- # Stubby for OpenWRT
-
- ## Stubby Description
-
- [Stubby](https://dnsprivacy.org/wiki/display/DP/DNS+Privacy+Daemon+-+Stubby) is
- an application that acts as a local DNS Privacy stub resolver (using
- DNS-over-TLS). Stubby encrypts DNS queries sent from a client machine to a DNS
- Privacy resolver increasing end user privacy.
-
- Stubby is useful on an OpenWRT device, because it can sit between the usual DNS
- resolver (dnsmasq by default) and the upstream DNS resolver and be used to
- ensure that DNS traffic is encrypted between the OpenWRT device and the
- resolver.
-
- Stubby is developed by the [getdns](http://getdnsapi.net/) project.
-
- For more background and FAQ see the [About
- Stubby](https://dnsprivacy.org/wiki/display/DP/About+Stubby) page.
-
-
- ## Installation
-
- Installation of this package can be achieved at the command line using `opkg
- install stubby`, or via the LUCI Web Interface. Installing the stubby package
- will also install the required dependency packages, including the
- `ca-certificates` package.
-
- ## Configuration
-
- The default configuration of the package has been chosen to ensure that stubby
- should work after installation.
-
- By default, configuration of stubby is integrated with the OpenWRT UCI system
- using the file `/etc/config/stubby`. The configuration options available are
- also documented in that file. If for some reason you wish to configure stubby
- using the `/etc/stubby/stubby.yml` file, then you simply need to set `option
- manual '1'` in `/etc/config/stubby` and all other settings in
- `/etc/config/stubby` will be ignored.
-
- ### Stubby port and addresses
-
- The default configuration ensures that stubby listens on port 5453 on the
- loopback interfaces for IPv4 and IPv6. As such, by default, stubby will respond
- only to lookups from the OpenWRT device itself.
-
- By setting the listening ports to non-standard values, this allows users to keep
- the main name server daemon in place (dnsmasq/unbound/etc.) and have that name
- server forward to stubby.
-
- ### Upstream resolvers
-
- The default package configuration uses the CloudFlare resolvers, configured for
- both IPv4 and IPv6.
-
- CloudFlare have not published SPKI pinsets, and even though they are available,
- they have made no commitment to maintaining them. Using the currently known SPKI
- pinsets for CloudFlare brings the risk that in the future they may be changed by
- CloudFlare, and DNS would stop working. The default configuration has those SPKI
- entries commented out for this reason.
-
- [CloudFlare's privacy
- statement](https://developers.cloudflare.com/1.1.1.1/commitment-to-privacy/)
- details how they treat data from DNS requests.
-
- More resolvers are available in the [upstream stubby example
- configuration](https://github.com/getdnsapi/stubby/blob/develop/stubby.yml.example)
- and the [DNS Privacy
- list](https://dnsprivacy.org/wiki/display/DP/DNS+Privacy+Test+Servers).
-
- ## Integration of stubby with dnsmasq
-
- The recommended way to use stubby on an OpenWRT device is to integrate it with a
- caching resolver. The default caching resolver in OpenWRT is dnsmasq.
-
- ### Set dnsmasq to send DNS requests to stubby
-
- Since dnsmasq responds to LAN DNS requests on port 53 of the OpenWRT device by
- default, all that is required is to have dnsmasq forward those requests to
- stubby which is listening on port 5453 of the OpenWRT device. To achieve this,
- we need to set the `server` option in the dnsmasq configuration in the
- `/etc/config/dhcp` file to `'127.0.0.1#5453'`. We also need to tell dnsmasq not
- to use resolvers found in `/etc/resolv.conf` by setting the dnsmasq option
- `noresolv` to `1` in the same file. This can be achieved by editing the
- `/etc/config/dhcp` file directly or executing the following commands at the
- command line:
-
- uci add_list dhcp.@dnsmasq[-1].server='127.0.0.1#5453'
- uci dhcp.@dnsmasq[-1].noresolv=1
- uci commit
-
- The same outcome can be achieved in the LUCI web interface as follows:
-
- 1. Select the Network->DHCP and DNS menu entry.
