1 Q: Why does dnsmasq open UDP ports >1024 as well as port 53.
2 Is this a security problem/trojan/backdoor?
4 A: The high ports that dnsmasq opens are for replies from the upstream
5 nameserver(s). Queries from dnsmasq to upstream nameservers are sent
6 from these ports and replies received to them. The reason for doing this is
7 that most firewall setups block incoming packets _to_ port 53, in order
8 to stop DNS queries from the outside world. If dnsmasq sent its queries
9 from port 53 the replies would be _to_ port 53 and get blocked.
11 This is not a security hole since dnsmasq will only accept replies to that
12 port: queries are dropped. The replies must be to oustanding queries
13 which dnsmasq has forwarded, otherwise they are dropped too.
15 Addendum: dnsmasq now has the option "query-port" (-Q), which allows
16 you to specify the UDP port to be used for this purpose. If not
17 specified, the operating system will select an available port number
18 just as it did before.
20 Second addendum: following the discovery of a security flaw in the
21 DNS protocol, dnsmasq from version 2.43 has changed behavior. It
22 now uses a new, randomly selected, port for each query. The old
23 default behaviour (use one port allocated by the OS) is available by
24 setting --query-port=0, and setting the query port to a positive
25 value still works. You should think hard and know what you are
26 doing before using either of these options.
28 Q: Why doesn't dnsmasq support DNS queries over TCP? Don't the RFC's specify
31 A: Update: from version 2.10, it does. There are a few limitations:
32 data obtained via TCP is not cached, and source-address
33 or query-port specifications are ignored for TCP.
35 Q: When I send SIGUSR1 to dump the contents of the cache, some entries have
36 no IP address and are for names like mymachine.mydomain.com.mydomain.com.
39 A: They are negative entries: that's what the N flag means. Dnsmasq asked
40 an upstream nameserver to resolve that address and it replied "doesn't
41 exist, and won't exist for <n> hours" so dnsmasq saved that information so
42 that if _it_ gets asked the same question it can answer directly without
43 having to go back to the upstream server again. The strange repeated domains
44 result from the way resolvers search short names. See "man resolv.conf" for
48 Q: Will dnsmasq compile/run on non-Linux systems?
50 A: Yes, there is explicit support for *BSD and MacOS X and Solaris.
51 There are start-up scripts for MacOS X Tiger and Panther
52 in /contrib. Dnsmasq will link with uclibc to provide small
53 binaries suitable for use in embedded systems such as
54 routers. (There's special code to support machines with flash
55 filesystems and no battery-backed RTC.)
56 If you encounter make errors with *BSD, try installing gmake from
57 ports and building dnsmasq with "make MAKE=gmake"
58 For other systems, try altering the settings in config.h.
60 Q: My company's nameserver knows about some names which aren't in the
61 public DNS. Even though I put it first in /etc/resolv.conf, it
62 dosen't work: dnsmasq seems not to use the nameservers in the order
63 given. What am I doing wrong?
65 A: By default, dnsmasq treats all the nameservers it knows about as
66 equal: it picks the one to use using an algorithm designed to avoid
67 nameservers which aren't responding. To make dnsmasq use the
68 servers in order, give it the -o flag. If you want some queries
69 sent to a special server, think about using the -S flag to give the
70 IP address of that server, and telling dnsmasq exactly which
71 domains to use the server for.
73 Q: OK, I've got queries to a private nameserver working, now how about
74 reverse queries for a range of IP addresses?
76 A: Use the standard DNS convention of <reversed address>.in-addr.arpa.
77 For instance to send reverse queries on the range 192.168.0.0 to
78 192.168.0.255 to a nameserver at 10.0.0.1 do
79 server=/0.168.192.in-addr.arpa/10.0.0.1
80 Note that the "bogus-priv" option take priority over this option,
81 so the above will not work when the bogus-priv option is set.
