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1 ---
2 ---
3 DNS and DHCP configuration
4 ==========================
5
6 include::uci_menu.inc[]
7
8 == DNS and DHCP configuration
9
10 The _dnsmasq_ and dhcpd configuration is located in **'/etc/config/dhcp'** and controls both DNS and DHCP server options on the device.
11
12 In the default configuration this file contains one _common section_ to specify DNS and daemon related options and one or more _DHCP pools_ to define DHCP ranges serving on network interfaces.
13
14 == Sections
15
16 Possible section types of the 'dhcp' configuration file are defined below. Not all types may appear in the file and most of them are only needed for special configurations. The common ones are the _Common Options_, the _DHCP Pools_ and _Static Leases_.
17
18 === Common Options
19
20 The config section type 'dnsmasq' determines values and options relevant to the overall operation of dnsmasq and the DHCP options on all interfaces served. The following table lists all available options, their default value, as well as the corresponding _dnsmasq_ command line option. See link:http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/docs/dnsmasq-man.html[the dnsmasq man page] for further details.
21
22 These are the default settings for the common options:
23
24 ----
25 config 'dnsmasq'
26 option domainneeded 1
27 option boguspriv 1
28 option filterwin2k 0
29 option localise_queries 1
30 option rebind_protection 1
31 option rebind_localhost 0
32 option local '/lan/'
33 option domain 'lan'
34 option expandhosts 1
35 option nonegcache 0
36 option authoritative 1
37 option readethers 1
38 option leasefile '/tmp/dhcp.leases'
39 option resolvfile '/tmp/resolv.conf.auto'
40 ----
41
42 * Options 'local' and 'domain' enable _dnsmasq_ to serve entries in '/etc/hosts' as well as the DHCP client's names as if they were entered into the _lan_ DNS domain.
43 * Options 'domainneeded', 'boguspriv', 'localise_queries', and 'expandhosts' make sure that requests for these local host names (and the reverse lookup) never get forwarded to the upstream DNS servers.
44 * Option 'authoritative' makes the router the only DHCP server on this network; clients get their IP lease a lot faster this way.
45 * Option 'leasefile' stores the leases in a file, so that they can be picked up again if _dnsmasq_ is restarted.
46 * Option 'resolvfile' tells _dnsmasq_ to use this file to find upstream name servers; it gets created by the WAN DHCP client or the PPP client.
47
48 === All Options
49 [cols="4*1,4",options="header"]
50 |====
51 | Name | Type | Default | Option | Description
52 | 'add_local_domain' | boolean | '1' | | Add the local domain as search directive in resolv.conf.
53 | 'add_local_hostname' | boolean | '1' | | Add A and PTR records automatically for the local hostname.
54 | 'addnhosts' | list of file paths | _(none)_ | '-H' | Additional host files to read for serving DNS responses
55 | 'authoritative' | boolean | '0' | '-K' | Force _dnsmasq_ into authoritative mode. This speeds up DHCP leasing. Used if this is the only server on the network
56 | 'bogusnxdomain' | list of IP addresses | _(none)_ | '-B' | IP addresses to convert into NXDOMAIN responses (to counteract upstream DNS servers that never return NXDOMAIN).
57 | 'boguspriv' | boolean | '0' | '-b' | Reject reverse lookups to private IP ranges where no corresponding entry exists in '/etc/hosts'
58 | 'cachelocal' | boolean | '1' | | When set to '0', use each network interface's 'dns' address in the local '/etc/resolv.conf'. Normally, only the loopback address is used, and all queries go through _dnsmasq_.
59 | 'cachesize' | integer | '150' | '-c' | Size of _dnsmasq_ query cache.
60 | 'dbus' | boolean | '0' | '-1' | Enable DBus messaging for _dnsmasq_. *CAUTION*: Standard builds of _dnsmasq_ do not include DBus support.
61 | 'dhcp_boot' | string | _(none)_ |--dhcp-boot>| Specifies BOOTP options, in most cases just the file name
62 | 'dhcphostsfile' | file path | _(none)_ | --dhcp-hostsfile | Specify an external file with per host DHCP options
63 | 'dhcpleasemax' | integer | '150' | '-X' | Maximum number of DHCP leases
64 | 'dnsforwardmax' | integer | '150' | '-0' (zero) | Maximum number of concurrent connections
65 | 'domain' | domain name | _(none)_ | '-s' | DNS domain handed out to DHCP clients
66 | 'domainneeded' | boolean | '0' | '-D' | Tells _dnsmasq_ never to forward queries for plain names, without dots or domain parts, to upstream nameservers. If the name is not known from /etc/hosts or DHCP then a "not found" answer is returned
67 | 'dnssec' | boolean | '0' | --dnssec | Validate DNS replies and cache DNSSEC data. *CAUTION*: Requires the _dnsmasq-full_ package.
