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167 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
167 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: post
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comments: true
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title: "dnscrypt-proxy v2 on Debian/Ubuntu quickly, dirtily"
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category: [english]
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tags: [english, dnscrypt, dns, dnscrypt-proxy]
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redirect_from:
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- /dnscrypt.html
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- /dnscrypt-proxy.html
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- /english/2018/10/21/dnscrypt-proxy-quick-dirty-debian.html
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sitemap: false
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---
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_DNSCrypt-proxy encrypts DNS queries that would otherwise go in plaintext
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ensuring that they won't be seen or modified by anyone in the middle. It works
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as a localhost DNS server sending queries to configured DNS resolvers._
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I guess I should also say why you would want dnscrypt v1 vs v2. V1 which is in
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most of repos currently uses broken resolver by default and only supports one
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resolver at a time, while v2 can use multiple of them while comparing them for
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the best ones.
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This post is on getting v2 to Debian Stable and Ubuntu pre 18.10 which contain
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v1 and I (sadly) don't know a better way to do this.
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In order to check which version your distro has available, check the
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dnscrypt-proxy search page for your distribution:
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- [Debian](https://packages.debian.org/dnscrypt-proxy)
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- 2018-11-03: the version in _stretch (stable)_ is `1.9.4-1` which has the
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issues why I wrote this post.
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- [Ubuntu](https://packages.ubuntu.com/dnscrypt-proxy)
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- 2018-11-03: I cannot find dnscrypt-proxy from Ubuntu at all, while I am sure
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it previously had the Debian version 1.
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---
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1. Update your local apt cache `sudo apt update` and install curl that will be
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used for downloading the package from Debian `sudo apt-get install curl`
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Check the version number at
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[Debian's dnscrypt-proxy package download page](https://packages.debian.org/sid/amd64/dnscrypt-proxy/download)
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and fix it below:
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2: download the
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package`curl -LO https://deb.debian.org/debian/pool/main/d/dnscrypt-proxy/dnscrypt-proxy_2.0.16-2_amd64.deb`
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**WARNING: This part is not supported by either Debian or Ubuntu, you are taking
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a package from another distribution and attempting to install it on another.**
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**WARNING: Usually when you use apt, it will verify package signatures and
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ensure that the package hasn't been tampered with. I have no idea how to do that
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with direct downloads (if it's even possible) so you will be trusting the Debian
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repository mirror or CDN blindly.**
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3. install the package you downloaded: `sudo dpkg -i dnscrypt-proxy<TAB>` (TAB
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(above capslock) automatically completes rest of the filename for you).
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1. In case there was a problem, attmept `sudo apt-get install -f` to fix
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broken package depedencies. **Remember to check that what it suggests
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looks reasonable!** If it asks to remove dnscrypt-proxy, you are out of
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luck and should do that instead of attempting to replace important system
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components from another distribution (creating "Frankendebian").
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Hopefully dnscrypt-proxy is now running, check `journalctl -u dnscrypt-proxy`,
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there should be a line saying
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`[NOTICE] Wiring systemd TCP socket #0, dnscrypt-proxy.socket, 127.0.2.1:53`
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Edit `/etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf` to avoid overlapping resolvers
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breaking each other, it should say say `dns=none` e.g.:
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```
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[main]
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plugins=ifupdown,keyfile
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dns=none
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```
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if it doesn't say dns=none, fix it and restart it with:
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`systemctl restart NetworkManager`
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Edit your /etc/resolv.conf, for example:
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```
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sudo su -
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rm /etc/resolv.conf
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nano /etc/resolv.conf && chattr +i /etc/resolv.conf
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```
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chattr +i will prevent modifying the file unless chattr -i is done first.
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Example resolv.conf:
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```
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nameserver 127.0.2.1
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options edns0 single-request-reopen
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#search mikaela.info
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```
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Nameserver is the host where dnscrypt-proxy said to be listening on in
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journalctl, options are from dnscrypt-proxy documentation and search means
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domains that are automatically searched for if you don't use fully qualified
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domain names, e.g. `ssh machine` in my (uncommented) config would turn into
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`ssh machine.mikaela.info`. Update: I find this a privacy leakage (whenever
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NXDOMAIN happens), which is why I nowadays have it commented.
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You should also tell dhclient to not touch resolv.conf or you may get many files
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into `/etc` beginning with names `resolv.conf.dhclient-new.` according to
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[Debian wiki](https://wiki.debian.org/resolv.conf#Stop_dhclient_from_modifying_.2Fetc.2Fresolv.conf)
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which gives the following two commands and
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[Debian bug 860928](https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=860928):
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```bash
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echo 'make_resolv_conf() { :; }' > /etc/dhcp/dhclient-enter-hooks.d/leave_my_resolv_conf_alone
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chmod 755 /etc/dhcp/dhclient-enter-hooks.d/leave_my_resolv_conf_alone
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```
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---
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**WARNING from 2018-10-21!** It appears that the cache and log directories of
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dnscrypt-proxy don't sometimes get created automatically (at least on Debian
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GNU/Linux 9.6 (stretch).
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If this happens to you or you would like to be sure to get them:
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```
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sudo mkdir -p /var/cache/dnscrypt-proxy/ /var/log/dnscrypt-proxy/
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sudo chown -R _dnscrypt-proxy:nogroup /var/cache/dnscrypt-proxy /var/log/dnscrypt-proxy
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```
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---
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For the curious my dnscrypt-proxy config
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[is in my shell-things repository](https://github.com/Mikaela/shell-things/tree/master/etc/dnscrypt-proxy)
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[mirror](https://gitea.blesmrt.net/mikaela/shell-things/src/branch/master/etc/dnscrypt-proxy).
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---
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## 2019-07-22 update
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I have also started performing local DNSSEC validation by running Unbound in
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front of DNSCrypt-proxy, so my queries go resolv.conf -> Unbound ->
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dnscrypt-proxy -> configured resolvers. This has the advantage that if the
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resolver didn't perform DNSSEC validation or lied about performing it, the
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protection by DNSSEC would still be received.
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The steps are simple:
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1. `sudo apt install unbound`
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- You should see a file
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`/etc/unbound/unbound.conf.d/root-auto-trust-anchor-file.conf` which simply
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says `server:` and on another line after intending
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`auto-trust-anchor-file: "/var/lib/unbound/root.key"` (the path varies by
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distribution) which means it's performing DNSSEC validation with those
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trust anchors.
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2. `sudo nano /etc/unbound/unbound.conf.d/dnscrypt-proxy.conf`
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```
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do-not-query-localhost: no
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forward-zone:
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name: "."
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forward-addr: 127.0.2.1@53
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```
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3. `sudo systemctl restart unbound`
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4. Ensure `/etc/resolv.conf` points to `127.0.0.1` and optionally `::1` instead
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of `127.0.2.1` where dnscrypt-proxy runs by default. For more details, CTRL +
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F for resolv.conf or chattr.
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