83 Q: Dnsmasq fails to start with an error like this: "dnsmasq: bind
84 failed: Cannot assign requested address". What's the problem?
86 A: This has been seen when a system is bringing up a PPP interface at
87 boot time: by the time dnsmasq start the interface has been
88 created, but not brought up and assigned an address. The easiest
89 solution is to use --interface flags to specify which interfaces
90 dnsmasq should listen on. Since you are unlikely to want dnsmasq to
91 listen on a PPP interface and offer DNS service to the world, the
94 Q: I'm running on BSD and dnsmasq won't accept long options on the
97 A: Dnsmasq when built on some BSD systems doesn't use GNU getopt by
98 default. You can either just use the single-letter options or
99 change config.h and the Makefile to use getopt-long. Note that
100 options in /etc/dnsmasq.conf must always be the long form,
103 Q: Names on the internet are working fine, but looking up local names
104 from /etc/hosts or DHCP doesn't seem to work.
106 A: Resolver code sometime does strange things when given names without
107 any dots in. Win2k and WinXP may not use the DNS at all and just
108 try and look up the name using WINS. On unix look at "options ndots:"
109 in "man resolv.conf" for details on this topic. Testing lookups
110 using "nslookup" or "dig" will work, but then attempting to run
111 "ping" will get a lookup failure, appending a dot to the end of the
112 hostname will fix things. (ie "ping myhost" fails, but "ping
113 myhost." works. The solution is to make sure that all your hosts
114 have a domain set ("domain" in resolv.conf, or set a domain in
115 your DHCP server, see below for Windows XP and Mac OS X).
116 Any domain will do, but "localnet" is traditional. Now when you
117 resolve "myhost" the resolver will attempt to look up
118 "myhost.localnet" so you need to have dnsmasq reply to that name.
119 The way to do that is to include the domain in each name on
120 /etc/hosts and/or to use the --expand-hosts and --domain options.
122 Q: How do I set the DNS domain in Windows XP or MacOS X (ref: previous
125 A: for XP, Control Panel > Network Connections > { Connection to gateway /
126 DNS } > Properties > { Highlight TCP/IP } > Properties > Advanced >
127 DNS Tab > DNS suffix for this connection:
129 A: for OS X, System Preferences > Network > {Connection to gateway / DNS } >
132 Q: Can I get dnsmasq to save the contents of its cache to disk when
133 I shut my machine down and re-load when it starts again?
135 A: No, that facility is not provided. Very few names in the DNS have
136 their time-to-live set for longer than a few hours so most of the
137 cache entries would have expired after a shutdown. For longer-lived
138 names it's much cheaper to just reload them from the upstream
139 server. Note that dnsmasq is not shut down between PPP sessions so
140 go off-line and then on-line again will not lose the contents of
143 Q: Who are Verisign, what do they have to do with the bogus-nxdomain
144 option in dnsmasq and why should I wory about it?
146 A: [note: this was written in September 2003, things may well change.]
147 Versign run the .com and .net top-level-domains. They have just
148 changed the configuration of their servers so that unknown .com and
149 .net domains, instead of returning an error code NXDOMAIN, (no such
150 domain) return the address of a host at Versign which runs a web
151 server showing a search page. Most right-thinking people regard
152 this new behaviour as broken :-). You can test to see if you are
153 suffering Versign brokeness by run a command like
155 host jlsdajkdalld.com
157 If you get "jlsdajkdalld.com" does not exist, then all is fine, if
158 host returns an IP address, then the DNS is broken. (Try a few
159 different unlikely domains, just in case you picked a wierd one
160 which really _is_ registered.)
162 Assuming that your DNS is broken, and you want to fix it, simply
163 note the IP address being returned and pass it to dnsmasq using the
164 --bogus-nxdomain flag. Dnsmasq will check for results returning
165 that address and substitute an NXDOMAIN instead.