68 | 'dnsseccheckunsigned' | boolean | '0' | --dnssec-check-unsigned | Check the zones of unsigned replies to ensure that unsigned replies are allowed in those zones. This protects against an attacker forging unsigned replies for signed DNS zones, but is slower and requires that the nameservers upstream of _dnsmasq_ are DNSSEC-capable. *CAUTION*: Requires the _dnsmasq-full_ package.
69 | 'ednspacket_max' | integer | '1280' | '-P' | Specify the largest EDNS.0 UDP packet which is supported by the DNS forwarder
70 | 'enable_tftp' | boolean | '0' | --enable-tftp | Enable the builtin TFTP server
71 | 'expandhosts' | boolean | '0' | '-E' | Add the local domain part to names found in '/etc/hosts'
72 | 'filterwin2k' | boolean | '0' | '-f' | Do not forward requests that cannot be answered by public name servers
73 | 'fqdn' | boolean | '0' | --dhcp-fqdn | Do not resolve unqualified local hostnames. Needs 'domain' to be set.
74 | 'interface' | list of interface names | _(all interfaces)_ | '-i' | List of interfaces to listen on. If unspecified, _dnsmasq_ will listen to all interfaces except those listed in 'notinterface'. Note that _dnsmasq_ listens on loopback by default.
75 | 'leasefile' | file path | _(none)_ | '-l' (ell) | Store DHCP leases in this file
76 | 'local' | string | _(none)_ | '-S' | Look up DNS entries for this domain from '/etc/hosts'. This follows the same syntax as 'server' entries, see the man page.
77 | 'localise_queries' | boolean | '0' | '-y' | Choose IP address to match the incoming interface if multiple addresses are assigned to a host name in '/etc/hosts'. *CAUTION*: Note well the spelling of this option.
78 | 'localservice' | boolean | '1' | --local-service | Accept DNS queries only from hosts whose address is on a local subnet, ice. a subnet for which an interface exists on the server.
79 | 'logqueries' | boolean | '0' | '-q' | Log the results of DNS queries, dump cache on SIGUSR1
80 | 'nodaemon' | boolean | '0' | '-d' | Don't daemonize the _dnsmasq_ process
81 | 'nohosts' | boolean | '0' | '-h' | Don't read DNS names from '/etc/hosts'
82 | 'nonegcache' | boolean | '0' | '-N' | Disable caching of negative "no such domain" responses
83 | 'noresolv' | boolean | '0' | '-R' | Don't read upstream servers from '/etc/resolv.conf'
84 | 'notinterface' | list of interface names | _(none)_ | '-I' (eye) | Interfaces _dnsmasq_ should not listen on.
85 | 'nonwildcard' | boolean | '0' | '-z' | Bind only configured interface addresses, instead of the wildcard address.
86 | 'port' | port number | '53' | '-p' | Listening port for DNS queries, disables DNS server functionality if set to '0'
87 | 'queryport' | integer | _(none)_ | '-Q' | Use a fixed port for outbound DNS queries
88 | 'readethers' | boolean | '0' | '-Z' | Read static lease entries from '/etc/ethers', re-read on SIGHUP
89 | 'rebind_protection' | boolean | '1' | --stop-dns-rebind | Enables DNS rebind attack protection by discarding upstream RFC1918 responses
90 | 'rebind_localhost' | boolean | '0' | --rebind-localhost-ok | Allows upstream 127.0.0.0/8 responses, required for DNS based blacklist services, only takes effect if rebind protection is enabled
91 | 'rebind_domain' | list of domain names | _(none)_ | --rebind-domain-ok | List of domains to allow RFC1918 responses for, only takes effect if rebind protection is enabled
92 | 'resolvfile' | file path | '/etc/resolv.conf' | '-r' | Specifies an alternative resolv file
93 | 'server' | list of strings | _(none)_ | '-S' | List of DNS servers to forward requests to. See the _dnsmasq_ man page for syntax details.
94 | 'strictorder' | boolean | '0' | '-o' | Obey order of DNS servers in '/etc/resolv.conf'
95 | 'tftp_root' | directory path | _(none)_ | --tftp-root | Specifies the TFTP root directory
96 |====
97
98 === DHCP Pools
99
100 Sections of the type 'dhcp' specify per interface lease pools and settings for serving DHCP requests. Typically there is at least one section of this type present in the '/etc/config/dhcp' file to cover the lan interface.