- 2. In the "General Settings" tab, enter the address `127.0.0.1#5453` as the only
- entry in the "DNS Forwardings" dialogue.
- 3. In the "Resolv and Host files" tab tick the "Ignore resolve file" checkbox.
-
- ### Disable sending DNS requests to ISP provided DNS servers
-
- The configuration changes in the previous section ensure that DNS queries are
- sent over TLS encrypted connections *once dnsmasq and stubby are started*. When
- the OpenWRT device is first brought up, there is a possibility that DNS queries
- can go to ISP provided DNS servers ahead of dnsmasq and stubby being active. In
- order to mitigate this leakage, it's necessary to ensure that upstream resolvers
- aren't available, and the only DNS resolver used by the system is
- dnsmasq+stubby.
-
- This requires setting the option `peerdns` to `0` and the option `dns` to the
- loopback address for both the `wan` and `wan6` interfaces in the
- `/etc/config/network` file. This can be achieved by editing the
- `/etc/config/network` file directly, or by executing the following commands:
-
- uci set network.wan.peerdns='0'
- uci set network.wan.dns='127.0.0.1'
- uci set network.wan6.peerdns='0'
- uci set network.wan6.dns='0::1'
- uci commit
-
- The same outcome can also be achieved using the LUCI web interface as follows:
-
- 1. Select the Network->Interfaces menu entry.
- 2. Click on Edit for the WAN interfaces.
- 3. Choose the Advanced Settings tab.
- 4. Unselect the "Use DNS servers advertised by peer" checkbox
- 5. Enter `127.0.0.1` in the "Use custom DNS servers" dialogue box.
- 6. Repeat the above steps for the WAN6 interface, but use the address `0::1`
- instead of `127.0.0.1`.
-
- ### Enabling DNSSEC
-
- The configuration described above ensures that DNS queries are executed over TLS
- encrypted links. However, the responses themselves are not validated; DNSSEC
- provides the ability to validate returned DNS responses, and mitigate against
- DNS poisoning risks.
-
- With the combination of stubby+dnsmasq there are two possible ways to enable
- DNSSEC:
-
- 1. Configure stubby to perform DNSSEC validation, and configure dnsmasq to proxy
- the DNSSEC data to clients.
- 2. Configure stubby not to perform DNSSEC validation and configure dnsmasq to
- require DNSSEC validation.
-
- Either option achieves the same outcome, and there appears to be little reason
- for choosing one over the other other than that the second option is easier to
- configure in the LUCI web interface. Both options are detailed below, and both
- require that the `dnsmasq` package on the OpenWRT device is replaced with the
- `dnsmasq-full` package. That can be achieved by running the following command:
-
- opkg install dnsmasq-full --download-only && opkg remove dnsmasq && opkg install dnsmasq-full --cache . && rm *.ipk
-
- #### DNSSEC by stubby
-
- Configuring stubby to perform DNSSEC validation requires setting the stubby
- configuration option `dnssec_return_status` to `'1'` in `/etc/config/stubby`,
- which can be done by editing the file directly or by executing the commands:
-
- uci set stubby.global.dnssec_return_status=1
- uci commit
-
- With stubby performing DNSSEC validation, dnsmasq needs to be configured to
- proxy the DNSSEC data to clients. This requires setting the option `proxydnssec`
- to 1 in the dnsmasq configuration in `/etc/config/dhcp`. That can be achieved by
- the following commands:
-
- uci set dhcp.@dnsmasq[-1].proxydnssec=1
- uci commit
-
- #### DNSSEC by dnsmasq
-
- Configuring dnsmasq to perform DNSSEC validation requires setting the dnsmasq
- option `dnssec` to `1` in the `/etc/config/dhcp` file. In addition, it is
- advisable to also set the dnsmasq option `dnsseccheckunsigned` to `1`. this can
- be achieved by editing the file `/etc/config/dhcp` or by executing the following
- commands:
-
- uci set dhcp.@dnsmasq[-1].dnssec=1
- uci set dhcp.@dnsmasq[-1].dnsseccheckunsigned=1
- uci commit
-
- The same options can be set in the LUCI web interface as follows:
-
- 1. Select the "Network->DHCP and DNS" menu entry.