167 As of writing, the IP address in question for the .com and .net
168 domains is is 64.94.110.11. Various other, less prominent,
169 registries pull the same stunt; there is a list of them all, and
170 the addresses to block, at http://winware.org/bogus-domains.txt
172 Q: This new DHCP server is well and good, but it doesn't work for me.
175 A: There are a couple of configuration gotchas which have been
176 encountered by people moving from the ISC dhcpd to the dnsmasq
177 integrated DHCP daemon. Both are related to differences in
178 in the way the two daemons bypass the IP stack to do "ground up"
179 IP configuration and can lead to the dnsmasq daemon failing
180 whilst the ISC one works.
182 The first thing to check is the broadcast address set for the
183 ethernet interface. This is normally the adddress on the connected
184 network with all ones in the host part. For instance if the
185 address of the ethernet interface is 192.168.55.7 and the netmask
186 is 255.255.255.0 then the broadcast address should be
187 192.168.55.255. Having a broadcast address which is not on the
188 network to which the interface is connected kills things stone
191 The second potential problem relates to firewall rules: since the ISC
192 daemon in some configurations bypasses the kernel firewall rules
193 entirely, the ability to run the ISC daemon does not indicate
194 that the current configuration is OK for the dnsmasq daemon.
195 For the dnsmasq daemon to operate it's vital that UDP packets to
196 and from ports 67 and 68 and broadcast packets with source
197 address 0.0.0.0 and destination address 255.255.255.255 are not
198 dropped by iptables/ipchains.
200 Q: I'm running Debian, and my machines get an address fine with DHCP,
201 but their names are not appearing in the DNS.
203 A: By default, none of the DHCP clients send the host-name when asking
204 for a lease. For most of the clients, you can set the host-name to
205 send with the "hostname" keyword in /etc/network/interfaces. (See
206 "man interfaces" for details.) That doesn't work for dhclient, were
207 you have to add something like "send host-name daisy" to
208 /etc/dhclient.conf [Update: the lastest dhcpcd packages _do_ send
209 the hostname by default.
211 Q: I'm network booting my machines, and trying to give them static
212 DHCP-assigned addresses. The machine gets its correct address
213 whilst booting, but then the OS starts and it seems to get
214 allocated a different address.
216 A: What is happening is this: The boot process sends a DHCP
217 request and gets allocated the static address corresponding to its
218 MAC address. The boot loader does not send a client-id. Then the OS
219 starts and repeats the DHCP process, but it it does send a
220 client-id. Dnsmasq cannot assume that the two requests are from the
221 same machine (since the client ID's don't match) and even though
222 the MAC address has a static allocation, that address is still in
223 use by the first incarnation of the machine (the one from the boot,
224 without a client ID.) dnsmasq therefore has to give the machine a
225 dynamic address from its pool. There are three ways to solve this:
226 (1) persuade your DHCP client not to send a client ID, or (2) set up
227 the static assignment to the client ID, not the MAC address. The
228 default client-id will be 01:<MAC address>, so change the dhcp-host
229 line from "dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,1.2.3.4" to
230 "dhcp-host=id:01:11:22:33:44:55:66,1.2.3.4" or (3) tell dnsmasq to
231 ignore client IDs for a particular MAC address, like this:
232 dhcp-host=11:22:33:44:55:66,id:*
234 Q: What network types are supported by the DHCP server?
236 A: Ethernet (and 802.11 wireless) are supported on all platforms. On
237 Linux all network types (including FireWire) are supported.
239 Q: What are these strange "bind-interface" and "bind-dynamic" options?
241 A: Dnsmasq from v2.63 can operate in one of three different "networking
242 modes". This is unfortunate as it requires users configuring dnsmasq
243 to take into account some rather bizzare contraints and select the
244 mode which best fits the requirements of a particular installation.