101
102 You can disable a lease pool for a specific interface by specifying the 'ignore' option in the corresponding section.
103
104 A minimal example of a 'dhcp' section is listed below:
105
106 ----
107 config 'dhcp' 'lan'
108 option 'interface' 'lan'
109 option 'start' '100'
110 option 'limit' '150'
111 option 'leasetime' '12h'
112 option ra server
113 option dhcpv6 server
114 ----
115
116 * 'lan' specifies the LEDE interface that is served by this DHCP pool
117 * '100' is the offset from the network address, in the default configuration this would mean start leasing addresses from '192.168.1.100'
118 * '150' is the maximum number of addresses that may be leased, in the default configuration this would mean leasing addresses up to '192.168.1.250'
119 * '12h' specifies the time to live for handed out leases, twelve hours in this example
120 * 'server' defines the mode for IPv6 configuration (RA & DHCPv6)
121
122 Below is a listing of legal options for 'dhcp' sections.
123
124 [cols="4*1,4",options="header"]
125 |====
126 | Name | Type | Required | Default | Description
127 | 'dhcp_option' | list of strings | no | _(none)_ | The ID dhcp_option here must be with written with an underscore. The init script will translate this to --dhcp-option, with a hyphen, as ultimately used by dnsmasq. Multiple option values can be given for this _network-id_, with a a space between them and the total string between "". E.g. '26,1470' or 'option:mtu, 1470' that can assign an MTU per DHCP. Your client must accept MTU by DHCP for this to work. Or "3,192.168.1.1 6,192.168.1.1" to give out gateway and dns server addresses.
128 | 'dynamicdhcp' | boolean | no | '1' | Dynamically allocate client addresses, if set to '0' only clients present in the 'ethers' files are served
129 | 'force' | boolean | no | '0' | Forces DHCP serving on the specified interface even if another DHCP server is detected on the same network segment
130 | 'ignore' | boolean | no | '0' | Specifies whether _dnsmasq_ should ignore this pool if set to '1'
131 | 'dhcpv6' | string | no | 'none' | Specifies whether DHCPv6 server should be enabled ('server'), relayed ('relay') or disabled ('disabled')
132 | 'ra' | string | no | 'none' | Specifies whether Router Advertisements should be enabled ('server'), relayed ('relay') or disabled ('disabled')
133 | 'ndp' | string | no | 'none' | Specifies whether NDP should be relayed 'relay' or disabled 'none'
134 | 'master' | boolean | no | 0 | Specifies whether DHCPv6, RA and NDP in relay mode is a master interface or not.
135 | 'interface' | logical interface name | yes | _(none)_ | Specifies the interface associated with this DHCP address pool; must be one of the interfaces defined in '/etc/config/network'.
136 | 'leasetime' | string | yes | '12h' | Specifies the lease time of addresses handed out to clients, for example '12h' or '30m'
137 | 'limit' | integer | yes | '150' | Specifies the size of the address pool (e.g. with start=100, limit=150, maximum address will be .249)
138 | 'networkid' | string | no | _(value of 'interface')_ | The dhcp functionality defined in the dhcp section is limited to the interface indicated here through its _network-id_. In case omitted the system tries to know the network-id via the 'interface' setting in this dhcp section, through consultation of /etc/config/network. Some IDs get assigned dynamically, are not provided by network, but still can be set here.
139 | 'start' | integer | yes | '100' | Specifies the offset from the network address of the underlying interface to calculate the minimum address that may be leased to clients. It may be greater than 255 to span subnets.
140 |====
141
142 Notes:
143
144 * Although called 'interface', this is the network name, i.e. lan, wan, wifi etc. (section names in /etc/config/network), NOT the interface name used internally, like eth0, eth1, wlan0 etc. (the 'ifname' IDs in /etc/config/network).
145 * Although called 'networkid', this is the interface name used internally, i.e. eth0, eth1, wlan0 etc., not the network name (lan, wan, wifi etc.).
146 This departs from 'ifname' and 'network' as used in /etc/config/network and in /etc/config/wireless, so double check!
147
148 === Static Leases
149
150 You can assign fixed IP addresses to hosts on your network, based on their MAC (hardware) address.
151
152 The configuration options in this section are used to construct a '-G' option for _dnsmasq_.
153
154 ----
155 config host
156 option ip '192.168.1.2'
157 option mac '00:11:22:33:44:55'
158 option name 'mypc'
159 ----
160 This adds the fixed IP address 192.168.1.2 and the name "mypc" for a machine with the (Ethernet) hardware address 00:11:22:33:44:55.
