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Linux

How to roll your own DynDNS…

I didn’t want to rely upon services like DynDNS.org (which obviously was a smart decision since they now pretty much closed their free service) so I rolled my own…

What you need is the following:

  1. Host your domain yourself using the popular nameserver “Bind.”
  2. Host a small CGI script that will tell you your external IP (or use one of the many free services available that do the same).
  3. Run a machine within your LAN 24×7 which can detect changes of your external IP and update your hostname accordingly.

Step 1: Setup Bind for Dynamic DNS Update

to do

Step 2: CGI Script

The CGI script that needs to be deployed somewhere in the Internet to tell you your external IP is very simple and tiny and looks like this:

#!/bin/bash
echo "Content-type: text/plain"
echo ""
echo "$REMOTE_ADDR"

Step 3: External IP Probe

Here’s the script that needs to run periodically on a machine (I use Ubuntu server) within your LAN (or on your Internet gateway, although if you have the means to run stuff on your gateway you could employ a more elegant, “proper” solution):

#!/bin/bash
lockfile="/run/extip"
lockfile-check $lockfile
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
    echo "Locked, bailing out..."
    exit 1
fi

lockfile-create $lockfile
filename="/var/lib/extip.txt"
logfile="/var/log/extip.log"
keyfile="/root/var/lib/dyndns/Kmyhost.dyn.example.org.+163+56719.key"
cur_ip=`curl -s http://example.org/cgi-bin/myip.sh`
prev_ip=`cat $filename`
if [ $cur_ip != $prev_ip ]; then
    echo "`date --rfc-3339=seconds` IP changed, old IP: $prev_ip, new IP: $cur_ip" >>$logfile
    echo "$cur_ip" >$filename
    # Wait 5 sec to complete, force kill if nsupdate not done after 10 sec
    timeout -k 10s 5s nsupdate -k $keyfile -v<<EOF
server example.org
zone dyn.example.org.
update delete myhost.dyn.example.org. A
update add myhost.dyn.example.org. 60 A $cur_ip
send
EOF
fi
lockfile-remove $lockfile

The above script — even though it’s pretty small — is not a quick’n’dirty hack, but even employs some sanity checks:

  • It makes sure that only one instance is running at any time, and
  • it uses the timeout command from the Linux coreutils package to enforce that the nsupdate command will be terminated if it takes longer than 10 s (e. g. due to network issues).

I run the above script once a minute as follows:

# cat /etc/cron.d/extip 
* * * * * root /usr/local/bin/pubextip.sh

That’s it!

Let me know what you think. Suggestions how to improve things are, as always, very welcome!