245 The origin of these are deficiencies in the Unix networking
246 model and APIs and each mode has different advantages and
247 problems. Just to add to the confusion, not all modes are available on
248 all platforms (due the to lack of supporting network APIs).To further
249 add to the confusion, the rules for the DHCP subsystem on dnsmasq are
250 different to the rules for the DNS and TFTP subsystems.
252 The three modes are "wildcard", "bind-interfaces" and "bind-dynamic".
254 In "wildcard" mode, dnsmasq binds the wildcard IP address (0.0.0.0 or
255 ::). This allows it to recieve all the packets sent to the server on
256 the relevant port. Access control (--interface, --except-interface,
257 --listen-address, etc) is implemented by dnsmasq: it queries the
258 kernel to determine the interface on which a packet was recieved and
259 the address to which it was sent, and applies the configured
260 rules. Wildcard mode is the default if neither of the other modes are
263 In "bind-interfaces" mode, dnsmasq runs through all the network
264 interfaces available when it starts, finds the set of IP addresses on
265 those interfaces, filters that set using the access control
266 configuration, and then binds the set of IP addresses. Only packets
267 sent to the allowed addresses are delivered by the kernel to dnsmasq.
269 In "bind-dynamic" mode, access control filtering is done both by
270 binding individual IP addresses, as for bind-interfaces, and by
271 inspecting individual packets on arrival as for wildcard mode. In
272 addition, dnsmasq notices when new interfaces appear or new addresses
273 appear on existing interfaces, and the resulting IP addresses are
274 bound automatically without having to restart dnsmasq.
276 The mode chosen has four different effects: co-existence with other
277 servers, semantics of --interface access control, effect of new
278 interfaces, and legality of --interface specifications for
279 non-existent inferfaces. We will deal with these in order.
281 A dnsmasq instance running in wildcard mode precludes a machine from
282 running a second instance of dnsmasq or any other DNS, TFTP or DHCP
283 server. Attempts to do so will fail with an "address in use" error.
284 Dnsmasq running in --bind-interfaces or bind-dynamic mode allow other
285 instances of dnsmasq or other servers, as long as no two servers are
286 configured to listen on the same interface address.
288 The semantics of --interface varies subtly between wildcard or
289 bind-dynamic mode and bind-interfaces mode. The situation where this
290 matters is a request which arrives via one interface (A), but with a
291 destination address of a second interface (B) and when dnsmasq is
292 configured to listen only on B. In wildcard or bind-dynamic mode, such
293 a request will be ignored, in bind-interfaces mode, it will be
296 The creation of new network interfaces after dnsmasq starts is ignored
297 by dnsmasq when in --bind-interfaces mode. In wildcard or bind-dynamic
298 mode, such interfaces are handled normally.
300 A --interface specification for a non-existent interface is a fatal
301 error at start-up when in --bind-interfaces mode, by just generates a
302 warning in wildcard or bind-dynamic mode.
304 Q: Why doesn't Kerberos work/why can't I get sensible answers to
305 queries for SRV records.
307 A: Probably because you have the "filterwin2k" option set. Note that
308 it was on by default in example configuration files included in
309 versions before 2.12, so you might have it set on without
312 Q: Can I get email notification when a new version of dnsmasq is
315 A: Yes, new releases of dnsmasq are always announced through
316 freshmeat.net, and they allow you to subcribe to email alerts when
317 new versions of particular projects are released. New releases are
318 also announced in the dnsmasq-discuss mailing list, subscribe at
319 http://lists.thekelleys.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/dnsmasq-discuss
321 Q: What does the dhcp-authoritative option do?
323 A: See http://www.isc.org/files/auth.html - that's
324 for the ISC daemon, but the same applies to dnsmasq.
326 Q: Why does my Gentoo box pause for a minute before getting a new
329 A: Because when a Gentoo box shuts down, it releases its lease with
330 the server but remembers it on the client; this seems to be a
331 Gentoo-specific patch to dhcpcd. On restart it tries to renew
332 a lease which is long gone, as far as dnsmasq is concerned, and
333 dnsmasq ignores it until is times out and restarts the process.
