ -0,0 +1,157 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"?>
<svg
xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
xmlns:cc="http://creativecommons.org/ns#"
xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"
xmlns:svg="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:sodipodi="http://sodipodi.sourceforge.net/DTD/sodipodi-0.dtd"
xmlns:inkscape="http://www.inkscape.org/namespaces/inkscape"
version="1.1"
x="0px"
y="0px"
width="56"
height="31"
viewBox="0 0 56 31"
enable-background="new 0 0 72.833 46.667"
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@@ -1,93 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
#
# Startup script for the DNS caching server
#
# chkconfig: 2345 99 01
# description: This script starts your DNS caching server
# processname: dnsmasq
# pidfile: /var/run/dnsmasq.pid
# Source function library.
. /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions
# Source networking configuration.
. /etc/sysconfig/network
# Check that networking is up.
[ ${NETWORKING} = "no" ] && exit 0
dnsmasq=/usr/sbin/dnsmasq
[ -f $dnsmasq ] || exit 0
# change this line if you want dnsmasq to serve an MX record for
# the host it is running on.
MAILHOSTNAME=""
# change this line if you want dns to get its upstream servers from
# somewhere other that /etc/resolv.conf
RESOLV_CONF=""
# change this if you want dnsmasq to cache any "hostname" or "client-hostname" from
# a dhcpd's lease file
DHCP_LEASE="/var/lib/dhcp/dhcpd.leases"
DOMAIN_SUFFIX=`dnsdomainname`
OPTIONS=""
if [ ! -z "${MAILHOSTNAME}" ]; then
OPTIONS="$OPTIONS -m $MAILHOSTNAME"
fi
if [ ! -z "${RESOLV_CONF}" ]; then
OPTIONS="$OPTIONS -r $RESOLV_CONF"
fi
if [ ! -z "${DHCP_LEASE}" ]; then
OPTIONS="$OPTIONS -l $DHCP_LEASE"
fi
if [ ! -z "${DOMAIN_SUFFIX}" ]; then
OPTIONS="$OPTIONS -s $DOMAIN_SUFFIX"
fi
RETVAL=0
# See how we were called.
case "$1" in
start)
echo -n "Starting dnsmasq: "
daemon $dnsmasq $OPTIONS
RETVAL=$?
echo
[ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && touch /var/lock/subsys/dnsmasq
;;
stop)
if test "x`pidof dnsmasq`" != x; then
echo -n "Shutting down dnsmasq: "
killproc dnsmasq
fi
RETVAL=$?
echo
[ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && rm -f /var/lock/subsys/dnsmasq /var/run/dnsmasq.pid
;;
status)
status dnsmasq
RETVAL=$?
;;
restart|reload)
$0 stop
$0 start
RETVAL=$?
;;
condrestart)
if test "x`/sbin/pidof dnsmasq`" != x; then
$0 stop
$0 start
RETVAL=$?
fi
;;
*)
echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart|reload|condrestart|status}"
exit 1
esac
exit $RETVAL

View File

@@ -221,7 +221,7 @@ triggering dial-on-demand internet links.
Sending SIGHUP to the dnsmasq process will cause it to empty its cache and
then re-load <TT>/etc/hosts</TT> and <TT>/etc/resolv.conf</TT>.
<P> Sending SIGUSR1 (killall -10 dnsmasq) to the dnsmasq process will
cause to to write cache usage statisticss to the log, typically
cause to write cache usage statisticss to the log, typically
<TT>/var/log/syslog</TT> or <TT>/var/log/messages</TT>.
<P> The <TT>log-queries</TT> option tells dnsmasq to verbosely log the queries
it is handling and causes SIGUSR1 to trigger a complete dump of the

394
src/bpf.c
View File

@@ -1,61 +1,199 @@
/* dnsmasq is Copyright (c) 2000-2006 Simon Kelley
/* dnsmasq is Copyright (c) 2000-2012 Simon Kelley
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991.
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991, or
(at your option) version 3 dated 29 June, 2007.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include "dnsmasq.h"
#ifndef HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
#if defined(HAVE_BSD_NETWORK) || defined(HAVE_SOLARIS_NETWORK)
#include <ifaddrs.h>
#if defined(HAVE_BSD_NETWORK) && !defined(__APPLE__)
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <net/route.h>
#include <net/if_dl.h>
#include <netinet/if_ether.h>
#ifndef SA_SIZE
#define SA_SIZE(sa) \
( (!(sa) || ((struct sockaddr *)(sa))->sa_len == 0) ? \
sizeof(long) : \
1 + ( (((struct sockaddr *)(sa))->sa_len - 1) | (sizeof(long) - 1) ) )
#endif
int arp_enumerate(void *parm, int (*callback)())
{
int mib[6];
size_t needed;
char *next;
struct rt_msghdr *rtm;
struct sockaddr_inarp *sin2;
struct sockaddr_dl *sdl;
struct iovec buff;
int rc;
buff.iov_base = NULL;
buff.iov_len = 0;
mib[0] = CTL_NET;
mib[1] = PF_ROUTE;
mib[2] = 0;
mib[3] = AF_INET;
mib[4] = NET_RT_FLAGS;
#ifdef RTF_LLINFO
mib[5] = RTF_LLINFO;
#else
mib[5] = 0;
#endif
if (sysctl(mib, 6, NULL, &needed, NULL, 0) == -1 || needed == 0)
return 0;
while (1)
{
if (!expand_buf(&buff, needed))
return 0;
if ((rc = sysctl(mib, 6, buff.iov_base, &needed, NULL, 0)) == 0 ||
errno != ENOMEM)
break;
needed += needed / 8;
}
if (rc == -1)
return 0;
for (next = buff.iov_base ; next < (char *)buff.iov_base + needed; next += rtm->rtm_msglen)
{
rtm = (struct rt_msghdr *)next;
sin2 = (struct sockaddr_inarp *)(rtm + 1);
sdl = (struct sockaddr_dl *)((char *)sin2 + SA_SIZE(sin2));
if (!(*callback)(AF_INET, &sin2->sin_addr, LLADDR(sdl), sdl->sdl_alen, parm))
return 0;
}
return 1;
}
#endif