161
162 ----
163 config host
164 option ip '192.168.1.3'
165 option mac '11:22:33:44:55:66 aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff'
166 option name 'mylaptop'
167 ----
168 This adds the fixed IP address 192.168.1.3 and the name "mylaptop" for a machine with the (Ethernet) hardware address 11:22:33:44:55:66 or aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff. Note that this is **unreliable** if more than one of the listed mac addresses is on the network simultaneously. It's useful for cases such as a laptop with both wireless and wired interfaces, provided that only one will be active at a given time.
169
170 [cols="4*1,4",options="header"]
171 |====
172 | Name | Type | Required | Default | Description
173 | 'ip' | string | yes | _(none)_ | 'ignore' or the IP address to be used for this host.
174 | 'mac' | string | no | _(none)_ | The hardware address(es) of this host, separated by commas.
175 | 'hostid' | string | no | _(none)_ | The IPv6 interface identifier (address suffix) as hexadecimal number (max. 8 chars)
176 | 'duid' | string | no | _(none)_ | The DHCPv6-DUID of this host.
177 | 'name' | string | no | _(none)_ | Optional hostname to assign.
178 | 'tag' | string | no | _(none)_ | Set the given tag for matching hosts.
179 | 'dns' | boolean | no | '0' | Add static forward and reverse DNS entries for this host.
180 | 'broadcast' | boolean | no | '0' | Force broadcast DHCP response.
181 | 'leasetime' | string | no | _(none)_ | Host-specific lease time, e.g. 2m, 3h, 5d. Note: introduced by r48801 in trunk
182 |====
183
184 As well as adding 'host' sections, you can also enable the 'dnsmasq' section option 'readethers', and add entries to the '/etc/ethers' file.
185
186 === DHCP OPTION example to set an alternative default gateway
187
188 You can specify an alternative default Gateway
189
190 ----
191 config 'dhcp' 'lan'
192 option 'interface' 'lan'
193 option 'start' '100'
194 option 'limit' '150'
195 option 'leasetime' '12h'
196 list 'dhcp_option' '3,192.168.1.2'
197 ----
198
199 use the list 'dhcp_option' '3,192.168.1.2' to set the default gateway. A list of options can be found here link:http://www.networksorcery.com/enp/protocol/bootp/options.htm[here]
200
201 === Booting Options
202
203 Some hosts support booting over the network (PXE booting). DHCP/BOOTP is used to tell the host which file to boot and the server to load it from. Each client can only receive one set of filename and server address options. If different hosts should boot different files, or boot from different servers, you can use _network-ids_ to map options to each client.
204
205 Usually, you need to set additional DHCP options (through 'dhcp_option') for further stages of the boot process. See the _dnsmasq_ man page for details on the syntax of the 'O' option.
206
207 The configuration options in this section are used to construct a '-M' option for _dnsmasq_.
208
209 *Note*: odhcp currently lacks support root-path specification. If you need this functionality, disable odhcpd and use dnsmasq instead.
210
211 ----
212 config boot linux
213 option filename '/tftpboot/pxelinux.0'
214 option serveraddress '192.168.1.2'
215 option servername 'fileserver'
216 list dhcp_option 'option:root-path,192.168.1.2:/data/netboot/root'
217 ----
218 This tells the client to load pxelinux.0 from the server at 192.168.1.2, and mount root from /data/netboot/root on the same server.
219 [cols="4*1,4",options="header"]
220 |====
221 | Name | Type | Required | Default | Description
222 | 'dhcp_option' | list of strings | no | _(none)_ | Additional options to be added for this network-id. *CAUTION*: If you specify this, you also need to specify the network-id.
223 | 'filename' | string | yes | _(none)_ | The filename the host should request from the boot server.
224 | 'networkid' | string | no | _(none)_ | The network-id these boot options should apply to. Applies to all clients if left unspecified.
225 | 'serveraddress' | string | yes | _(none)_ | The IP address of the boot server.
226 | 'servername' | string | yes | _(none)_ | The hostname of the boot server.
227 | 'force' | bool | no | _(none)_ | dhcp-option will always be sent, even if the client does not ask for it in the parameter request list. This is sometimes needed, for example when sending options to PXELinux.
228 |====
229
230 === Classifying Clients And Assigning Individual Options
231
232 DHCP can provide the client with numerous options, such as the domain name, NTP servers, network booting options, etc. While some settings are applicable to all hosts in a network segment, other are more specific and apply only to a group of hosts, or even only a single one. _dnsmasq_ offers to group DHCP options and their values by a _network-id_, an alphanumeric identifier, and sending options only to hosts which have been tagged with that _network-id_.
233
234 In LEDE, you can tag hosts by the DHCP range they're in (section 'dhcp'), or a number of options the client might send with their DHCP request. In each of these sections, you can use the 'dhcp_option' list to add DHCP options to be sent to hosts with this _network-id_.
235
236 Each classifying section has two configuration options: the value of the DHCP option used to distinguish clients, and the _network-id_ that these clients should be tagged with. Here's a template:
237
238 ----
239 config _classifier_
240 option _classifier_ '_value_'
241 option networkid '_network-id_'
242 list dhcp_option '_DHCP-option_'
243 ----
244
245 The placeholder '_classifier_' can be one of these values:
246 [cols="1,4",options="header"]
247 |====
248 | Classifier | Description
249 | 'mac' | Hardware address of the client
250 | 'vendorclass' | String sent by the client representing the vendor of the client. _dnsmasq_ performs a substring match on the vendor class string using this value.
251 | 'userclass' | String sent by the client representing the user of the client. _dnsmasq_ performs a substring match on the user class string using this value.
252 | 'circuitid' | Matches the circuit ID as sent by the relay agent, as defined in RFC3046.
253 | 'remoteid' | Matches the remote ID as sent by the relay agent, as defined in RFC3046.
254 | 'subscrid' | Matches the subscriber ID as sent by the relay agent, as defined in RFC3993.
255 |====
256
257
258 An example using the 'mac' classifier to create a tagged network for openvpn would look like this in the config file:
259
260 ----
261 config mac 'opnvpn'
262 option mac '00:FF:*:*:*:*'
263 option networkid 'opnvpn'
264 list dhcp_option '3'
265 ----
266
267
268 And like this in UCI
269 ----
270 dhcp.opnvpn=mac
271 dhcp.opnvpn.mac=00:FF:*:*:*:*
272 dhcp.opnvpn.networkid=opnvpn
273 dhcp.opnvpn.dhcp_option=3
274 ----
275
276 _DHCP-option_ adds a DHCP option for this _network-id_. See the _dnsmasq_ man page for a complete explanation of the syntax of the '-O' option.
277
278 _force_ is a bool option. It forces dhcp-option to always be sent, even if the client does not ask for it in the parameter request list. This is sometimes needed, for example when sending options to PXELinux.
279
280
281 == Using plain dnsmasq.conf
282
283 It is possible to mix the traditional '/etc/dnsmasq.conf' configuration file with the options found in '/etc/config/dhcp'.
284
285 The 'dnsmasq.conf' file does not exist by default but will be processed by _dnsmasq_ on startup if it is present. Note that options in '/etc/config/dhcp' take precedence over 'dnsmasq.conf' since they are translated to command line arguments.
286
287 You can have 'dnsmasq' execute a script on every action:
288
289 ----
290 dhcp-script=/sbin/action.sh
291 ----
292
293 === DNS and DHCP Ports
294
295 DNS needs TCP and UDP port 53 open on the firewall. DHCP needs UDP ports 67 and 68 open from your zone to/from the firewall. See http://wiki.openwrt.org/doc/recipes/guest-wlan and http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/docs/dnsmasq-man.html (viz "--dhcp-alternate-port") for more information.
296
297 == Examples
298
299 === Static Lease (MAC address hot swap)
300
301 Define a static lease for a host with MAC addresses '00:a0:24:5a:33:69' and '00:11:22:33:44:55' (handy when you use both wired and wireless connection on the same computer/laptop - of course, you can use just one MAC address) and assign the IP address '192.168.1.230' and the hostname 'example-host' to it. We call this _MAC address hot swap_, since IP address stay same, but MAC address changes.
302
303 ----
304 config 'host'
305 option 'name' 'example-host'
306 option 'ip' '192.168.1.230'
307 option 'mac' '00:a0:24:5a:33:69 00:11:22:33:44:55'
308 ----
309
310 === Troubleshooting ===
311
312 *CAUTION*: **Windows 7** has introduced a new _Microsoft-enhanced_ feature. It won't assign IP address obtained from a DHCP server to an interface, if the IP was used before for another interface, even if that other interface is **NOT** active currently (i.e. cable disconnected). This behaviour is unique and was not reported for older Windows versions, Mac OS nor Linux.
313
314 If you try configure MAC address hot swap on your router, Windows 7 clients will end up in an infinite link:http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1531#section-3.1[DORA] loop.