- 2. Select the "Advanced Settings" tab.
- 3. Ensure both the "DNSSEC" and "DNSSEC check unsigned" check boxes are ticked.
-
- #### Validating DNSSEC operation
-
- Having configured DNSSEC validation using one of the two approaches above, it's
- important to check it's actually working. The following command can be used:
-
- dig dnssectest.sidn.nl +dnssec +multi @192.168.1.1
-
- This command should return output like the following:
-
- ; <<>> DiG 9.11.4-P1-RedHat-9.11.4-5.P1.fc28 <<>> dnssectest.sidn.nl +dnssec +multi @192.168.1.1
- ;; global options: +cmd
- ;; Got answer:
- ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 26579
- ;; flags: qr rd ra ad; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 2, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1
-
- ;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
- ; EDNS: version: 0, flags: do; udp: 512
- ;; QUESTION SECTION:
- ;dnssectest.sidn.nl. IN A
-
- ;; ANSWER SECTION:
- dnssectest.sidn.nl. 14399 IN A 213.136.9.12
- dnssectest.sidn.nl. 14399 IN RRSIG A 8 3 14400 (
- 20181104071058 20181005071058 42033 sidn.nl.
- YAQl3tef36M9EQUOmCneHKCCkxox3csLpfUOql5i/6ND
- zPrQFsNr3g32HPoxOsi+hD2BE5+bEsnARayDSVLyx0qU
- 6Hpi2rzQ0zGNZZkCJhCsdp3wnM1BWlMgPrCD0iIsJDok
- +DH5zu+yYufVUdSLQrMqA3MZDFUIqDUqSZuYDF4= )
-
- ;; Query time: 77 msec
- ;; SERVER: 192.168.1.1#53(192.168.1.1)
- ;; WHEN: Sat Oct 06 20:36:25 BST 2018
- ;; MSG SIZE rcvd: 230
-
- The key thing to note is the `flags: qr rd ra ad` part - the `ad` flag signifies
- that DNSSEC validation is working. If that flag is absent DNSSEC validation is
- not working.
-
- ## Appendix: stubby configuration options
-
- This section details the options available for use in the `/etc/config/stubby`
- file. The `global` configuration section specifies the configuration parameters
- for the stubby daemon. One or more `resolver` sections are used to configure
- upstream resolvers for the stubby daemon to use.
-
- ### `global` section options
-
- #### `option manual`
-
- Specify whether to use this file to configure the stubby service. If this is set
- to `'1'` stubby will be configured using the file `/etc/stubby/stubby.yml`. If this
- is set to `'0'`, configuration options will be taken from this file, and the service
- will be managed through UCI.
-
- #### `option trigger`
-
- This specifies an interface to trigger stubby start up on; stubby startup will
- be triggered by a procd signal associated with this interface being ready. If
- this interface is restarted, stubby will also be restarted.
-
- This option can also be set to `'timed'`, in which case a time, specified by the
- option `triggerdelay`, will be waited before starting stubby.
-
-
- #### `option triggerdelay`
-
- If the `trigger` option specifies an interface, this option sets the time that
- is waited after the procd signal is received before starting stubby.
-
- If `trigger` is set to `'timed'` then this is the delay before starting stubby.
- This option is specified in seconds and defaults to the value `'2'`.
-
- #### `list dns_transport`
-
- The `dns_transport` list specifies the allowed transports. Allowed values are:
- `GETDNS_TRANSPORT_UDP`, `GETDNS_TRANSPORT_TCP` and `GETDNS_TRANSPORT_TLS`. The
- transports are tried in the order listed.
-
- #### `option tls_authentication`
-
- This option specifies whether TLS authentication is mandatory. A value of `'1'`
- mandates TLS authentication, and is the default.
-
- If this is set to `'0'`, and `GETDNS_TRANSPORT_TCP` or `GETDNS_TRANSPORT_UDP`
- appears in the `dns_transport` list, stubby is allowed to fall back to non-TLS
- authenticated lookups. You probably don't want this though.