int iface_enumerate(int family, void *parm, int (*callback)())
{
struct ifaddrs *head, *addrs;
int errsav, ret = 0;
if (family == AF_UNSPEC)
#if defined(HAVE_BSD_NETWORK) && !defined(__APPLE__)
return arp_enumerate(parm, callback);
#else
return 0; /* need code for Solaris and MacOS*/
#endif
/* AF_LINK doesn't exist in Linux, so we can't use it in our API */
if (family == AF_LOCAL)
family = AF_LINK;
if (getifaddrs(&head) == -1)
return 0;
for (addrs = head; addrs; addrs = addrs->ifa_next)
{
if (addrs->ifa_addr->sa_family == family)
{
int iface_index = if_nametoindex(addrs->ifa_name);
if (iface_index == 0)
continue;
if (family == AF_INET)
{
struct in_addr addr, netmask, broadcast;
addr = ((struct sockaddr_in *) addrs->ifa_addr)->sin_addr;
netmask = ((struct sockaddr_in *) addrs->ifa_netmask)->sin_addr;
broadcast = ((struct sockaddr_in *) addrs->ifa_broadaddr)->sin_addr;
if (!((*callback)(addr, iface_index, netmask, broadcast, parm)))
goto err;
}
#ifdef HAVE_IPV6
else if (family == AF_INET6)
{
struct in6_addr *addr = &((struct sockaddr_in6 *) addrs->ifa_addr)->sin6_addr;
unsigned char *netmask = (unsigned char *) &((struct sockaddr_in6 *) addrs->ifa_netmask)->sin6_addr;
int scope_id = ((struct sockaddr_in6 *) addrs->ifa_addr)->sin6_scope_id;
int i, j, prefix = 0;
for (i = 0; i < IN6ADDRSZ; i++, prefix += 8)
if (netmask[i] != 0xff)
break;
if (i != IN6ADDRSZ && netmask[i])
for (j = 7; j > 0; j--, prefix++)
if ((netmask[i] & (1 << j)) == 0)
break;
/* voodoo to clear interface field in address */
if (!option_bool(OPT_NOWILD) && IN6_IS_ADDR_LINKLOCAL(addr))
{
addr->s6_addr[2] = 0;
addr->s6_addr[3] = 0;
}
if (!((*callback)(addr, prefix, scope_id, iface_index, 0, parm)))
goto err;
}
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_DHCP6
else if (family == AF_LINK)
{
/* Assume ethernet again here */
struct sockaddr_dl *sdl = (struct sockaddr_dl *) addrs->ifa_addr;
if (sdl->sdl_alen != 0 &&
!((*callback)(iface_index, ARPHRD_ETHER, LLADDR(sdl), sdl->sdl_alen, parm)))
goto err;
}
#endif
}
}
ret = 1;
err:
errsav = errno;
freeifaddrs(head);
errno = errsav;
return ret;
}
#endif
#if defined(HAVE_BSD_NETWORK) && defined(HAVE_DHCP)
#include <net/bpf.h>
static struct iovec ifconf = {
.iov_base = NULL,
.iov_len = 0
};
static struct iovec ifreq = {
.iov_base = NULL,
.iov_len = 0
};
struct header {
struct ether_header ether;
struct ip ip;
struct udphdr {
u16 uh_sport; /* source port */
u16 uh_dport; /* destination port */
u16 uh_ulen; /* udp length */
u16 uh_sum; /* udp checksum */
} udp;
};
void init_bpf(struct daemon *daemon)
void init_bpf(void)
{
int i = 0;
while (1)
{
/* useful size which happens to be sufficient */
if (expand_buf(&ifreq, sizeof(struct ifreq)))
{
sprintf(ifreq.iov_base, "/dev/bpf%d", i++);
if ((daemon->dhcp_raw_fd = open(ifreq.iov_base, O_RDWR, 0)) != -1)
return;
}
sprintf(daemon->dhcp_buff, "/dev/bpf%d", i++);
if ((daemon->dhcp_raw_fd = open(daemon->dhcp_buff, O_RDWR, 0)) != -1)
return;
if (errno != EBUSY)
die(_("cannot create DHCP BPF socket: %s"), NULL);
die(_("cannot create DHCP BPF socket: %s"), NULL, EC_BADNET);
}
}
void send_via_bpf(struct daemon *daemon, struct dhcp_packet *mess, size_t len,
void send_via_bpf(struct dhcp_packet *mess, size_t len,
struct in_addr iface_addr, struct ifreq *ifr)
{
/* Hairy stuff, packet either has to go to the
@@ -64,15 +202,23 @@ void send_via_bpf(struct daemon *daemon, struct dhcp_packet *mess, size_t len,
Build the packet by steam, and send directly, bypassing
the kernel IP stack */
struct header header;
struct ether_header ether;
struct ip ip;
struct udphdr {
u16 uh_sport; /* source port */
u16 uh_dport; /* destination port */
u16 uh_ulen; /* udp length */
u16 uh_sum; /* udp checksum */
} udp;
u32 i, sum;
struct iovec iov[2];
struct iovec iov[4];
/* Only know how to do ethernet on *BSD */
if (mess->htype != ARPHRD_ETHER || mess->hlen != ETHER_ADDR_LEN)
{
syslog(LOG_WARNING, _("DHCP request for unsupported hardware type (%d) received on %s"),
mess->htype, ifr->ifr_name);
my_syslog(MS_DHCP | LOG_WARNING, _("DHCP request for unsupported hardware type (%d) received on %s"),
mess->htype, ifr->ifr_name);
return;
}
@@ -80,159 +226,71 @@ void send_via_bpf(struct daemon *daemon, struct dhcp_packet *mess, size_t len,
if (ioctl(daemon->dhcpfd, SIOCGIFADDR, ifr) < 0)
return;
memcpy(header.ether.ether_shost, LLADDR((struct sockaddr_dl *)&ifr->ifr_addr), ETHER_ADDR_LEN);
header.ether.ether_type = htons(ETHERTYPE_IP);
memcpy(ether.ether_shost, LLADDR((struct sockaddr_dl *)&ifr->ifr_addr), ETHER_ADDR_LEN);
ether.ether_type = htons(ETHERTYPE_IP);
if (ntohs(mess->flags) & 0x8000)
{
memset(header.ether.ether_dhost, 255, ETHER_ADDR_LEN);
header.ip.ip_dst.s_addr = INADDR_BROADCAST;
memset(ether.ether_dhost, 255, ETHER_ADDR_LEN);
ip.ip_dst.s_addr = INADDR_BROADCAST;
}
else
{
memcpy(header.ether.ether_dhost, mess->chaddr, ETHER_ADDR_LEN);
header.ip.ip_dst.s_addr = mess->yiaddr.s_addr;
memcpy(ether.ether_dhost, mess->chaddr, ETHER_ADDR_LEN);
ip.ip_dst.s_addr = mess->yiaddr.s_addr;
}
header.ip.ip_p = IPPROTO_UDP;
header.ip.ip_src.s_addr = iface_addr.s_addr;