315
316 Solution:
317 - Create a bridge from the wireless and ethernet interfaces on your client
318
319 * it's trivial: google->windows 7 create bridge
320 * you will have to add the MAC address of the bridge to '/etc/config/dhcp'
321 *
322 ----
323 config 'host'
324 option 'name' 'example-host'
325 option 'ip' '192.168.1.230'
326 option 'mac' '00:a0:24:5a:33:69 00:11:22:33:44:55 02:a0:24:5a:33:69 02:11:22:33:44:55'
327 ----
328 * Since the bridge will probably take and alter your ethernet MAC address, you will lose SLAAC on wifi interface, making your laptop IPv6-disabled when only wireless is up.
329 - Another solution is IPv6 friendly, you don't need to create a bridge, nor add MAC address to dnsmasq config file, but it involves user interaction:
330 * When you plug the ethernet cable in, disable wireless interface in control panel (power off wireless won't do it).
331 * When you unplug ethernet cable, enable wireless and disable ethernet.
332
333 Notes:
334
335 * http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-networking/windows-7-refuses-dhcp-addresses-if-they-were/1b72b289-0f58-492f-afb8-e76c80a81f00
336 * _force_ is a bool option that will force dhcp-option to always be sent, even if the client does not ask for it in the parameter request list. This is sometimes needed, for example when sending options to PXELinux.
337
338 === Only allow static leases
339
340 If you want to distribute IPv4 addresses to known clients only (static leases), use:
341
342 ----
343 config dhcp 'lan'
344 ...
345 option dynamicdhcp 0
346 ----
347
348 With this, dnsmasq will consider static leases defined in "config host" blocks and in /etc/ethers, and refuse to hand out any IPv4 address to unknown clients.
349
350 Note that you shouldn't use this as a security feature to prevent unwanted clients from connecting. A client can simply configure a static IP in the right range to have access to the network.
351
352 === Custom Domain
353
354 Define a custom domain name and the corresponding PTR record - assigns the IP address '192.168.1.140' to the domain name 'typhoon' and construct an appropriate reverse record '140.1.168.192.in-addr.arpa'. It works like an entry in '/etc/hosts' but more flexible
355 and integrated.
356
357 ----
358 config 'domain'
359 option 'name' 'typhoon'
360 option 'ip' '192.168.1.140'
361 ----
362
363 another example: redirect www.example.com to 1.2.3.4
364 ----
365 config 'domain'
366 option 'name' 'www.example.com'
367 option 'ip' '1.2.3.4'
368 ----
369
370 === SRV RR for SIP
371
372 To define an SRV record for SIP over UDP, with the default port of 5060 on the host pbx.mydomain.com, with a class of 0 and a weight of 10 one would use:
373
374 ----
375 config 'srvhost'
376 option srv '_sip._udp.mydomain.com'
377 option target 'pbx.mydomain.com'
378 option port 5060
379 option class 0
380 option weight 10
381 ----
382
383 === CNAME RR
384
385 A Canonical Name record specifies that a domain name is an alias for another domain, the "canonical" domain. To specify that the web server also doubles as the FTP server, one might use:
386
387 ----
388 config 'cname'
389 option cname 'ftp.example.com'
390 option target 'www.example.com'
391 ----
392 Note that it is necessary to use fully qualified domain names.
393
394 === MX RR
395
396 If you're running the mail server for your domain behind a firewall (and therefore, with split-horizon for your own domain) then you might need to convince that mailer that it's actually authoritative for your domain.
397
398 If sendmail tells you "Domain of sender address xxx@yyy.zzz does not exist" this is because it isn't finding an MX record confirming that it's an MX relay for that domain.
399
400 Adding:
401
402 ----
403 config 'mxhost'
404 option domain 'yyy.zzz'
405 option relay 'my.host.com'
406 option pref 10
407 ----
408
409 will mitigate the issues caused by split-horizon.
410
411 === TFTP Boot
412
413 Direct BOOTP requests to the TFTP server at the IP address '192.168.1.2' and use '/tftpboot/pxelinux.0' as boot file name.
414
415 ----
416 config 'boot'
417 option 'filename' 'pxelinux.0'
418 option 'servername' 'data'
419 option 'serveraddress' '192.168.1.2'
420 ----
421
422 === Multiple DHCP options
423
424 Multiple DHCP options can be configured under a single dhcp_option object. In this case, option 66 (tftp-server) and option 150 (multiple tftp servers) were used for a Cisco Callmanager deployment.
