• funfungo0dg0od@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    Interesting question actually.

    From what I know, there is very few solutions for this purpose. I haven’t found a direct way to update DNS records from docker containers, without a lot of crafting.

    I toyed with registrator but it’s not updated since a long time (https://github.com/gliderlabs/registrator). The idea is to plug container to another backend, etc/consul. For internal traffic, it’s good but if you want to publicly expose the zone, probably need to setup a real DNS server as proxy. Well a lots of setup, especially if you want internet exposition .

    This guy tried an interesting thing, still involving Consul, but it look like what I could publicly expose on internet: https://ilhicas.com/2023/01/25/Creating-a-core-dns-with-consul-docker-image.html

    I’ve also seen that: https://github.com/rlipscombe/dockerns , wich is interesting for service discovery, but probably not more.

    This is good also: https://github.com/phensley/docker-dns

    On my side, I started a little python project that watch docker events, scan container labels, and send a nsupdate add/del records to another DNS server that accept dnsupdate. The smartest approach on my side, but it relies on a quick and dirty script I wrote. If I take time to rewrite it, I guess it could be a good solution for every one. Ho and it also solve the dual-dns issue, as you can forward different records to different servers.

    If you feel I interested, I can publish my python project :)

    • Mr-Mars-Machine@alien.topOPB
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      11 months ago

      Thank you for sharing your experience in such a detailed way. I will take a look at all these repositories you mention ☺️
      About what you say about your project, of course. I would be very happy to try it. If you can publish it it would be great!

      Thanks again!