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Configuration file

See file config.dist.yml for a full example of a YAML configuration file with comments.

dns

The dns object configures the behavior of the DNS server. It has the following properties:

cache

The cache object configures caching the results of querying DNS. It has the following properties:

  • enabled: Whether or not the DNS results should be cached.

    Example: true

  • size: The maximum size of the DNS result cache as human-readable data size. It must be greater than zero if enabled is true.

    Example: 128MB

  • client_size: The maximum size of the DNS result cache for each configured client’s address or subnetwork as human-readable data size. It must be greater than zero if enabled is true.

    Example: 4MB

server

The server object configures the handling of incoming requests. It has the following properties:

  • listen_addresses: The set of addresses with ports to listen on.

    Property example:

    'listen_addresses':
    - address: '127.0.0.1:53'
    - address: '[::1]:53'

bootstrap

The bootstrap object configures the resolution of upstream server addresses. It has the following properties:

  • servers: The list of servers to resolve the hostnames of upstream servers.

    Property example:

    'servers':
    - address: '8.8.8.8:53'
    - address: '192.168.1.1:53'
  • timeout: The timeout for bootstrap DNS requests as a human-readable duration.

    Example: 2s

upstream

The upstream object configures the actual resolving of requests. It has the following properties:

  • groups: The set of upstream servers keyed by the group’s name. It has the following fields:

    • address: The upstream server’s address.

      Example: '8.8.8.8:53'

    • match: The list of criteria to match the request against. Each entry may contain the following properties:

      • question_domain: The domain or a suffix of the domain that the set of upstream servers should be used to resolve.

        Example: 'mycompany.local'

      • client: The client’s address or a subnet of the client’s address from which the set of upstream servers should resolve requests. It must have no significant bits outside the subnet mask.

        Example: '192.0.2.0/24'

      note

      Properties specified within a single entry are combined with a logical AND. Entries are combined with a logical OR.

      Property example:

      'match':
      - question_domain: 'mycompany.local'
      client: '192.168.1.0/24'
      - question_domain: 'mycompany.external'
      - client: '1.2.3.4'
    info

    groups should contain at least a single entry named default, and optionally a single entry named private, both should have no match property.

    The default group will be used when there are no matches among other groups. The private group will be used to resolve the PTR requests for the private IP addresses. Such queries will be answered with NXDOMAIN if no private group is defined.

  • timeout: The timeout for upstream DNS requests as a human-readable duration.

    Example: 2s

fallback

The fallback object configures the behavior of the DNS server in case of failure. It has the following properties:

  • servers: The list of servers to use after the actual upstream failed to respond.

    Property example:

    'servers':
    - address: 'tls://94.140.14.140'
  • timeout: The timeout for fallback DNS requests as a human-readable duration.

    Example: 2s

debug

The debug object configures the debugging features. It has the following properties:

pprof

The pprof object configures the pprof HTTP handlers. It has the following properties:

  • port: The port to listen on for debug HTTP requests on localhost.

    Example: 6060

  • enabled: Whether or not the debug profiling is enabled.

    Example: true

log

The log object configures the logging. It has the following properties:

  • output: The output to which logs are written.

    note

    Log entries written to the system log are in text format (see below) and use the system timestamp.

    Possible values:

    • syslog means that the platform-specific system log is used, which is syslog for Linux and Event Log for Windows.

    • stdout for standard output stream.

    • stderr for standard error stream.

    • Absolute path to the log file.

      Example: /home/user/logs

      Example: C:\Users\user\logs.txt

    Example: syslog

  • format: Specifies the format of the log entries.

    Possible values:

    • adguard_legacy
    • default
    • json
    • jsonhybrid
    • text

    Example: default

  • timestamp: Specifies whether to include a timestamp in the log entries.

    Example: false

  • verbose: Specifies whether the log should be more informative.

    Example: false