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+<TITLE> Dnsmasq - a DNS forwarder for NAT firewalls.</TITLE>
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+<BODY BGCOLOR="WHITE"> 
+<H1 ALIGN=center>Dnsmasq</H1> 
+Dnsmasq is lightweight, easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP
+ server. It is designed to provide DNS and, optionally, DHCP, to a 
+ small network. It can serve the names of local machines which are 
+ not in the global DNS. The DHCP server integrates with the DNS 
+ server and allows machines with DHCP-allocated addresses
+ to appear in the DNS with names configured either in each host or
+ in a central configuration file. Dnsmasq supports static and dynamic 
+ DHCP leases and BOOTP for network booting of diskless machines.
+<P>
+ Dnsmasq is targeted at home networks using NAT and 
+connected to the internet via a modem, cable-modem or ADSL
+connection but would be a good choice for any small network where low
+resource use and ease of configuration are important. 
+<P>
+Dnsmasq is included in at least the following Linux distributions: Gentoo, Debian,
+Smoothwall, IP-Cop, floppyfw, Firebox, Freesco and
+Clarkconnect. It is also available as a FreeBSD port and is used in Linksys wireless routers.
+<P>
+Dnsmasq provides the following features:
+<DIR>
+
+<LI> 
+The DNS configuration of machines behind the firewall is simple and
+doesn't depend on the details of the ISP's dns servers
+<LI>
+Clients which try to do DNS lookups while  a modem link to the
+internet is down will time out immediately.
+</LI>
+<LI>
+Dnsmasq will serve names from the /etc/hosts file on the firewall
+machine: If the names of local machines are there, then they can all
+be addressed without having to maintain /etc/hosts on each machine.
+</LI>
+<LI>
+Dnsmasq will serve names from the DHCP leases file on the firewall machine:
+If machines specify a hostname when they take out a DHCP lease, then they are
+addressable in the local DNS. <B>UPDATE</B> Dnsmasq version 2 now offers an integrated DHCP server
+instead of the lease file reader. This gives better control of the
+interaction with new functions (for example fixed IP leasess and
+attaching names to ethernet addresses centrally) it's also much
+smaller than dnsmasq and ISC dhcpd which is important for router distros.
+</LI>
+<LI>
+Dnsmasq caches internet addresses (A records and AAAA records) and address-to-name
+mappings (PTR records), reducing the load on upstream servers and
+improving performance (especially on modem connections). From version
+0.95 the cache honours time-to-live information and removes old
+records as they expire. From version 0.996 dnsmasq does negative
+caching. From version 1.2 dnsmasq supports IPv6 addresses, both
+in its cache and in /etc/hosts.
+</LI>
+<LI>
+Dnsmasq can be configured to automatically pick up the addresses of
+it's upstream nameservers from ppp or dhcp configuration. It will
+automatically reload this information if it changes. This facility
+will be of particular interest to maintainers of Linux firewall
+distributions since it allows dns configuration to be made automatic.
+</LI>
+<LI>
+On IPv6-enabled boxes, dnsmasq can both talk to upstream servers via IPv6 
+and offer DNS service via IPv6. On dual-stack (IPv4 and IPv6) boxes it talks
+both protocols and can even act as IPv6-to-IPv4 or IPv4-to-IPv6 forwarder.
+</LI>
+<LI>
+Dnsmasq can be configured to send queries for certain domains to
+upstream servers handling only those domains. This makes integration
+with private DNS systems easy.
+</LI>
+<LI>
+Dnsmasq can be configured to return an MX record 
+for the firewall host. This makes it easy to configure the mailer on the local 
+machines to forward all mail to the central mailer on the firewall host. Never 
+lose root messages from your machines again!
+</LI>
+<LI>
+For version 1.15 dnsmasq has a facility to work around Verisign's infamous wildcard A record
+in the .com and .net TLDs
+</LI>
+</DIR>
+
+<H2>Download.</H2>
+
+Download dnsmasq <A HREF="http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/"> here</A>. 
+The tarball includes this documentation, source, manpage and control files for building .rpms.
+There are also pre-built i386 .rpms, and a 
+<A HREF="CHANGELOG"> CHANGELOG</A>.
+Dnsmasq is part of the Debian distribution, it can be downloaded from 
+<A HREF="http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/d/dnsmasq/"> here</A> or installed using <TT>apt</TT>.
+
+
+<H2>Building rpms.</H2>
+Assuming you have the relevant tools installed, you can rebuild .rpms simply by running (as root)
+
+<PRE>
+rpmbuild -ta dnsmasq-xxx.tar.gz
+</PRE>
+
+Note for Suse users: you will need to re-compress the tar file as
+bzip2 before building using the commands
+<PRE>
+gunzip dnsmasq-xxx.tar.gz
+bzip2 dnsmasq-zzz.tar
+</PRE>
+
+<H2>Links.</H2>
+Ulrich Ivens has a nice HOWTO in German on installing dnsmasq at <A HREF="http://howto.linux-hardware-shop.de/dnsmasq.html">http://howto.linux-hardware-shop.de/dnsmasq.html</A>
+
+<H2>License.</H2>
+Dnsmasq is distributed under the GPL. See the file COPYING in the distribution 
+for details.
+
+<H2>Contact.</H2>
+Dnsmasq was written by Simon Kelley. You can contact me at <A HREF="mailto:simon@thekelleys.org.uk">simon@thekelleys.org.uk</A>. Bugreports, patches, and suggestions for improvements gratefully accepted.
+</BODY>
+