Skip to content

sleinen/openwrt-nsupdate

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

3 Commits
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

DNS UPDATE (RFC 2136) support for OpenWRT

Many Internet users get a dynamic IPv4 address from their ISP, and use a "router" (actually a NAT) to give Internet access to devices on the "internal" network.

But it is often desirable to have a stable handle for whatever public IPv4 address is currently used. A DNS hostname is the obvious choice here. When the router notices that the ISP assigned it a new IPv4 address, it should be able to update the information (an "A" record) in DNS.

A popular method for updating DNS information is the HTTP-based DynDNS protocol. Many routers support it.

But there is also a "native" update method that's part of the DNS standard itself. It is described in RFC 2136, "Dynamic Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS UPDATE)" by Paul Vixie et al. (1997).

If your DNS provider supports RFC 2136 (DNS UPDATE), they should provide you with a named key for your zone. It should be comprised of two related files, a K.key file and a K.private file. You need to put these files on the router.

Based on Justin Foell's instructions on http://www.foell.org/justin/diy-dynamic-dns-with-openwrt-bind/, I have written a script to dynamically update the router's DNS A record when the WAN interface is brought up or changes its IPv4 address.

The script includes installation instructions. Note that it needs to be parametrized with the correct hostname, authoritative DNS server, etc. All the parametrization should be concentrated near the top of the script.

Compared to Justin's original script, I added some logging to syslog.

About

Update your router's IP address in DNS using the DNS UPDATE protocol

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages