Fwd: Add local DNS forwarder to Windows client

Yves Goergen yves.goergen at gmail.com
Tue Nov 10 11:47:53 CET 2020


Oops, Google Mail cannot reply to all including the mailing list? Why
can't we have a normal web forum here?


---------- Forwarded message ---------
Von: Yves Goergen <yves.goergen at gmail.com>
Date: Di., 10. Nov. 2020 um 11:45 Uhr
Subject: Re: Add local DNS forwarder to Windows client
To: Tomcsanyi, Domonkos <domi at tomcsanyi.net>


Hello Domi,

It's not quite that simple. I'll have to find a DNS proxy that does
what is required to make this scenario work. There is no
hostname/domain pattern because all hosts on a LAN have no dot in
them, just names alone. And nobody knows what names are valid in a
certain network, so all have to be tried. Only one of them should
resolve for a local name. All of them might resolve for global names.
If all are equal, that's fine. If not, we have a problem anyway.

But which DNS servers to query depends on what VPN connections are
active. Only the WG client knows that because it's managing the
connections/tunnels. A separate DNS proxy would need to query the WG
state and also know what DNS servers can be found in each tunnel. This
would best be configured in the tunnel configuration. Anything else
makes it complicated and error-prone.

I really can't imagine why DNS resolution should be very specific.
Nobody uses DNS in local networks? Do you access all your LAN machines
by their IP address? If not, why would you want to do it over a VPN?
This is basically what you're suggesting.

Imagine you have tunnels to two separate local networks active. How
would you set things up, on Windows or Linux, to resolve local host
names from both remote LANs as well as the internet in your default
browser? Internet names should prefer the local DNS resolver, not go
through any potentially slow VPN.

-Yves

Am Di., 10. Nov. 2020 um 09:14 Uhr schrieb Tomcsanyi, Domonkos
<domi at tomcsanyi.net>:
>
> Hello Yves,
>
> I am by no means a person with authority to make such a decision, but your usecase seems to be so specific I would not imagine it would make sense to blow up the size and complexity of the Windows wg with a local DNS forwarder.
> I think it is way better if people just install a local DNS resolver/forwarder on their own. There a ton of choices available, from simply python scripts to large scale servers. You could easily configure any of these to distinguish which DNS server to ask based on the TLD portion of your local domain or whatever other distinguisher you have.
> Then the only thing you need to do is tell your system (either via wg or by other means) to use the local resolver and the case is solved :).
> Also I am pretty sure one of the main philosophies behind wg is to be the same as much as possible on all platforms. Adding a DNS resolver would again mean a lot of complications when compared to e.g. the Linux version, since most Linux distributions already feature some kind of a local resolver by default.
>
> Cheers,
> Domi
>
>
> > 09.11.2020 dátummal, 23:46 időpontban Yves Goergen <yves.goergen at gmail.com> írta:
> >
> > Hello,
> >
> > I've already used WireGuard to connect to private networks and it's
> > quite easy once you figure out how to set it up. (Most tutorials are
> > outdated and haven't been updated, new ones haven't been written.) One
> > thing that's really missing however is DNS support. All I can do now
> > is connect to IP addresses. Names are not resolvable on the other
> > side. If I add the "DNS" directive to my client configuration, it
> > replaces the local DNS resolver and *all* lookups go to that server
> > instead. This isn't working either because I'm on two local networks
> > and each has its own local DNS server that can only resolve its own
> > local names (and forward the rest to the internet).
> >
> > Specifying both networks' DNS servers also fails because when
> > resolving a name, one of them is chosen at random (and the other one
> > isn't regarded) and then you won't be able to resolve some of the
> > names some of the time. This is also very frustrating. And it wouldn't
> > scale to multiple active tunnels.
> >
> > The solution I've read about is to set up a local DNS forwarder that
> > can be configured so that it uses multiple servers and queries each of
> > them and returns only a positive response. This way it could query
> > both local LAN DNS servers and for local names, only one of them would
> > resolve the name. This is a bit complicated to do if you're not
> > permanently connected to a VPN, or if you move from one local DHCP
> > network to another (like with a laptop). And it requires additional
> > software, setup and configuration, and probably intensive maintenance
> > and care. All of this makes WireGuard a pretty ugly alternative to
> > OpenVPN where all of this already works. Despite all the disadvantages
> > of OpenVPN.
> >
> > I'm asking if it's possible to integrate such a local DNS forwarder
> > into the Windows client application. I imagine it would start up
> > automatically once the first tunnel is activated. And it would replace
> > the local system's DNS server setting for as long as it's active (like
> > the tunnel-configured DNS server already does). And it would query the
> > original locally configured DNS server and all configured DNS servers
> > for the active tunnels. It would then be able to resolve local names
> > and tunnel-remote names without any additional work on the user end.
> > The user wouldn't have to perform many complex tasks upon activating
> > or deactivating a tunnel. This would make WireGuard be as simple and
> > productive as I believe it was intended to be (but isn't yet).
> >
> > This probably stops working as soon as other VPN software is used in
> > parallel, but the current "DNS" setting has the same limitation, it's
> > better than nothing and most of the time, you only run a single VPN
> > software.
> >
> > Please let me know what you think of it.
> >
> > -Yves


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