header.ip.ip_len = htons(sizeof(struct ip) +
sizeof(struct udphdr) +
len) ;
header.ip.ip_hl = sizeof(struct ip) / 4;
header.ip.ip_v = IPVERSION;
header.ip.ip_tos = 0;
header.ip.ip_id = htons(0);
header.ip.ip_off = htons(0x4000); /* don't fragment */
header.ip.ip_ttl = IPDEFTTL;
header.ip.ip_sum = 0;
ip.ip_p = IPPROTO_UDP;
ip.ip_src.s_addr = iface_addr.s_addr;
ip.ip_len = htons(sizeof(struct ip) +
sizeof(struct udphdr) +
len) ;
ip.ip_hl = sizeof(struct ip) / 4;
ip.ip_v = IPVERSION;
ip.ip_tos = 0;
ip.ip_id = htons(0);
ip.ip_off = htons(0x4000); /* don't fragment */
ip.ip_ttl = IPDEFTTL;
ip.ip_sum = 0;
for (sum = 0, i = 0; i < sizeof(struct ip) / 2; i++)
sum += ((u16 *)&header.ip)[i];
sum += ((u16 *)&ip)[i];
while (sum>>16)
sum = (sum & 0xffff) + (sum >> 16);
header.ip.ip_sum = (sum == 0xffff) ? sum : ~sum;
ip.ip_sum = (sum == 0xffff) ? sum : ~sum;
header.udp.uh_sport = htons(DHCP_SERVER_PORT);
header.udp.uh_dport = htons(DHCP_CLIENT_PORT);
udp.uh_sport = htons(daemon->dhcp_server_port);
udp.uh_dport = htons(daemon->dhcp_client_port);
if (len & 1)
((char *)mess)[len] = 0; /* for checksum, in case length is odd. */
header.udp.uh_sum = 0;
header.udp.uh_ulen = sum = htons(sizeof(struct udphdr) + len);
udp.uh_sum = 0;
udp.uh_ulen = sum = htons(sizeof(struct udphdr) + len);
sum += htons(IPPROTO_UDP);
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
sum += ((u16 *)&header.ip.ip_src)[i];
sum += ip.ip_src.s_addr & 0xffff;
sum += (ip.ip_src.s_addr >> 16) & 0xffff;
sum += ip.ip_dst.s_addr & 0xffff;
sum += (ip.ip_dst.s_addr >> 16) & 0xffff;
for (i = 0; i < sizeof(struct udphdr)/2; i++)
sum += ((u16 *)&header.udp)[i];
sum += ((u16 *)&udp)[i];
for (i = 0; i < (len + 1) / 2; i++)
sum += ((u16 *)mess)[i];
while (sum>>16)
sum = (sum & 0xffff) + (sum >> 16);
header.udp.uh_sum = (sum == 0xffff) ? sum : ~sum;
udp.uh_sum = (sum == 0xffff) ? sum : ~sum;
ioctl(daemon->dhcp_raw_fd, BIOCSETIF, ifr);
iov[0].iov_base = &header;
iov[0].iov_len = sizeof(struct header);
iov[1].iov_base = mess;
iov[1].iov_len = len;
while (writev(daemon->dhcp_raw_fd, iov, 2) == -1 && retry_send());
}
iov[0].iov_base = &ether;
iov[0].iov_len = sizeof(ether);
iov[1].iov_base = &ip;
iov[1].iov_len = sizeof(ip);
iov[2].iov_base = &udp;
iov[2].iov_len = sizeof(udp);
iov[3].iov_base = mess;
iov[3].iov_len = len;
int iface_enumerate(struct daemon *daemon, void *parm, int (*ipv4_callback)(), int (*ipv6_callback)())
{
char *ptr;
struct ifreq *ifr, ifaux;
struct ifconf ifc;
int fd, errsav, ret = 0;
int lastlen = 0;
size_t len;
if ((fd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0)) == -1)
return 0;
for (len = 0; ; len += 10*sizeof(struct ifreq))
{
if (!expand_buf(&ifconf, len))
goto err;
ifc.ifc_len = len;
ifc.ifc_buf = ifconf.iov_base;
if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFCONF, &ifc) == -1)
{
if (errno != EINVAL || lastlen != 0)
goto err;
}
else
{
if (ifc.ifc_len == lastlen)
break; /* got a big enough buffer now */
lastlen = ifc.ifc_len;
}
}
for (ptr = ifc.ifc_buf; ptr < ifc.ifc_buf + ifc.ifc_len; ptr += len )
{
/* subsequent entries may not be aligned, so copy into
an aligned buffer to avoid nasty complaints about
unaligned accesses. */
#ifdef HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
len = ((struct ifreq *)ptr)->ifr_addr.sa_len + IF_NAMESIZE;
#else
len = sizeof(struct ifreq);
#endif
if (!expand_buf(&ifreq, len))
goto err;
ifr = ifreq.iov_base;
memcpy(ifr, ptr, len);
strncpy(ifaux.ifr_name, ifr->ifr_name, IF_NAMESIZE);
if (ifr->ifr_addr.sa_family == AF_INET && ipv4_callback)
{
struct in_addr addr, netmask, broadcast;
if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFINDEX, &ifaux) == -1)
continue;
broadcast.s_addr = 0;
addr = ((struct sockaddr_in *) &ifr->ifr_addr)->sin_addr;
if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFNETMASK, ifr) == -1)
continue;
netmask = ((struct sockaddr_in *) &ifr->ifr_addr)->sin_addr;
if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFBRDADDR, ifr) != -1)
broadcast = ((struct sockaddr_in *) &ifr->ifr_addr)->sin_addr;
if (!((*ipv4_callback)(daemon, addr, (int)ifaux.ifr_index, netmask, broadcast, parm)))
goto err;
}
#ifdef HAVE_IPV6
else if (ifr->ifr_addr.sa_family == AF_INET6 && ipv6_callback)
{
struct in6_addr *addr = &((struct sockaddr_in6 *)&ifr->ifr_addr)->sin6_addr;
/* voodoo to clear interface field in address */
if (!(daemon->options & OPT_NOWILD) && IN6_IS_ADDR_LINKLOCAL(addr))
{
addr->s6_addr[2] = 0;
addr->s6_addr[3] = 0;
}
if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFINDEX, &ifaux) == -1)
continue;
if (!((*ipv6_callback)(daemon, addr,
(int)((struct sockaddr_in6 *)&ifr->ifr_addr)->sin6_scope_id,
(int)ifaux.ifr_index,
parm)))
goto err;
}
#endif
}
ret = 1;
err:
errsav = errno;
close(fd);
errno = errsav;
return ret;
while (writev(daemon->dhcp_raw_fd, iov, 4) == -1 && retry_send());
}
#endif

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -1,97 +1,50 @@
/* dnsmasq is Copyright (c) 2000-2006 Simon Kelley
/* dnsmasq is Copyright (c) 2000-2012 Simon Kelley
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991.