334 To fix this, set the dhcp-authoritative flag in dnsmasq.
336 Q: My laptop has two network interfaces, a wired one and a wireless
337 one. I never use both interfaces at the same time, and I'd like the
338 same IP and configuration to be used irrespective of which
339 interface is in use. How can I do that?
341 A: By default, the identity of a machine is determined by using the
342 MAC address, which is associated with interface hardware. Once an
343 IP is bound to the MAC address of one interface, it cannot be
344 associated with another MAC address until after the DHCP lease
345 expires. The solution to this is to use a client-id as the machine
346 identity rather than the MAC address. If you arrange for the same
347 client-id to sent when either interface is in use, the DHCP server
348 will recognise the same machine, and use the same address. The
349 method for setting the client-id varies with DHCP client software,
350 dhcpcd uses the "-I" flag. Windows uses a registry setting,
351 see http://www.jsiinc.com/SUBF/TIP2800/rh2845.htm
353 From version 2.46, dnsmasq has a solution to this which doesn't
354 involve setting client-IDs. It's possible to put more than one MAC
355 address in a --dhcp-host configuration. This tells dnsmasq that it
356 should use the specified IP for any of the specified MAC addresses,
357 and furthermore it gives dnsmasq permission to sumarily abandon a
358 lease to one of the MAC addresses if another one comes along. Note
359 that this will work fine only as longer as only one interface is
360 up at any time. There is no way for dnsmasq to enforce this
361 constraint: if you configure multiple MAC addresses and violate
362 this rule, bad things will happen.
364 Q: Can dnsmasq do DHCP on IP-alias interfaces?
366 A: Yes, from version-2.21. The support is only available running under
367 Linux, on a kernel which provides the RT-netlink facility. All 2.4
368 and 2.6 kernels provide RT-netlink and it's an option in 2.2
371 If a physical interface has more than one IP address or aliases
372 with extra IP addresses, then any dhcp-ranges corresponding to
373 these addresses can be used for address allocation. So if an
374 interface has addresses 192.168.1.0/24 and 192.168.2.0/24 and there
375 are DHCP ranges 192.168.1.100-192.168.1.200 and
376 192.168.2.100-192.168.2.200 then both ranges would be used for host
377 connected to the physical interface. A more typical use might be to
378 have one of the address-ranges as static-only, and have known
379 hosts allocated addresses on that subnet using dhcp-host options,
380 while anonymous hosts go on the other.
383 Q: Dnsmasq sometimes logs "nameserver xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx refused
384 to do a recursive query" and DNS stops working. What's going on?
386 A: Probably the nameserver is an authoritative nameserver for a
387 particular domain, but is not configured to answer general DNS
388 queries for an arbitrary domain. It is not suitable for use by
389 dnsmasq as an upstream server and should be removed from the
390 configuration. Note that if you have more than one upstream
391 nameserver configured dnsmasq will load-balance across them and
392 it may be some time before dnsmasq gets around to using a
393 particular nameserver. This means that a particular configuration
394 may work for sometime with a broken upstream nameserver
398 Q: Does the dnsmasq DHCP server probe addresses before allocating
399 them, as recommended in RFC2131?
401 A: Yes, dynamically allocated IP addresses are checked by sending an
402 ICMP echo request (ping). If a reply is received, then dnsmasq
403 assumes that the address is in use, and attempts to allocate an
404 different address. The wait for a reply is between two and three
405 seconds. Because the DHCP server is not re-entrant, it cannot serve
406 other DHCP requests during this time. To avoid dropping requests,
407 the address probe may be skipped when dnsmasq is under heavy load.
