DNS proxy for filtering out unwanted domains.
What it is
- Run
dnswhisperer
on some box - Use this box as your DNS server
- Add some domains that you don't like to
dnswhisperer.txt
- And voilĂ - all these domains will now shows up as "not found" on your machine
This is primarily meant for blocking online tracking and ad services. In particular, this works well for devices that can't run ad-blocking capable browsers themselves.
How it works
It listens for DNS requests on UDP 0.0.0.0:53, checks that they are queries and checks all names from the Question section against the blacklist. It remembers the result and forwards request to a real DNS server.
When it receives a response, if it was a query for a blacklisted domain it changes IP addresses in all A answer sections to 0.0.0.0 and forwards response to the client.
Note that earlier versions were changing the response code to NXDOMAIN ("not found") instead. This however stopped working with newer iOS versions as they appear to be falling back to hardcoded DNS servers in these cases, thus negating the blacklisting effort.
See code for details.
Example
Here's a single page load of https://reddit.com on iPad, each line is a DNS request:
www.reddit.com
www.redditstatic.com
b.thumbs.redditmedia.com
a.thumbs.redditmedia.com
reddit.com
nope -- ssl-google-analytics.l.google.com
nope -- www-google-analytics.l.google.com
www.redditmedia.com
nope -- events.redditmedia.com
pixel.redditmedia.com
nope -- s.zkcdn.net
nope -- www-googletagmanager.l.google.com
Line marked with nope are the DNS requests that were blocked.
Caveats
This code is few hours worth of effort. It's stable and reasonably clean, but it could use lots of improvement.
- Maxium number of in-flight (pending) requests is hardcoded to 256.
- Real DNS address is hardcoded to 208.67.222.222, one of OpenDNS servers. Can be overriden with
-s 1.2.3.4
command line argument (though it's IPv4 only for now). - It uses a single socket to talk to the real DNS server, so the absolute maximum of in-flight requests is 2^16, because the Request ID field in a DNS packet is 16 bit wide. To increase this cap the code will simply need to maintain 2+ sockets and then track which request was forwarded to the server through which socket.
- Blacklist matching is as dumb as it gets - a linear scan with no less linear substring search of each entry in the query name.
- There's no support for proper clean up of timed out queries.
Can't be daemonized at the moment.Logs to stdout.- Uses select() - mortifying, granted, but, hey, there are just two sockets!
Bulding
- Procure Linux
- Run
make
Running
On console, logging to stdout:
sudo ./dnswhisperer
On console, logging to a file:
sudo ./dnswhisperer -l dnswhisperer.log
Daemonize, without a log:
sudo ./dnswhisperer -d
Daemonize, with a log:
sudo ./dnswhisperer -d -l /var/log/dnswhisperer.log
Sudo's needed because of listening on UDP/53, which is a privileged port. Alternatively, use setuid.