425
426 ----
427 config 'dhcp' 'lan'
428 option 'interface' 'lan'
429 option 'start' '62'
430 option 'limit' '192'
431 option 'leasetime' '600h'
432 list 'dhcp_option' '66,172.16.60.64'
433 list 'dhcp_option' '150,172.16.60.64'
434 ----
435
436 === Multiple DHCP/DNS server/forwarder instances
437
438 If you need multiple DNS forwarders with different configurations or DHCP server with different sets of lease files,
439 have a look at this link:https:_dev.openwrt.org/ticket/8862[patch].
440 Multiple dnsmasq "named" instances can be configured:
441 ----
442 config 'dnsmasq' 'hotspot'
443 option nonwildcard '1' # Tell dnsmasq to bind specific address(es)
444 option resolvfile '/tmp/resolv.conf.hotspot'
445 ...
446 ----
447
448 Your configs are usually active for all instances, but you can limit them to single instances by:
449 ----
450 config 'dhcp' 'lan'
451 option 'interface' 'lan'
452 option 'dnsmasq_config' 'hotspot'
453
454 config 'host'
455 option 'name' 'chef'
456 option 'mac' '00:00:00:00:00:00'
457 option 'ip' '192.168.1.66'
458 option 'dnsmasq_config' 'hotspot'
459 ----
460
461 The web interface (luci) has not been updated for this patch yet.
462
463 === Assigning DHCP pool to a subnet in a large network
464
465 In DHCP pool limit setting, the start and limit values do *not* refer to the "last digit", they're relative offsets to the network address.
466 * the network address of 10.0.0.1 / 255.0.0.0 is 10.0.0.0
467 * the 10.22.0.1 start address is 22 x /16 subnets away: (2^16) * 22 = 1441792
468 * 10.0.0.0 + 1441792 + 1 = 10.22.0.1 -> start = 1441793
469 * 10.22.0.254 - 10.22.0.1 = 253 -> limit = 253
470
471 ----
472 config dhcp lan
473 option interface lan
474 option start 1441793
475 option limit 253
476 ----
477
478 Test:
479
480 ----
481 root@lede:~# ipcalc.sh 10.0.0.1 255.0.0.0 1441793 253
482 IP=10.0.0.1
483 NETMASK=255.0.0.0
484 BROADCAST=10.255.255.255
485 NETWORK=10.0.0.0
486 PREFIX=8
487 START=10.22.0.1
488 END=10.22.0.254
489 root@lede:~#
490 ----
491
492 === Classifying Clients And Assigning Individual Options
493
494 Assign different dhcp-options to a single MAC address:
495
496 ----
497 uci batch <<'EOF'
498 add dhcp mac
499 set dhcp.@mac[-1].mac=00:11:22:33:44:55
500 set dhcp.@mac[-1].networkid=someone
501 add_list dhcp.@mac[-1].dhcp_option=6,192.168.1.3,192.168.1.2,192.168.1.1
502 add_list dhcp.@mac[-1].dhcp_option=3,192.168.1.2
503 add_list dhcp.@mac[-1].dhcp_option=44,192.168.1.3
504 commit dhcp
505 EOF
506 uci commit dhcp
507 /etc/init.d/dnsmasq reload
508 ----
509 Where 6=DNS, 3=Default Gateway, 44=WINS
510
511 Assign different dhcp-options to multiple hosts:
512
513 ----
514 config host
515 option name 'j400'
516 option mac '00:21:63:75:aa:17'
517 option ip '10.11.12.14'
518 option tag 'vpn' # assign tag "vpn" to this host
519
520 config host
521 option name 'j500'
522 option mac '01:22:64:76:bb:18'
523 option ip '10.11.12.15'
524 option tag 'vpn' # assign tag "vpn" to this host
525
526 config tag 'vpn' # match tag "vpn"
527 list dhcp_option '6,8.8.8.8,8.8.4.4' # assign arbitrary extra dhcp options to this tag
528 option force '1' #dhcp-option will always be sent, even if the client does not ask for it in the parameter request list. This is sometimes needed, for example when sending options to PXELinux.
529 ----
530
531 *CAUTION*: Specifying a dhcp option without any value, would disable that option. so for example you can use:
532 ----
533 list dhcp_option '3'
534 ----
535 to disable sending a default gateway to a specific client
536
537 === Enabling DHCP without enabling DNS
538
539 This is useful when you just want to hand out addresses to clients, without doing any DNS.
540
541 ----
542 config dnsmasq
543 ...
544 option port 0
545 option domain ''
546 ----
547
548 The second option prevents dnsmasq from giving out a domain name and DNS search list to clients: this is useless without DNS resolving.