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991, or
(at your option) version 3 dated 29 June, 2007.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#define VERSION "2.28"
#define FTABSIZ 150 /* max number of outstanding requests */
#define FTABSIZ 150 /* max number of outstanding requests (default) */
#define MAX_PROCS 20 /* max no children for TCP requests */
#define CHILD_LIFETIME 150 /* secs 'till terminated (RFC1035 suggests > 120s) */
#define EDNS_PKTSZ 1280 /* default max EDNS.0 UDP packet from RFC2671 */
#define TIMEOUT 20 /* drop UDP queries after TIMEOUT seconds */
#define EDNS_PKTSZ 4096 /* default max EDNS.0 UDP packet from RFC5625 */
#define TIMEOUT 10 /* drop UDP queries after TIMEOUT seconds */
#define FORWARD_TEST 50 /* try all servers every 50 queries */
#define FORWARD_TIME 20 /* or 20 seconds */
#define RANDOM_SOCKS 64 /* max simultaneous random ports */
#define LEASE_RETRY 60 /* on error, retry writing leasefile after LEASE_RETRY seconds */
#define LOGRATE 120 /* log table overflows every LOGRATE seconds */
#define CACHESIZ 150 /* default cache size */
#define MAXLEASES 150 /* maximum number of DHCP leases */
#define MAXLEASES 1000 /* maximum number of DHCP leases */
#define PING_WAIT 3 /* wait for ping address-in-use test */
#define PING_CACHE_TIME 30 /* Ping test assumed to be valid this long. */
#define DECLINE_BACKOFF 600 /* disable DECLINEd static addresses for this long */
#define DHCP_PACKET_MAX 16384 /* hard limit on DHCP packet size */
#define SMALLDNAME 40 /* most domain names are smaller than this */
#define HOSTSFILE "/etc/hosts"
#define ETHERSFILE "/etc/ethers"
#ifdef __uClinux__
# define RESOLVFILE "/etc/config/resolv.conf"
#else
# define RESOLVFILE "/etc/resolv.conf"
#endif
#define RUNFILE "/var/run/dnsmasq.pid"
#if defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined (__OpenBSD__)
# define LEASEFILE "/var/db/dnsmasq.leases"
#else
# define LEASEFILE "/var/lib/misc/dnsmasq.leases"
#endif
#if defined(__FreeBSD__)
# define CONFFILE "/usr/local/etc/dnsmasq.conf"
#else
# define CONFFILE "/etc/dnsmasq.conf"
#endif
#define DEFLEASE 3600 /* default lease time, 1 hour */
#define CHUSER "nobody"
#define CHGRP "dip"
#define DHCP_SERVER_PORT 67
#define DHCP_CLIENT_PORT 68
/* DBUS interface specifics */
#define DNSMASQ_SERVICE "uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq"
#define TFTP_MAX_CONNECTIONS 50 /* max simultaneous connections */
#define LOG_MAX 5 /* log-queue length */
#define RANDFILE "/dev/urandom"
#define EDNS0_OPTION_MAC 5 /* dyndns.org temporary assignment */
#define DNSMASQ_SERVICE "uk.org.thekelleys.dnsmasq" /* DBUS interface specifics */
#define DNSMASQ_PATH "/uk/org/thekelleys/dnsmasq"
/* Logfile stuff - change this to change the options and facility */
/* debug is true if the --no-daemon flag is given */
#ifdef LOG_PERROR
# define DNSMASQ_LOG_OPT(debug) (debug) ? LOG_PERROR : LOG_PID
#else
# define DNSMASQ_LOG_OPT(debug) (debug) ? 0 : LOG_PID
#endif
#ifdef LOG_LOCAL0
# define DNSMASQ_LOG_FAC(debug) (debug) ? LOG_LOCAL0 : LOG_DAEMON
#else
# define DNSMASQ_LOG_FAC(debug) LOG_DAEMON
#endif
/* A small collection of RR-types which are missing on some platforms */
#ifndef T_SRV
# define T_SRV 33
#endif
#ifndef T_OPT
# define T_OPT 41
#endif
/* Get linux C library versions. */
#if defined(__linux__) && !defined(__UCLIBC__) && !defined(__uClinux__)
# include <libio.h>
#endif
/* Follows system specific switches. If you run on a
new system, you may want to edit these.
May replace this with Autoconf one day.
HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
define this to do networking the Linux way. When it's defined, the code will
use IP_PKTINFO, Linux capabilities and the RTnetlink system. If it's not defined,
a few facilities will be lost, namely support for multiple addresses on an interface,
DNS query retransmission, and (on some systems) wildcard interface binding.
/* compile-time options: uncomment below to enable or do eg.
make COPTS=-DHAVE_BROKEN_RTC
HAVE_BROKEN_RTC
define this on embedded systems which don't have an RTC
@@ -107,87 +60,133 @@ HAVE_BROKEN_RTC
NOTE: when enabling or disabling this, be sure to delete any old
leases file, otherwise dnsmasq may get very confused.
HAVE_ISC_READER
define this to include the old ISC dhcpcd integration. Note that you cannot
set both HAVE_ISC_READER and HAVE_BROKEN_RTC.
HAVE_TFTP
define this to get dnsmasq's built-in TFTP server.
HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
define this if you have GNU libc or GNU getopt.
HAVE_DHCP
define this to get dnsmasq's DHCPv4 server.
HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
define this if you have arc4random() to get better security from DNS spoofs
by using really random ids (OpenBSD)
HAVE_DHCP6
define this to get dnsmasq's DHCPv6 server. (implies HAVE_DHCP).
HAVE_RANDOM
define this if you have the 4.2BSD random() function (and its
associated srandom() function), which is at least as good as (if not
better than) the rand() function.