-
- #### `option tls_query_padding_blocksize`
-
- This option specifies the block size to pad DNS queries to. You shouldn't need
- to set this to anything but `'128'` (the default), as recommended by
- https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-dprive-padding-policy-03
-
- #### `option tls_connection_retries`
-
- This option specifies the number of connection failures stubby permits before
- Stubby backs-off from using an individual upstream resolver. You shouldn't need
- to change this from the default value of `'2'`.
-
- #### `option tls_backoff_time`
-
- This option specifies the maximum time in seconds Stubby will back-off from
- using an individual upstream after failures. You shouldn't need to change this
- from the default value of `'3600'`.
-
- #### `option timeout`
-
- This option specifies the timeout on getting a response to an individual
- request. This is specified in milliseconds. You shouldn't need to change this
- from the default value of ` '5000'`.
-
- #### `option dnssec_return_status`
-
- This option specifies whether stubby should require DNSSEC validation. Specify
- to `'1'` to turn on validation, and `'0'` to turn it off. By default it is off.
-
- #### `option appdata_dir`
-
- This option specifies the location for storing stubby runtime data. In
- particular, if DNSSEC is turned on, stubby will store its automatically
- retrieved trust anchor data here. The default value is `'/var/lib/stubby'`.
-
- #### `option dnssec_trust_anchors`
-
- This option sets the location of the file containing the trust anchor data used
- for DNSSEC validation. If this is not specified, stubby will automatically
- retrieve a trust anchor at startup. It's unlikely you'll want to manage the
- trust anchor data manually, so in most cases this is not needed. By default,
- this is unset.
-
- #### `option edns_client_subnet_private`
-
- This option specifies whether to enforce ECS client privacy. The default is
- `'1'`. Set to `'0'` to disable client privacy.
-
- For more details see Section 7.1.2 [here](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7871).
-
- #### `option idle_timeout`
-
- This option specifies the time (in milliseconds) to hold TLS connections open to
- avoid the overhead of opening a new connection for every query. You should not
- normally need to change this from the default value (currently `'10000'`).
-
- See [here](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7828) for more details.
-
- #### `option round_robin_upstreams`
-
- This option specifies how stubby will use the upstream DNS resolvers. Set to
- `'1'` (the default) to instruct stubby to distribute queries across all
- available name servers - this will use multiple simultaneous connections which
- can give better performance in most (but not all) cases. Set to `'0'` to treat
- the upstream resolvers as an ordered list and use a single upstream resolver
- until it becomes unavailable, then use the next one.
-
- #### `list listen_address`
-
- This list sets the addresses and ports for the stubby daemon to listen for
- requests on. the default configuration configures stubby to listen on port 5453
- on the loopback interface for both IPv4 and IPv6.
-
- #### `option log_level`
-
- If set, this option specifies the level of logging from the stubby
- daemon. By default, this option is not set.
-
- The possible levels are:
-
- '0': EMERG - System is unusable
- '1': ALERT - Action must be taken immediately
- '2': CRIT - Critical conditions
- '3': ERROR - Error conditions
- '4': WARN - Warning conditions
- '5': NOTICE - Normal, but significant, condition
- '6': INFO - Informational message
- '7': DEBUG - Debug-level message
-
- #### `option command_line_arguments`
-
- This option specifies additional command line arguments for
- stubby daemon. By default, this is an empty string.
-
- ### `resolver` section options
-
- #### `option address`
-
- This option specifies the resolver IP address, and can either be an IPv4 or an
- IPv6 address.
-
- #### `option tls_auth_name`
-
- This option specifies the upstream domain name used for TLS authentication with
- the supplied server certificate
-
- #### `list spki`
-
- This list specifies the SPKI pinset which is verified against the keys in the
- server cerrtificate. The values takes the form `'<digest type>/value>'`, where
- the `digest type` is the hashing algorithm used, and the value is the Base64
- encoded hash of the public key. At present, only `sha256` is
- supported for the digest type.
-
- This should ONLY be used if the upstream resolver has committed to maintaining
- the pinset. CloudFlare have made no such commitment, and so we do not specify
- the SPKI values in the default configuration, even though they are available.
|