hush-seeder is a crawler for the HUSH network, based on bitcoin-seeder, which exposes a list of reliable nodes via a built-in DNS server.
Features:
- regularly revisits known nodes to check their availability
- bans nodes after enough failures, or bad behaviour
- accepts nodes down to protocol version 170002
- keeps statistics over (exponential) windows of 2 hours, 8 hours, 1 day and 1 week, to base decisions on.
- very low memory (a few tens of megabytes) and cpu requirements.
- crawlers run in parallel (by default 96 threads simultaneously).
sudo apt-get install build-essential libboost-all-dev libssl-dev
- NOTE You cannot run this seeder on the same machine as a Hush full node, as both require port 18030.
Assuming you want to run a dns seed on dnsseed.example.com, you will need an authorative NS record in example.com's domain record, pointing to for example vps.example.com:
dig -t NS dnsseed.example.com
;; ANSWER SECTION dnsseed.example.com. 86400 IN NS vps.example.com.
On the system vps.example.com, you can now run dnsseed:
./dnsseed -h dnsseed.example.com -n vps.example.com
If you want the DNS server to report SOA records, please provide an e-mail address (with the @ part replaced by .) using -m.
Compiling will require boost and ssl. On debian systems, these are provided
by libboost-dev
and libssl-dev
respectively.
make
This will produce the dnsseed
binary.
Typically, you'll need root privileges to listen to port 53 (name service).
One solution is using an iptables rule (Linux only) to redirect it to a non-privileged port:
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p udp --dport 53 -j REDIRECT --to-port 5353
If properly configured, this will allow you to run dnsseed in userspace, using the -p 5353 option.
MIT