HAVE_SCRIPT
define this to get the ability to call scripts on lease-change.
HAVE_DEV_RANDOM
define this if you have the /dev/random device, which gives truly
random numbers but may run out of random numbers.
HAVE_DEV_URANDOM
define this if you have the /dev/urandom device, which gives
semi-random numbers when it runs out of truly random numbers.
HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
define this if struct sockaddr has sa_len field (*BSD)
HAVE_LUASCRIPT
define this to get the ability to call Lua script on lease-change. (implies HAVE_SCRIPT)
HAVE_DBUS
Define this if you want to link against libdbus, and have dnsmasq
define some methods to allow (re)configuration of the upstream DNS
define this if you want to link against libdbus, and have dnsmasq
support some methods to allow (re)configuration of the upstream DNS
servers via DBus.
NOTES:
For Linux you should define
HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
HAVE_RANDOM
HAVE_DEV_RANDOM
HAVE_DEV_URANDOM
you should NOT define
HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
HAVE_IDN
define this if you want international domain name support.
NOTE: for backwards compatibility, IDN support is automatically
included when internationalisation support is built, using the
*-i18n makefile targets, even if HAVE_IDN is not explicitly set.
For *BSD systems you should define
HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
HAVE_RANDOM
you should NOT define
HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
and you MAY define
HAVE_ARC4RANDOM - OpenBSD and FreeBSD and NetBSD version 2.0 or later
HAVE_DEV_URANDOM - OpenBSD and FreeBSD and NetBSD
HAVE_DEV_RANDOM - FreeBSD and NetBSD
(OpenBSD with hardware random number generator)
HAVE_GETOPT_LONG - NetBSD, later FreeBSD
(FreeBSD and OpenBSD only if you link GNU getopt)
HAVE_CONNTRACK
define this to include code which propogates conntrack marks from
incoming DNS queries to the corresponding upstream queries. This adds
a build-dependency on libnetfilter_conntrack, but the resulting binary will
still run happily on a kernel without conntrack support.
NO_IPV6
NO_TFTP
NO_DHCP
NO_DHCP6
NO_SCRIPT
NO_LARGEFILE
these are avilable to explictly disable compile time options which would
otherwise be enabled automatically (HAVE_IPV6, >2Gb file sizes) or
which are enabled by default in the distributed source tree. Building dnsmasq
with something like "make COPTS=-DNO_SCRIPT" will do the trick.
LEASEFILE
CONFFILE
RESOLVFILE
the default locations of these files are determined below, but may be overridden
in a build command line using COPTS.
*/
/* platform independent options. */
#undef HAVE_BROKEN_RTC
#undef HAVE_ISC_READER
#undef HAVE_DBUS
#if defined(HAVE_BROKEN_RTC) && defined(HAVE_ISC_READER)
# error HAVE_ISC_READER is not compatible with HAVE_BROKEN_RTC
/* The default set of options to build. Built with these options, dnsmasq
has no library dependencies other than libc */
#define HAVE_DHCP
#define HAVE_DHCP6
#define HAVE_TFTP
#define HAVE_SCRIPT
/* #define HAVE_LUASCRIPT */
/* #define HAVE_BROKEN_RTC */
/* #define HAVE_DBUS */
/* #define HAVE_IDN */
/* #define HAVE_CONNTRACK */
/* Default locations for important system files. */
#ifndef LEASEFILE
# if defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined (__OpenBSD__) || defined(__DragonFly__) || defined(__NetBSD__)
# define LEASEFILE "/var/db/dnsmasq.leases"
# elif defined(__sun__) || defined (__sun)
# define LEASEFILE "/var/cache/dnsmasq.leases"
# elif defined(__ANDROID__)
# define LEASEFILE "/data/misc/dhcp/dnsmasq.leases"
# else
# define LEASEFILE "/var/lib/misc/dnsmasq.leases"
# endif
#endif
/* platform dependent options. */
#ifndef CONFFILE
# if defined(__FreeBSD__)
# define CONFFILE "/usr/local/etc/dnsmasq.conf"
# else
# define CONFFILE "/etc/dnsmasq.conf"
# endif
#endif
#ifndef RESOLVFILE
# if defined(__uClinux__)
# define RESOLVFILE "/etc/config/resolv.conf"
# else
# define RESOLVFILE "/etc/resolv.conf"
# endif
#endif
/* platform dependent options: these are determined automatically below
HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
HAVE_BSD_NETWORK
HAVE_SOLARIS_NETWORK
define exactly one of these to alter interaction with kernel networking.
HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
defined when GNU-style getopt_long available.
HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
defined if arc4random() available to get better security from DNS spoofs
by using really random ids (OpenBSD)
HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
defined if struct sockaddr has sa_len field (*BSD)
*/
/* Must preceed __linux__ since uClinux defines __linux__ too. */
#if defined(__uClinux__)
#define HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
#define HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#undef HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
#define HAVE_RANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_URANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_RANDOM
#undef HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
/* Never use fork() on uClinux. Note that this is subtly different from the
--keep-in-foreground option, since it also suppresses forking new
processes for TCP connections. It's intended for use on MMU-less kernels. */
processes for TCP connections and disables the call-a-script on leasechange
system. It's intended for use on MMU-less kernels. */
#define NO_FORK
#elif defined(__UCLIBC__)
@@ -195,19 +194,16 @@ NOTES:
#if defined(__UCLIBC_HAS_GNU_GETOPT__) || \
((__UCLIBC_MAJOR__==0) && (__UCLIBC_MINOR__==9) && (__UCLIBC_SUBLEVEL__<21))
# define HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#else
# undef HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#endif
#undef HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
#define HAVE_RANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_URANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_RANDOM
#undef HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
#if !defined(__UCLIBC_HAS_MMU__)
#if !defined(__ARCH_HAS_MMU__) && !defined(__UCLIBC_HAS_MMU__)
# define NO_FORK
#endif
#if !defined(__UCLIBC_HAS_IPV6__)
# define NO_IPV6
#if defined(__UCLIBC_HAS_IPV6__)
# ifndef IPV6_V6ONLY
# define IPV6_V6ONLY 26
# endif
#endif
/* This is for glibc 2.x */
@@ -215,65 +211,52 @@ NOTES:
#define HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
#define HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#undef HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
#define HAVE_RANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_URANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_RANDOM
#undef HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
/* glibc < 2.2 has broken Sockaddr_in6 so we have to use our own. */
/* glibc < 2.2 doesn't define in_addr_t */
#if defined(__GLIBC__) && (__GLIBC__ == 2) && \
defined(__GLIBC_MINOR__) && (__GLIBC_MINOR__ < 2)
typedef unsigned long in_addr_t;
# define HAVE_BROKEN_SOCKADDR_IN6
#endif
#elif defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__OpenBSD__)
#undef HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
#elif defined(__FreeBSD__) || \
defined(__OpenBSD__) || \
defined(__DragonFly__) || \
defined(__FreeBSD_kernel__)
#define HAVE_BSD_NETWORK
/* Later verions of FreeBSD have getopt_long() */
#if defined(optional_argument) && defined(required_argument)
# define HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#else
# undef HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#endif
#define HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
#define HAVE_RANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_URANDOM
#if !defined(__FreeBSD_kernel__)
# define HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
#endif
#define HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
#elif defined(__APPLE__)
#undef HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
#undef HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#define HAVE_BSD_NETWORK
#define HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#define HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
#define HAVE_RANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_URANDOM
#define HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
/* Define before sys/socket.h is included so we get socklen_t */
#define _BSD_SOCKLEN_T_
/* This is not defined in Mac OS X arpa/nameserv.h */
#define IN6ADDRSZ 16
#elif defined(__NetBSD__)
#undef HAVE_LINUX_NETWORK
#define HAVE_BSD_NETWORK
#define HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#undef HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
#define HAVE_RANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_URANDOM
#define HAVE_DEV_RANDOM
#define HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
#elif defined(__sun) || defined(__sun__)
#define HAVE_SOLARIS_NETWORK
#define HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
#undef HAVE_ARC4RANDOM
#undef HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
#define ETHER_ADDR_LEN 6
#endif
/* Decide if we're going to support IPv6 */
/* We assume that systems which don't have IPv6
headers don't have ntop and pton either */
#if defined(INET6_ADDRSTRLEN) && defined(IPV6_V6ONLY) && !defined(NO_IPV6)
#if defined(INET6_ADDRSTRLEN) && defined(IPV6_V6ONLY)
# define HAVE_IPV6
# define ADDRSTRLEN INET6_ADDRSTRLEN
# if defined(SOL_IPV6)
# define IPV6_LEVEL SOL_IPV6
# else
# define IPV6_LEVEL IPPROTO_IPV6
# endif
#elif defined(INET_ADDRSTRLEN)
# undef HAVE_IPV6
# define ADDRSTRLEN INET_ADDRSTRLEN
@@ -283,3 +266,102 @@ typedef unsigned long in_addr_t;
#endif
/* rules to implement compile-time option dependencies and
the NO_XXX flags */
#ifdef NO_IPV6
#undef HAVE_IPV6
#endif
#ifdef NO_TFTP
#undef HAVE_TFTP
#endif
#ifdef NO_DHCP
#undef HAVE_DHCP
#undef HAVE_DHCP6
#endif
#if defined(NO_DHCP6) || !defined(HAVE_IPV6)
#undef HAVE_DHCP6
#endif
/* DHCP6 needs DHCP too */
#ifdef HAVE_DHCP6
#define HAVE_DHCP
#endif
#if defined(NO_SCRIPT) || !defined(HAVE_DHCP) || defined(NO_FORK)
#undef HAVE_SCRIPT
#undef HAVE_LUASCRIPT
#endif
/* Must HAVE_SCRIPT to HAVE_LUASCRIPT */
#ifdef HAVE_LUASCRIPT
#define HAVE_SCRIPT
#endif
/* Define a string indicating which options are in use.
DNSMASQP_COMPILE_OPTS is only defined in dnsmasq.c */
#ifdef DNSMASQ_COMPILE_OPTS
static char *compile_opts =
#ifndef HAVE_IPV6
"no-"
#endif
"IPv6 "
#ifndef HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
"no-"
#endif
"GNU-getopt "
#ifdef HAVE_BROKEN_RTC
"no-RTC "
#endif
#ifdef NO_FORK
"no-MMU "
#endif
#ifndef HAVE_DBUS
"no-"
#endif
"DBus "
#ifndef LOCALEDIR
"no-"
#endif
"i18n "
#if !defined(LOCALEDIR) && !defined(HAVE_IDN)
"no-"
#endif
"IDN "
#ifndef HAVE_DHCP
"no-"
#endif
"DHCP "
#if defined(HAVE_DHCP)
# if !defined (HAVE_DHCP6)
"no-"
# endif
"DHCPv6 "
# if !defined(HAVE_SCRIPT)
"no-scripts "
# else
# if !defined(HAVE_LUASCRIPT)
"no-"
# endif
"Lua "
# endif
#endif
#ifndef HAVE_TFTP
"no-"
#endif
"TFTP "
#ifndef HAVE_CONNTRACK
"no-"
#endif
"conntrack";
#endif

90
src/conntrack.c Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,90 @@
/* dnsmasq is Copyright (c) 2000-2012 Simon Kelley
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991, or
(at your option) version 3 dated 29 June, 2007.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include "dnsmasq.h"
#ifdef HAVE_CONNTRACK
#include <libnetfilter_conntrack/libnetfilter_conntrack.h>
static int gotit = 0; /* yuck */
static int callback(enum nf_conntrack_msg_type type, struct nf_conntrack *ct, void *data);
int get_incoming_mark(union mysockaddr *peer_addr, struct all_addr *local_addr, int istcp, unsigned int *markp)
{
struct nf_conntrack *ct;
struct nfct_handle *h;
gotit = 0;
if ((ct = nfct_new()))
{
nfct_set_attr_u8(ct, ATTR_L4PROTO, istcp ? IPPROTO_TCP : IPPROTO_UDP);
nfct_set_attr_u16(ct, ATTR_PORT_DST, htons(daemon->port));
#ifdef HAVE_IPV6
if (peer_addr->sa.sa_family == AF_INET6)
{
nfct_set_attr_u8(ct, ATTR_L3PROTO, AF_INET6);
nfct_set_attr(ct, ATTR_IPV6_SRC, peer_addr->in6.sin6_addr.s6_addr);
nfct_set_attr_u16(ct, ATTR_PORT_SRC, peer_addr->in6.sin6_port);
nfct_set_attr(ct, ATTR_IPV6_DST, local_addr->addr.addr6.s6_addr);
}
else
#endif
{
nfct_set_attr_u8(ct, ATTR_L3PROTO, AF_INET);
nfct_set_attr_u32(ct, ATTR_IPV4_SRC, peer_addr->in.sin_addr.s_addr);
nfct_set_attr_u16(ct, ATTR_PORT_SRC, peer_addr->in.sin_port);
nfct_set_attr_u32(ct, ATTR_IPV4_DST, local_addr->addr.addr4.s_addr);
}
if ((h = nfct_open(CONNTRACK, 0)))
{
nfct_callback_register(h, NFCT_T_ALL, callback, (void *)markp);
if (nfct_query(h, NFCT_Q_GET, ct) == -1)
{
static int warned = 0;
if (!warned)
{
my_syslog(LOG_ERR, _("Conntrack connection mark retrieval failed: %s"), strerror(errno));
warned = 1;
}
}
nfct_close(h);
}
nfct_destroy(ct);
}
return gotit;
}
static int callback(enum nf_conntrack_msg_type type, struct nf_conntrack *ct, void *data)
{
unsigned int *ret = (unsigned int *)data;
*ret = nfct_get_attr_u32(ct, ATTR_MARK);
(void)type; /* eliminate warning */
gotit = 1;
return NFCT_CB_CONTINUE;
}
#endif

View File

@@ -1,22 +1,61 @@
/* dnsmasq is Copyright (c) 2000-2005 Simon Kelley
/* dnsmasq is Copyright (c) 2000-2012 Simon Kelley
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991.
