Dynamic DNS functionality backed by Google Cloud DNS hosted on Google Cloud Functions. The deployed function can be called with the host, IPv4 and IPv6 address to update. The data can be either URL query parameters or a JSON body.
curl https://us-central1-<project-name>.cloudfunctions.net/updateHost?token=<secretToken>&host=test.example.com&ipv4=192.168.1.1&ipv6=::1
curl https://us-central1-<project-name>.cloudfunctions.net/updateHost \
-d '{ \
token: "<secretToken>" \
host: "test.example.com" \
ipv4: "192.168.1.1" \
ipv6: "::1" \
}'
If neither an IPv4 nor an IPv6 address is provided, the source address of the request is used.
Test payload
{
"token": "<secretToken>",
"host": "test.example.com",
"ipv4": "192.168.1.1"
}
Settings are stored in settings.json
Config | Description |
---|---|
dnsZone |
The Google Cloud DNS Zone name in which the records reside. |
secretToken |
A secret token, used to authenticate users. |
allowedHosts |
A list of hosts that callers are allowed to update. May include "*" to allow all hosts. |
ttl |
Time to live for records in seconds. |
To be able to authenticate against the Google Cloud DNS API, an environment variable GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
must be set, which points to a valid credentials.json. The Google Cloud project name is read from the env var GCLOUD_PROJECT
.
nvm use
npm install
- Setup your Gcloud credentials:
export GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS=/Path/to/your/credentials.json
- To start the emulator in the background:
npm start &
- Send requests to the emulator:
curl localhost:8080?token=<secretToken>&host=test.example.com&ipv4=192.168.1.1&ipv6=::1
See docs for further info.
- Setup Google Cloud Functions
- Install the
gcloud
CLI tool - Authenticate:
gcloud auth login
npm run deploy
If you want to call this automatically under Linux, you can try Dynamic Cloud DNS Client
Copyright (c) 2020, Simon Rüegg. All rights reserved.
Dynamic Cloud DNS is licensed under the MIT License.
See LICENSE for more details.