I’m attempting to configure an anonymized DNS service using dnscrypt-proxy2, routed through the Tor network. I believe I have everything needed for it to work, but that does not seem to be the case. The DNS resolution is fine, but it’s not being proxied through Tor as desired.
services.resolved.enable = false;
services.dnscrypt-proxy2 = {
enable = true;
settings = {
ipv6_servers = config.networking.enableIPv6;
block_ipv6 = !(config.networking.enableIPv6);
listen_addresses = ["127.0.0.1:53" "[::1]:53"];
force_tcp = true;
use_syslog = false;
odoh_servers = true;
require_dnssec = true;
require_nolog = false;
require_nofilter = true;
anonymized_dns = {
routes = [
{
server_name = "*";
via = ["anon-plan9-dns" "anon-v.dnscrypt.up-ipv4"];
}
];
skip_incompatible = true;
};
sources.public-resolvers = {
urls = [
"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-resolvers/master/v3/public-resolvers.md"
"https://download.dnscrypt.info/resolvers-list/v3/public-resolvers.md"
];
cache_file = "/var/lib/dnscrypt-proxy2/public-resolvers.md";
minisign_key = "RWQf6LRCGA9i53mlYecO4IzT51TGPpvWucNSCh1CBM0QTaLn73Y7GFO3";
};
block_unqualified = true;
block_undelegated = true;
proxy = "socks5://127.0.0.1:9050";
};
};
systemd.services.dnscrypt-proxy2.serviceConfig = {
StateDirectory = "dnscrypt-proxy";
};
useDHCP = false;
enableIPv6 = true;
nameservers = [
"127.0.0.1"
"::1"
];
networkmanager.enable = true;
networkmanager.dns = "none";
services.tor = {
enable = true;
enableGeoIP = false;
torsocks.enable = true;
client = {
enable = true;
};
};
How do you know it’s not being proxied? How are you reaching that conclusion?
Anti Commercial-AI license
It’s not hiding my real ip from websites such as https://whatismyipaddress.com/. If it was torrified, I’d expect something changing on “am i using tor” websites as well.
Is this whatismyip address on the dns server that should have all its traffic going through tor or just DNS? what is my ip address works by responding with the ip address that is connecting to it. If you are only trying to have dns go over tor what is my ip would respond with a non tor ip address but if all traffic is going through tor then yes something is not working.
Edit: Reading more in depth of your post 100% whatismyipaddress will not return your tor ip. You’ve just offloaded name resultion ie. www.google.com is 123.123.123.123 ip address. You are still connecting to websites with your ISP ip.
I don’t think that’s a correct assumption. DNS just resolves domain names to IPs. When you access a website, if the IP isn’t in your dns cache, it will look it up and that’s the only part that should be going through dnscrypt. The actual request to the site goes to the IP directly. To use TOR across your entire system, it should either be used as a VPN or as a system-wide proxy. Dunno how to set that up though…
You should be able to at least activate logs for dnscrypt and see which DNS entries are being requested. To have a deeper look into your traffic, the only thing I know of is wireshark, which can sniff all your packets. You should be able to observe your DNS request going to dnscrypt, possibly through TOR (I doubt the packet tracing will work, sequence numbers or something should be disrupted by going through TOR), then a request going out to the IP it found over HTTP (port 80) or HTTPS (port 443).
Anti Commercial-AI license
Routing DNSCrypt through the Tor network should, in theory, anonymize DNS queries. This configuration would result in the DNS resolver observing the IP address of the Tor exit node rather than my actual IP address, thus hiding my identity from the resolver. I’m not sure why the actual request to the site would go to the IP directly.
For implementing DNS over HTTPS (DoH) via Tor, I followed the guidelines from this GitHub repository and translated them into my current approach.
I’ve gone through DNSCrypt’s logs, but nothing really stood out. I’m a bit lost with Wireshark - there’s so much data even if I filter it by DNS or Tor Socks Port (From my relay).
While you asked about the basis for my conclusions, it’s worth noting that if the Tor proxy were working as intended, I would also anticipate a considerable increase in latency. There’s a huge difference when I enter https://one.one.one.one/help/ normally with
"Use system proxy settings"
in my browser and when I enter it with a"Manual proxy configuration"
with theSOCKS Host set up
and"Proxy DNS when using SOCKS v5"
checked on.sequenceDiagram Computer->>+Nameserver: Where's wikipedia.org Nameserver-->>-Computer: 185.15.59.224 Computer->>+Wikipedia: GET / Wikipedia-->>-Computer: return /
Here is the simplified sequence diagram
As you can see the request to wikipedia itself does not go through a nameserver, only the DNS request does. It’s the entire reason Firefox has the option to proxy DNS queries over the proxy: to avoid DNS leaks
Right now, all that should be happening is DNS requests being proxied, not the rest of your traffic.
To me that indicates the DNS proxy through TOR isn’t actually working with your dnscrypt setup 🤔 However it’s difficult to debug from here. It’s possible the DNS query is slow, but because the actual HTTP request is going through your standard internet with no proxy it’s fast, and when you do turn on the proxy for HTTP/S requests, you observe actually using TOR for everything and thus the latency.
Could you run these commands please
If you feel comfortable with it, you share the logs of dnscrypt (I don’t know what kind of information is in there, so you might have to clean it).
journalctl -u dnscrypt-proxy2
or justsystemctl status dnscrypt-proxy2
. Either here or PMed. Here are encrypted pastebin alternatives.Anti Commercial-AI license
The simplified sequence diagram really helps to picture it. I’ll PM you with the logs.