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Zcash DNS Seeder

This repo contains scripts for building and deploying the Zcash Foundation's DNS seeder. These scripts can deploy seeders for the Zcash mainnet, testnet, or regtest.

There are several options for how to deploy a seeder of your own:

Docker

To build the container, run either make docker or docker build -t zfnd-seeder:latest -f Dockerfile ..

To run the container, use make docker-run or docker run --rm -p 1053:53/udp -p 1053:53/tcp zfnd-seeder:latest. That will bind the DNS listener to the host's port 1053. You could also use --network host if you want to bind to the host's port 53 directly. The seeder is stateless so it's fine to --rm the containers when they exit.

If you want to override the default Corefile (and you should because it won't work with your domain), mount a volume over /etc/dnsseeder/Corefile.

Google Compute Engine

The container built here is designed to run on a GCP Container OS VM, but you'll need to use a start script to disable the systemd stub resolver and mount an appropriate configuration to /etc/dnsseeder/Corefile. An example is available in scripts/gcp-start.sh, which both stops the systemd resolver and drops the config file in an appropriate place for a host volume mount.

Debian package

TODO

Deploying from binary to a generic systemd Linux

Check the releases page for a tarball. Extract the contents anywhere, change to that directory, then run sudo make install. Then edit /etc/dnsseeder/Corefile to replace instances of "example.com" with your desired DNS names.

Deploying from source to a generic systemd Linux

Clone this repo to the machine you want to deploy to, which will need to have a working Go build environment. Then run sudo make install, edit /etc/dnsseeder/Corefile with your DNS names, and you're good to go. If you'd prefer not to do that, the only part of the build and install process that actually needs elevated permissions is linking the systemd configuration.

Further down the rabbit hole, you can look at what scripts/build.sh and scripts/install_systemd.sh do and then do that manually instead. It's Go, so you can pretty much just scp the coredns binary and Corefile to wherever you want.

To remove the seeder, run scripts/uninstall_systemd.sh.

Testing

To see if your seeder instance is up and running, query it with something like

dig @my.seeder.ip mainnet.dnsseed.example.com

DNS configuration

Let's say you want to configure seeders for the Zcash mainnet and testnet under the domain dnsseed.example.com. Then you would add an NS record for the subdomain dnsseed under your example.com configuration pointing to the address where you've deployed the seeder. The seeder will automatically respond to any subdomains as configured, so if your Corefile looks like the default you'll end up with mainnet.dnsseed.example.com and testnet.dnsseed.example.com.

Non-Zcash Networks

If you want to use the seeder on a non-Zcash network:

  1. Choose a unique magic value and port for your network
  2. Choose an initial network protocol version
  3. Set these values in the node implementation and seeder:

If there are any changes in the message format of the seeder messages (version, verack, ping, pong, getaddr, addr), update the seeder with the new message formats.