549
550 Of course, you will want to hand out the address of a DNS resolver to clients:
551
552 ----
553 config dhcp lan
554 option interface lan
555 ...
556 list dhcp_option "6,80.67.188.188,6,80.67.169.12"
557 list dns "2001:913::8"
558 list dns "2001:910:800::12"
559 ----
560
561 The `dhcp_option` entry is meant for dnsmasq, while the more elegant `dns` entries are understood by odhcpd. By default, odhcpd is only used for IPv6, but if you also use odhcpd for IPv4, you can just use `dns` entries for everything.
562
563 === Several DNS servers
564
565 ----
566 config dnsmasq
567 option domainneeded '1'
568 option localise_queries '1'
569 option local '/lan/'
570 option domain 'lan'
571 option expandhosts '1'
572 option authoritative '1'
573 option readethers '1'
574 option leasefile '/tmp/dhcp.leases'
575 option resolvfile '/tmp/resolv.conf.auto'
576 list server '/subdomain.example.com/192.0.2.1'
577 #be careful that some options should be absent (or set to False)
578 #to allow the forwarding towards the "so defined" private networks
579 #http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_network
580 # likely 'bogusprivat'
581 list server '/example.com/208.67.222.222'
582 option rebind_protection '0'
583 ----
584
585 === Conditional DNS Forwarding for Windows Active Directory Domains / DNS Dependent Directory Based Authentication Services
586
587 1. Install dnsmasq using your local package manager
588 2. Edit /etc/dnsmasq.conf
589 . Tells dnsmasq to forward anything with the domain of remote.local to dns server 10.25.11.2
590 server=/remote.local/10.25.11.2
591 . Listen to requests only coming from the local machine
592 listen-address=127.0.0.1
593 . Do not cache anything
594 . A decent dns server will already cache for your local network
595 cache-size=0
596 3. Edit /etc/resolv.conf
597
598 . Local LAN Domain
599 domain ion.lan
600
601 . local dnsmasq server
602 nameserver 127.0.0.1
603
604 . Your main dns server (dnsmasq will forward all requests to this server)
605 nameserver 10.20.1.1
606 4. Start dnsmasq
607
608 5. Test – ping a local server and remote server using the FQDN
609
610 All dns requests will be forwarded to 10.20.1.1 except any matching *.remote.local. server.remote.local will be forwarded to 10.25.11.2
611
612 Credit: link:http://pyther.net/2010/12/dns-conditional-forwarding-dnsmasq/[here]
613
614 ----
615
616 cat /etc/config/dhcp
617
618 config dnsmasq
619 option localise_queries '1'
620 option rebind_protection '0'
621 option authoritative '1'
622 option leasefile '/tmp/dhcp.leases'
623 option localservice '1'
624 option dnssec '0'
625 option cachesize '0'
626 option domain 'example.local'
627 option readethers '1'
628 option logqueries '1'
629 option fliterwin2k '0'
630 #Define your Domain and Domain Controllers IP address here.
631 option local '/example.local/192.168.1.X'**
632 list server '/0.openwrt.pool.ntp.org/8.8.8.8'
633 list server '/1.openwrt.pool.ntp.org/8.8.8.8'
634 list server '/2.openwrt.pool.ntp.org/8.8.8.8'
635 list server '/3.openwrt.pool.ntp.org/8.8.8.8'
636 option resolvfile '/etc/resolv.conf'
637 option boguspriv '1'
638
639 config dhcp 'lan'
640 option interface 'lan'
641 option start '100'
642 option limit '150'
643 option leasetime '12h'
644 ----
645 Almost completed, Now on to the finalisation of the /etc/resolv.conf Traditionally /etc/resolv.conf is populated via symlink based on interface settings which get inserted via script into /tmp/resolv.conf. We're going to disable this symlink because without doing so it would override our static settings.
646
647 You'll want to remove /etc/resolv.conf
648 That will remove the resolv.conf symlink. Then we will add the ip address of the secondary DNS and external resolving address inside the /etc/resolv.conf file finally establishing conditional forwarding, something that should be specified for easy configuration via the GUI.
649
650 ----
651 rm /etc/resolv.conf
652 echo "domain example.local">>/etc/resolv.conf
653 echo "nameserver 127.0.0.1">>/etc/resolv.conf
654 echo "nameserver 208.67.220.220">>/etc/resolv.conf
655
656 ----
657
658 ----
659
660 cat /etc/resolv.conf
661 #Define your Domain Below & Public DNS you desire.
662
663 domain example.local
664 nameserver 127.0.0.1
665 nameserver 208.67.220.220
666
667 ----