+++ /dev/null
-dyn-nsupdate: Self-made DynDNS
-==============================
-
-Introduction
-------------
-
-Welcome to dyn-nsupdate_, a collection of tools using BIND_, CGI_ and Python_ to
-provide DynDNS services with your own nameserver. Both IPv4 and IPv6 are fully
-supported.
-
-dyn-nsupdate consists of two pieces: The server part provides a way to update IP
-addresses in Bind's DNS zones via CGI, in a safe manner. The client part uses CGI
-to update some domain to the current address(es) of the machine it is running
-on. Alternatively, some routers can be configured to do this themselves. The
-FritzBox is known to be supported.
-
-.. _dyn-nsupdate: https://www.ralfj.de/projects/dyn-nsupdate
-.. _BIND: https://www.isc.org/downloads/bind/
-.. _CGI: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Gateway_Interface
-.. _Python: https://www.python.org/
-
-Server Setup
-------------
-
-In the following, replace ``dyn.example.com`` by whatever domain will be managed
-through DynDNS. I assume that BIND has already been set up for
-``dyn.example.com`` as a dynamic zone that can be updated through ``nsupdate
--l``. This can be achieved by setting ``update-policy local;`` in the zone
-configuration. Furthermore, I assume the directory ``/var/lib/bind/`` exists.
-
-There are two pieces that have to be installed: A setuid wrapper which checks
-the passwords, and applies the updates; and some CGI scripts offered through a
-webserver. Please read this guide carefully and make sure you understand the
-security implications of what you are doing. setuid wrappers are not toys!
-
-Let's first set up the setuid wrapper. To compile it, you will need cmake and
-boost, including the regex and program_options boost packages. Starting in the
-source directory, run::
-
- cd nsupd-wrapper
- mkdir -p build
- cd build
- DIR=/var/lib/bind
- cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DDYNNSUPDATE_CONFIG_FILE=$DIR/dyn-nsupdate.conf
- make
-
-This should compile the binary ``dyn-nsupdate``. Notice that the path to the
-configuration file will be hard-coded into the binary. If it were run-time
-configurable, then a user could call the script with her own configuration file,
-gaining access to all domains BIND lets you configure. If you want to put the
-files in another directory, change the configuration file name accordingly. Make
-sure the file (and all of the directories it is in) can *not be written by
-non-root*. The setuid wrapper trusts that file. You can now install it and the
-sample configuration file, and set their permissions::
-
- sudo install dyn-nsupdate $DIR/dyn-nsupdate -o bind -g bind -m +rx,u+ws
- sudo install ../../dyn-nsupdate.conf.dist $DIR/dyn-nsupdate.conf -o bind -g bind -m u+rw
-
-Finally, edit the config file. The format should be pretty self-explanatory. In
-particular, **change the password**!
-
-Now, let's go on with the CGI scripts. They are using Python 2, so make sure you
-have that installed. There are two scripts: One is used for clients to detect
-their current external IP address, and one is used to do the actual update of
-the domain. The first script is used by the "web" IP detection method (see
-client configuration below). It should be available on a domain that is
-available only through a single protocol, i.e., IPv4 only or IPv6 only. This is
-required to reliably detect the current address of the given protocol. If you
-want to support both IPv4 and IPv6, I suggest you have three domains
-``ipv4.ns.example.com``, ``ipv6.ns.example.com`` and ``ns.example.com`` where
-only the latter is available via both protocols (this is something you have to
-configure in your ``example.com`` DNS zone). All can serve the same scripts
-(e.g. via a ``ServerAlias`` in the apache configuration). I also **strongly
-suggest** you make these domains *HTTPS-only*, as the client script will send a
-password!
-
-Choose some directory (e.g., ``/srv/ns.example.com``) for the new domain, and
-copy the content of ``server-scripts`` there. Now configure your webserver
-appropriately for CGI scripts to be executed there. You can find a sample
-configuration for apache in ``apache-ns.example.com.conf``. If you used a
-non-default location for the ``dyn-nsupdate`` wrapper, you have to change the
-path in the ``update`` CGI script accordingly.
-
-That's it! Your server is now configured. You can use ``curl`` to test your
-setup::
-
- DOMAIN=test.dyn.example.com
- PW=some_secure_password
- curl 'https://ns.example.com/update?domain=$DOMAIN&password=$PW&ip=127.0.0.1'
-
-
-Client setup (using the script)
--------------------------------
-
-You can find the client script at ``client-scripts/dyn-ns-client``. It requires
-Python 3. Copy that script to the machine that should be available under the
-dynamic domain. Also copy the sample configuration file
-``dyn-ns-client.conf.dist`` to ``$HOME/.config/dyn-nsupdate/dyn-ns-client.conf``.
-You can choose another name, but then you will have to tell the script about it.
-Call ``dyn-ns-client --help`` for this and other options the script accepts. An
-important aspect of configuration is how to detect the current addresses of the
-machine the script is running on. For IPv4, this can only be "web", which can
-deal with NAT. For IPv6, the script can alternatively attempt to detect the
-correct local address to use. The sample file contains comments that should
-explain everything.
-
-Note that the script can update a list of domain names, in case you need the
-machine to have several names. It is preferable to use a CNAME instead, this
-will reduce the number of updates performed in the zone.
-
-To run the script regularly, simply set up a cronjob. You can do so by running
-``crontab -e``, and add a line as follows::
-
- */15 * * * * /home/user/dyn-ns-client
-
-This sets the update interval to 15min. If your IP address changes daily, you
-may want to reduce this to 5min to have a smaller timeframe during which your
-server is not available.
-
-If you want to be emailed about changes in your IP address, pass ``-v`` as
-argument. The script will then only produce output if it has to update the DNS
-record.
-
-Client setup (using a router)
------------------------------
-
-Some routers are able to perform the update of the domain names themselves. The
-FritzBox is known to be supported. To configure it to tell your server about the
-current IP address, go to the DynDNS configuration section of the FritzBox and
-choose the "custom" DynDNS provider. Then enter the following settings:
-
-- Update-URL: ``https://ns.example.com/update?domain=<domain>&password=<pass>&ip=<ipaddr>``
-- Domain Name: ``test.dyn.example.com``
-- User Name: ``just_something``
-- Password: ``some_secure_password``
-
-Note that the user name is ignored.
-
-
-
-Source, License
----------------
-
-You can find the sources in the `git repository`_ (also available `on GitHub`_).
-They are provided under a `2-clause BSD license`_. See the file ``LICENSE-BSD``
-for more details.
-
-.. _git repository: http://www.ralfj.de/git/dyn-nsupdate.git
-.. _on GitHub: https://github.com/RalfJung/dyn-nsupdate
-.. _2-clause BSD license: http://opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php
-
-Contact
--------
-
-If you found a bug, or want to leave a comment, please
-`send me a mail <mailto:post-AT-ralfj-DOT-de>`_. All sorts of feedback are
-welcome :)