A tool written in python to update freenom's dns records
- Manage (add/update/remove) a domain's dns record with cli
- Automatic records updates according to ip (v4/v6) changes
- Auto renew domains (thanks to Cedric Farinazzo)
- Password encryption
pip install freenom-dns-updater
Let's say you want to add or update your main A/AAAA domain records exemple.tk with your current ip (v4/v6). Simply type :
fdu record update $LOGIN $PASSWORD exemple.tk
Note that if you don't have a ipv6 access, the tool will detect that and will update only the A record (ipv4) of example.tk.
In order to add or update the subdomain sub.example.tk:
fdu record update $LOGIN $PASSWORD example.tk -n sub
If you want to update multiple (sub)domains you could call the tool for each domains.
Even better, you can create a configuration file.
A configuration is a YAML file, which look like :
login: yourlogin@somemail.domain
password: yourpassword
# list here the records you want to add/update
record:
# the following will update both the A and AAAA records with your current ips (v4 and v6).
# Note that if you don't have a ipv6 connection, the program'll detect it and will only update the A record (ipv4)
- domain: test.tk
# the following will update both your subdomain's A and AAAA records with your current ips (v4 and v6)
- domain: test.tk
name: mysubdomain
# here's more advanced exemples
# the following will update the AAAA record with a specified ipv6
- domain: test2.tk
name: # you can omit this line
type: AAAA
target: "fd2b:1c1b:3641:1cd8::" # note that you have to quote ipv6 addresses
ttl: 24440
# the following will update your subdomain's A record with your current ip (v4)
- domain: test2.tk
name: mysubdomain
type: A
target: auto # you can omit this line
# you can omit the record type and give only ipv4 or ipv6 addresses.
- domain: test2.tk
name: ipv6sub
target: "fd2b:1c1b:3641:1cd8::"
- domain: test2.tk
name: ipv4sub
target: "64.64.64.64"
In order to use such configuration, you can use the following command :
fdu update /path/to/config
Where /path/to/config can be either:
- A path to a file (default location is
/etc/freenom.yml
) - A http url (a raw secret gist for instance)
In order to launch regularly an update, you can launch the tool with :
fdu process -c -i -r -t 3600 /path/to/config
Where the params are :
param | description |
---|---|
-c | cache the ip and update only if there is any changes |
-i | ignore errors when updating |
-r | renew the domains |
-t | time (in second) to wait between two updates |
/path/to/config | a path or a url to a configuration file |
For ease of use a systemd unit file is available along the source code.
- Save your configuration into
/etc/freenom.yml
- Copy the
systemd/system/freenom-dns-updater.service
into a valid systemd unit folder (/usr/lib/systemd/system/
for instance). - finally enable the service using
systemctl enable freenom-dns-updater
systemctl start freenom-dns-updater
There's two straightforward choices :
- Launch the previous
fdu process
command - Schedule the
fdu update
command using cron, windows' scheduled task, ...
- The website my.freenom.com is not really stable (503/504 errors very often) => there's 3 retry on every request made by the tool but even with this it's common to face a remote server error
If you want to run this tool in an "isolated" environment there's a docker image available at maxisoft/freenom-dns-updater
Note that if you want to use the ipv6 functionality, you have to enable the docker ipv6 stack
- Update dns records using a gist config file :
docker run -it --rm maxisoft/freenom-dns-updater fdu update https://gist.githubusercontent.com/maxisoft/1b979b64e4cf5157d58d/raw/freenom.yml
- Run the tool in a background docker with a local config file :
docker run -d --rm -v /path/to/config:/etc/freenom.yml maxisoft/freenom-dns-updater