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991, or
(at your option) version 3 dated 29 June, 2007.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include "dnsmasq.h"
#ifdef HAVE_DBUS
#define DBUS_API_SUBJECT_TO_CHANGE
#include <dbus/dbus.h>
const char* introspection_xml =
"<!DOCTYPE node PUBLIC \"-//freedesktop//DTD D-BUS Object Introspection 1.0//EN\"\n"
"\"http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/introspect.dtd\">\n"
"<node name=\"" DNSMASQ_PATH "\">\n"
" <interface name=\"org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable\">\n"
" <method name=\"Introspect\">\n"
" <arg name=\"data\" direction=\"out\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" </method>\n"
" </interface>\n"
" <interface name=\"" DNSMASQ_SERVICE "\">\n"
" <method name=\"ClearCache\">\n"
" </method>\n"
" <method name=\"GetVersion\">\n"
" <arg name=\"version\" direction=\"out\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" </method>\n"
" <method name=\"SetServers\">\n"
" <arg name=\"servers\" direction=\"in\" type=\"av\"/>\n"
" </method>\n"
" <signal name=\"DhcpLeaseAdded\">\n"
" <arg name=\"ipaddr\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" <arg name=\"hwaddr\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" <arg name=\"hostname\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" </signal>\n"
" <signal name=\"DhcpLeaseDeleted\">\n"
" <arg name=\"ipaddr\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" <arg name=\"hwaddr\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" <arg name=\"hostname\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" </signal>\n"
" <signal name=\"DhcpLeaseUpdated\">\n"
" <arg name=\"ipaddr\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" <arg name=\"hwaddr\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" <arg name=\"hostname\" type=\"s\"/>\n"
" </signal>\n"
" </interface>\n"
"</node>\n";
struct watch {
DBusWatch *watch;
struct watch *next;
@@ -25,28 +64,25 @@ struct watch {
static dbus_bool_t add_watch(DBusWatch *watch, void *data)
{
struct daemon *daemon = data;
struct watch *w;
for (w = daemon->watches; w; w = w->next)
if (w->watch == watch)
return TRUE;
if (!(w = malloc(sizeof(struct watch))))
if (!(w = whine_malloc(sizeof(struct watch))))
return FALSE;
w->watch = watch;
w->next = daemon->watches;
daemon->watches = w;
dbus_watch_set_data (watch, (void *)daemon, NULL);
w = data; /* no warning */
return TRUE;
}
static void remove_watch(DBusWatch *watch, void *data)
{
struct daemon *daemon = data;
struct watch **up, *w;
for (up = &(daemon->watches), w = daemon->watches; w; w = w->next)
@@ -57,9 +93,11 @@ static void remove_watch(DBusWatch *watch, void *data)
}
else
up = &(w->next);
w = data; /* no warning */
}
static void dbus_read_servers(struct daemon *daemon, DBusMessage *message)
static void dbus_read_servers(DBusMessage *message)
{
struct server *serv, *tmp, **up;
DBusMessageIter iter;
@@ -109,13 +147,13 @@ static void dbus_read_servers(struct daemon *daemon, DBusMessage *message)
}
#ifndef HAVE_IPV6
syslog(LOG_WARNING, _("attempt to set an IPv6 server address via DBus - no IPv6 support"));
my_syslog(LOG_WARNING, _("attempt to set an IPv6 server address via DBus - no IPv6 support"));
#else
if (i == sizeof(struct in6_addr)-1)
{
memcpy(&addr.in6.sin6_addr, p, sizeof(addr.in6));
memcpy(&addr.in6.sin6_addr, p, sizeof(struct in6_addr));
#ifdef HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN
source_addr.in6.sin6_len = addr.in6.sin6_len = sizeof(addr.in6);
source_addr.in6.sin6_len = addr.in6.sin6_len = sizeof(struct sockaddr_in6);
#endif
source_addr.in6.sin6_family = addr.in6.sin6_family = AF_INET6;
addr.in6.sin6_port = htons(NAMESERVER_PORT);
@@ -161,11 +199,14 @@ static void dbus_read_servers(struct daemon *daemon, DBusMessage *message)
}
}
if (!serv && (serv = malloc(sizeof (struct server))))
if (!serv && (serv = whine_malloc(sizeof (struct server))))
{
/* Not found, create a new one. */
memset(serv, 0, sizeof(struct server));
if (domain)
serv->domain = malloc(strlen(domain)+1);
serv->domain = whine_malloc(strlen(domain)+1);
if (domain && !serv->domain)
{
free(serv);
@@ -176,7 +217,6 @@ static void dbus_read_servers(struct daemon *daemon, DBusMessage *message)
serv->next = daemon->servers;
daemon->servers = serv;
serv->flags = SERV_FROM_DBUS;
serv->sfd = NULL;
if (domain)
{
strcpy(serv->domain, domain);
@@ -208,6 +248,7 @@ static void dbus_read_servers(struct daemon *daemon, DBusMessage *message)
tmp = serv->next;
if (serv->flags & SERV_MARK)
{
server_gone(serv);
*up = serv->next;
free(serv);
}
@@ -222,9 +263,16 @@ DBusHandlerResult message_handler(DBusConnection *connection,
void *user_data)
{
char *method = (char *)dbus_message_get_member(message);
struct daemon *daemon = (struct daemon *)user_data;
if (strcmp(method, "GetVersion") == 0)
if (dbus_message_is_method_call(message, DBUS_INTERFACE_INTROSPECTABLE, "Introspect"))
{
DBusMessage *reply = dbus_message_new_method_return(message);
