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My dnsmasq brings all the boys to the yard, and they're like, it's smaller than yours! -- @andyshinn

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docker-dnsmasq

It's a dnsmasq Docker image. It is only 6 MB in size. It is just an ENTRYPOINT to the dnsmasq binary. Can you smell what the rock is cookin'?

Usage

It is usually a good idea to use a tag other than latest if you are using this image in a production setting. There are several tags to choose from:

  • 4km3/dnsmasq:2.86-r0: dnsmasq 2.86-r0 based on Alpine 3.15 (for backwards compatibility, latest points to this tag)
  • 4km3/dnsmasq:2.85-r2: dnsmasq 2.85-r2 based on Alpine 3.14
  • 4km3/dnsmasq:edge: dnsmasq 2.86-r0 based on Alpine edge

dnsmasq requires NET_ADMIN capabilities to run correctly. Start it with something like docker run -p 53:53/tcp -p 53:53/udp --cap-add=NET_ADMIN 4km3/dnsmasq:2.75.

The configuration is all handled on the command line (no wrapper scripts here). The ENTRYPOINT is dnsmasq -k to keep it running in the foreground. If you wanted to send requests for an internal domain (such as Consul) you can forward the requests upstream using something like docker run -p 53:53/tcp -p 53:53/udp --cap-add=NET_ADMIN 4km3/dnsmasq:2.75 -S /consul/10.17.0.2. This will send a request for redis.service.consul to 10.17.0.2

As this is a very barebones entrypoint with just enough to run in the foreground, there is no logging enabled by default. To send logging to stdout you can add --log-facility=- as an option.

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My dnsmasq brings all the boys to the yard, and they're like, it's smaller than yours! -- @andyshinn

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