410 Q: I'm using dnsmasq on a machine with the Firestarter firewall, and
411 DHCP doesn't work. What's the problem?
413 A: This a variant on the iptables problem. Explicit details on how to
414 proceed can be found at
415 http://lists.thekelleys.org.uk/pipermail/dnsmasq-discuss/2005q3/000431.html
418 Q: I'm using dnsmasq on a machine with the shorewall firewall, and
419 DHCP doesn't work. What's the problem?
421 A: This a variant on the iptables problem. Explicit details on how to
422 proceed can be found at
423 http://lists.thekelleys.org.uk/pipermail/dnsmasq-discuss/2007q4/001764.html
426 Q: Dnsmasq fails to start up with a message about capabilities.
427 Why did that happen and what can do to fix it?
429 A: Change your kernel configuration: either deselect CONFIG_SECURITY
430 _or_ select CONFIG_SECURITY_CAPABILITIES. Alternatively, you can
431 remove the need to set capabilities by running dnsmasq as root.
434 Q: Where can I get .rpms Suitable for openSUSE/SLES?
436 A: Dnsmasq is in openSUSE itself, and the latest releases are also
437 available at http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network/
440 Q: Can I run dnsmasq in a Linux vserver?
442 A: Yes, as a DNS server, dnsmasq will just work in a vserver.
443 To use dnsmasq's DHCP function you need to give the vserver
444 extra system capabilities. Please note that doing so will lesser
445 the overall security of your system. The capabilities
446 required are NET_ADMIN and NET_RAW. NET_ADMIN is essential, NET_RAW
447 is required to do an ICMP "ping" check on newly allocated
448 addresses. If you don't need this check, you can disable it with
449 --no-ping and omit the NET_RAW capability.
450 Adding the capabilities is done by adding them, one per line, to
451 either /etc/vservers/<vservername>/ccapabilities for a 2.4 kernel or
452 /etc/vservers/<vservername>/bcapabilities for a 2.6 kernel (please
453 refer to the vserver documentation for more information).
456 Q: What's the problem with syslog and dnsmasq?
458 A: In almost all cases: none. If you have the normal arrangement with
459 local daemons logging to a local syslog, which then writes to disk,
460 then there's never a problem. If you use network logging, then
461 there's a potential problem with deadlock: the syslog daemon will
462 do DNS lookups so that it can log the source of log messages,
463 these lookups will (depending on exact configuration) go through
464 dnsmasq, which also sends log messages. With bad timing, you can
465 arrive at a situation where syslog is waiting for dnsmasq, and
466 dnsmasq is waiting for syslog; they will both wait forever. This
467 problem is fixed from dnsmasq-2.39, which introduces asynchronous
468 logging: dnsmasq no longer waits for syslog and the deadlock is
469 broken. There is a remaining problem in 2.39, where "log-queries"
470 is in use. In this case most DNS queries generate two log lines, if
471 these go to a syslog which is doing a DNS lookup for each log line,
472 then those queries will in turn generate two more log lines, and a
473 chain reaction runaway will occur. To avoid this, use syslog-ng
474 and turn on syslog-ng's dns-cache function.
477 Q: DHCP doesn't work with windows Vista, but everything else is fine.
479 A: The DHCP client on windows Vista (and possibly later versions)
480 demands that the DHCP server send replies as broadcasts. Most other
481 clients don't do this. The broadcasts are send to
482 255.255.255.255. A badly configured firewall which blocks such
483 packets will show exactly these symptoms (Vista fails, others
487 Q: DHCP doesn't work with windows 7 but everything else is fine.
489 A: There seems to be a problem if Windows 7 doesn't get a value for
490 DHCP option 252 in DHCP packets it gets from the server. The
491 symtoms have beeen variously reported as continual DHCPINFORM
492 requests in an attempt to get an option-252, or even ignoring DHCP
493 offers completely (and failing to get an IP address) if there is no
494 option-252 supplied. DHCP option 252 is for WPAD, WWW Proxy
495 Auto Detection and if you don't want or need to use that, then
496 simplest fix seems to be to supply an empty option with: