| ddnsd | ddns-server | ddns-client |
A Dynamic DNS (DDNS / DynDNS) server written in node.js.
This server is capable of all of the following:
- static dns
- dynamic dns
- device dns
- multiple device dynamic dns
This module consists of 3 plugins:
- ddns-rest (external https APIs, typically https port 443)
- ddns-nameserver (nameserver implementation, typically udp/tcp ports 53)
- ddns-webapp (web interface, typically https port 443)
Commandline
Casual
# Core Library
npm install --save ddns-server
# Default Plugins
npm install --save ddns-rest
npm install --save ddns-nameserver
npm install --save ddns-webapp
For Development
git clone [email protected]:Daplie/node-ddns.git
pushd node-ddns/
mkdir node_modules/
git clone [email protected]:Daplie/ddns-rest.git node_modules/ddns-rest
git clone [email protected]:Daplie/ddns-nameserver.git node_modules/ddns-nameserver
git clone [email protected]:Daplie/ddns-webapp.git node_modules/ddns-webapp
Here's how to create your own nameserver and ddns api using only the default plugins.
'use strict';
require('ddns-server').create({
dnsPort: 53
, httpPort: 80
, filepath: path.join(require('os').homedir(), '.ddnsd.sqlite3')
, primaryNameserver: 'ns1.example.com'
, nameservers: [
{ name: 'ns1.example.com', ipv4: '192.168.1.101' }
, { name: 'ns2.example.com', ipv4: '192.168.1.102' }
]
}).listen();
You can follow this example verbatim and get working results.
There are three steps:
- Create a token for a domain and a device
- Set a device record
- Update the device's ip
Create a Token
The device represents a physical device, like a server, Digital Ocean droplet, VPS, your laptop, or a Raspberry Pi
The domain is a domain the device is allowed to modify.
# node bin/ddns-jwtgen.js <<private key>> <<domain>> <<device name>>
node bin/ddns-jwtgen.js ./privkey.pem example.com digital-ocean-server-1 > srv1-example-com.jwt
Example: A record
curl 'http://localhost:80/api/com.daplie.ddns/dns' \
-X POST \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $(cat srv1-example-com.jwt)" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8" \
-d '[
{ "registered": true
, "groupIdx": 1
, "type": "A"
, "name": "example.com"
, "device": "digital-ocean-server-1"
, "value": "127.0.0.1"
, "ttl": 600
, "token": "$(cat srv1-example-com.jwt)"
}
]'
And test
dig @127.0.0.1 example.com
Note: Yes, token
is used twice, but that's just a workaround for a current problem.
Note: value
will default to the IP address of the connecting client
Note: You can add multiple records for the same DNS host with various devices. This means that some clients will pick any available record at random or will access each device round-robin style.
Update a device IP
All A (and AAAA, if specified) records associated with the device digital-ocean-server-1
will be updated
with the supplied IP addresses:
curl 'http://localhost:80/api/com.daplie.ddns/devices' \
-X POST \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $(cat srv1-example-com.jwt)" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8" \
-d '{
"name": "digital-ocean-server-1"
, "addresses": [ { "type": "A", "value": "127.0.0.1" } ]
}'
Note: groupIdx
must exist and token and be the same as set in the dns record
Example: other records
curl 'http://localhost:80/api/com.daplie.ddns/dns' \
-X POST \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $(cat srv1-example-com.jwt)" \
-d '[
{ "registered": true
, "groupIdx": 1
, "type": "CNAME"
, "name": "www.example.com"
, "value": "example.com"
, "ttl": 600
, "token": "'$(cat srv1-example-com.jwt)'"
}
]'
Note: Yes, token
is used twice, but that's just a workaround to another bug.
Note: MX records have the additional option priority
.
MIT + Apache2