vagrant-dns
allows you to configure a dns-server managing a development subdomain. It works much like pow, but manages Vagrant machines.
If you use the gem version of Vagrant, use:
$ gem install vagrant-dns
otherwise, use:
$ vagrant gem install vagrant-dns
In addition to your networking config, configure a toplevel domain and a host_name
for your machine. Optionally, configure a set of free matching patterns. Global configuration options can be given through the VagrantDNS::Config
object:
Vagrant::Config.run do |config|
#...
config.dns.tld = "dev"
config.vm.host_name = "machine"
config.dns.patterns = [/^.*mysite.dev$/, /^.*myothersite.dev$/]
config.vm.network :hostonly, "33.33.33.60"
end
# optional
VagrantDNS::Config.logger = Logger.new("dns.log")
Then, register the DNS server as a resolver. RVM users must use rvmsudo
instead of sudo
:
$ sudo vagrant dns --install
On OS X, this will create a file /etc/resolver/dev
, which tells OS X to resolve the TLD .dev
by using the nameserver given in this file. You will have to rerun --install every time a tld is added.
You can delete this file by running:
$ sudo vagrant dns --uninstall
Then, run the DNS server:
$ vagrant dns --start
And test it:
$ dig @localhost -p 5300 test.machine.dev
You can now reach the server under the given domain.
Finally, stop the server using:
$ vagrant dns --stop
The DNS server will start automatically once the first VM is started.
vm.dns.tld
: Set the tld for the given virtual machine. No default.vm.dns.tlds
: Set multiple tlds. Default:[tld]
vm.dns.patterns
: A list of domain patterns to match. Defaults to[/^.*{host_name}.{tld}$/]
VagrantDNS::Config.listen
: an Array of Arrays describing interfaces to bind to. Defaults to[[:udp, "127.0.0.1", 5300]]
.VagrantDNS::Config.auto_run
: (re)start and reconfigure the server every time a machine is started. On by default.
- A records only
- no ipv6 support
- OS X only
- Alpha code