dbus_message_append_args(reply, DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &introspection_xml, DBUS_TYPE_INVALID);
dbus_connection_send (connection, reply, NULL);
dbus_message_unref (reply);
}
else if (strcmp(method, "GetVersion") == 0)
{
char *v = VERSION;
DBusMessage *reply = dbus_message_new_method_return(message);
@@ -235,22 +283,24 @@ DBusHandlerResult message_handler(DBusConnection *connection,
}
else if (strcmp(method, "SetServers") == 0)
{
syslog(LOG_INFO, _("setting upstream servers from DBus"));
dbus_read_servers(daemon, message);
check_servers(daemon);
my_syslog(LOG_INFO, _("setting upstream servers from DBus"));
dbus_read_servers(message);
check_servers();
}
else if (strcmp(method, "ClearCache") == 0)
clear_cache_and_reload(daemon);
clear_cache_and_reload(dnsmasq_time());
else
return (DBUS_HANDLER_RESULT_NOT_YET_HANDLED);
method = user_data; /* no warning */
return (DBUS_HANDLER_RESULT_HANDLED);
}
/* returns NULL or error message, may fail silently if dbus daemon not yet up. */
char *dbus_init(struct daemon *daemon)
char *dbus_init(void)
{
DBusConnection *connection = NULL;
DBusObjectPathVTable dnsmasq_vtable = {NULL, &message_handler, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL };
@@ -260,30 +310,33 @@ char *dbus_init(struct daemon *daemon)
dbus_error_init (&dbus_error);
if (!(connection = dbus_bus_get (DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM, &dbus_error)))
return NULL;
dbus_connection_set_exit_on_disconnect(connection, FALSE);
dbus_connection_set_watch_functions(connection, add_watch, remove_watch,
NULL, (void *)daemon, NULL);
NULL, NULL, NULL);
dbus_error_init (&dbus_error);
dbus_bus_request_name (connection, DNSMASQ_SERVICE, 0, &dbus_error);
if (dbus_error_is_set (&dbus_error))
return (char *)dbus_error.message;
if (!dbus_connection_register_object_path(connection, DNSMASQ_PATH,
&dnsmasq_vtable, daemon))
&dnsmasq_vtable, NULL))
return _("could not register a DBus message handler");
daemon->dbus = connection;
if ((message = dbus_message_new_signal(DNSMASQ_PATH, DNSMASQ_SERVICE, "Up")))
dbus_connection_send(connection, message, NULL);
{
dbus_connection_send(connection, message, NULL);
dbus_message_unref(message);
}
return NULL;
}
int set_dbus_listeners(struct daemon *daemon, int maxfd,
fd_set *rset, fd_set *wset, fd_set *eset)
void set_dbus_listeners(int *maxfdp,
fd_set *rset, fd_set *wset, fd_set *eset)
{
struct watch *w;
@@ -291,10 +344,9 @@ int set_dbus_listeners(struct daemon *daemon, int maxfd,
if (dbus_watch_get_enabled(w->watch))
{
unsigned int flags = dbus_watch_get_flags(w->watch);
int fd = dbus_watch_get_fd(w->watch);
int fd = dbus_watch_get_unix_fd(w->watch);
if (fd > maxfd)
maxfd = fd;
bump_maxfd(fd, maxfdp);
if (flags & DBUS_WATCH_READABLE)
FD_SET(fd, rset);
@@ -304,11 +356,9 @@ int set_dbus_listeners(struct daemon *daemon, int maxfd,
FD_SET(fd, eset);
}
return maxfd;
}
void check_dbus_listeners(struct daemon *daemon,
fd_set *rset, fd_set *wset, fd_set *eset)
void check_dbus_listeners(fd_set *rset, fd_set *wset, fd_set *eset)
{
DBusConnection *connection = (DBusConnection *)daemon->dbus;
struct watch *w;
@@ -317,7 +367,7 @@ void check_dbus_listeners(struct daemon *daemon,
if (dbus_watch_get_enabled(w->watch))
{
unsigned int flags = 0;
int fd = dbus_watch_get_fd(w->watch);
int fd = dbus_watch_get_unix_fd(w->watch);
if (FD_ISSET(fd, rset))
flags |= DBUS_WATCH_READABLE;
@@ -340,4 +390,58 @@ void check_dbus_listeners(struct daemon *daemon,
}
}
#ifdef HAVE_DHCP
void emit_dbus_signal(int action, struct dhcp_lease *lease, char *hostname)
{
DBusConnection *connection = (DBusConnection *)daemon->dbus;
DBusMessage* message = NULL;
DBusMessageIter args;
char *action_str, *mac = daemon->namebuff;
unsigned char *p;
int i;
if (!connection)
return;
if (!hostname)
hostname = "";
#ifdef HAVE_DHCP6
if (lease->flags & (LEASE_TA | LEASE_NA))
{
print_mac(mac, lease->clid, lease->clid_len);
inet_ntop(AF_INET6, lease->hwaddr, daemon->addrbuff, ADDRSTRLEN);
}
else
#endif
{
p = extended_hwaddr(lease->hwaddr_type, lease->hwaddr_len,
lease->hwaddr, lease->clid_len, lease->clid, &i);
print_mac(mac, p, i);
inet_ntop(AF_INET, &lease->addr, daemon->addrbuff, ADDRSTRLEN);
}
if (action == ACTION_DEL)
action_str = "DhcpLeaseDeleted";
else if (action == ACTION_ADD)
action_str = "DhcpLeaseAdded";
else if (action == ACTION_OLD)
action_str = "DhcpLeaseUpdated";
else
return;
if (!(message = dbus_message_new_signal(DNSMASQ_PATH, DNSMASQ_SERVICE, action_str)))
return;
dbus_message_iter_init_append(message, &args);
if (dbus_message_iter_append_basic(&args, DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &daemon->addrbuff) &&
dbus_message_iter_append_basic(&args, DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &mac) &&
dbus_message_iter_append_basic(&args, DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &hostname))
dbus_connection_send(connection, message, NULL);
dbus_message_unref(message);
}
#endif
#endif

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