├── LICENSE ├── README.md ├── lessload-installer.bat ├── re-dnscrypt-v2.bat ├── re-dnscrypt.bat └── win64 ├── LICENSE ├── dnscrypt-proxy.exe ├── example-blacklist.txt ├── example-cloaking-rules.txt ├── example-dnscrypt-proxy.toml ├── example-forwarding-rules.txt ├── example-ip-blacklist.txt ├── example-whitelist.txt ├── localhost.pem ├── service-install.bat ├── service-restart.bat └── service-uninstall.bat /LICENSE: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 3 | 4 | Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 5 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies 6 | of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. 7 | 8 | Preamble 9 | 10 | The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for 11 | software and other kinds of works. 12 | 13 | The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed 14 | to take away your freedom to share and change the works. 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Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16. 613 | 614 | If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided 615 | above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms, 616 | reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates 617 | an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the 618 | Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a 619 | copy of the Program in return for a fee. 620 | 621 | END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS 622 | 623 | How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs 624 | 625 | If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest 626 | possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it 627 | free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms. 628 | 629 | To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest 630 | to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively 631 | state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least 632 | the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. 633 | 634 | 635 | Copyright (C) 636 | 637 | This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify 638 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 639 | the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or 640 | (at your option) any later version. 641 | 642 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 643 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 644 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 645 | GNU General Public License for more details. 646 | 647 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 648 | along with this program. If not, see . 649 | 650 | Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. 651 | 652 | If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short 653 | notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: 654 | 655 | Copyright (C) 656 | This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. 657 | This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it 658 | under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. 659 | 660 | The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate 661 | parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands 662 | might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box". 663 | 664 | You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school, 665 | if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. 666 | For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see 667 | . 668 | 669 | The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program 670 | into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you 671 | may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with 672 | the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General 673 | Public License instead of this License. But first, please read 674 | . 675 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 2 | ## USE _dnscrypt-proxy_ with A captive portal (from public wifi) without reload 3 | You can use it without reload by doing this. 4 | 1. add fake url-ip in cloak rule, used for redirect to captive portal. ( real url make browser cache them and not redirect )
5 | add something like this in cloak rule. 6 | ``` 7 | =fakeportal.com 34.107.221.82 8 | ``` 9 | and go to fakeportal.com for detect and redirect to captive portal page. 10 | some portal will fail because they not use private ip. You need to continue with step 2.
11 | 12 | 2. add captive portal url and their real IP in `cloaking-rules.txt`.
13 | add something look like this. 14 | ``` 15 | =portal.web-login.com 10.10.0.1 16 | =portal-content.web-login.com 10.10.0.2 17 | ``` 18 | You can obtain ip by nslookup, something like 19 | ``` 20 | > nslookup portal.web-login.com 10.10.0.10 21 | Server: UnKnown 22 | Address: 10.10.0.10 23 | 24 | Non-authoritative answer: 25 | Name: portal.web-login.com 26 | Addresses: 10.10.0.1 27 | 10.10.0.2 28 | ``` 29 | where `portal.web-login.com` is a login page. and `10.10.0.10` is a dns ip. 30 | - why cloak it not forward it? because forward rule not work when you set `force_tcp = true` 31 | 32 | ## _dnscrypt-proxy_ Pain Point.! 33 | - their `netprob` not work correctly on many public wifi that use web portal login. you can ping any IP but not real respond from that IP. 34 | - `dnscrypt-proxy` stop it self when resolver was outdated, and doesn't have the secure way to update itself. make dns traffic leak when restart it. 35 | - _(v2.0.45 problem solved)_ Cloaking rule doesn't make domain have multiple IP. 36 | - `*.hostname` was equal to `hostname` but `*ads.*` not equal to `ads.*`. Is it logical? Multiple logic in one program. 37 | - When you set `force_tcp = true` normal dns from forward rule will go out with TCP port 53. That not work with many public wifi dns. (8.8.8.8 work fine) 38 | - Firefox randomly fails to resolve AAAA when use dnscrypt-proxy (problem may from Firefox). but dev fastly close the issue for $@#%@$@ 39 | ## _dnscrypt-proxy_ Weird..! 40 | - Cloak rule was overwrite by Block rule. This so weird. Why people need block their own cloak rule.! User may use large set of block list and it's will block their cloak rule someday. (add blocked url to allow rule to make it work) 41 | 42 |
43 | 44 | # DNSCrypt installer & reloader 45 | 46 | cmd script automatic detect internet and start. one click base to re-run dnscrypt-proxy. 47 | 48 | 1. download `dnscrypt-proxy-win64-x.x.x.zip` ( [source](https://github.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-proxy/releases/) ) and place `win64` folder same directory as `lessload-installer.bat`
(Modify needed in Windows 32bit) 49 | 50 | 2. run `lessload-installer.bat` _[run as admin]_ to install
(it will install loopback to all interface & block all internet by default) 51 | 52 | 3. config your `dnscrypt-proxy.toml` and other. 53 | 54 | 4. one click `re-dnscrypt.bat` _[run as admin]_ to check internet and start dnscrypt, script will automatic detect internet or wait for you to login through Web Portal and run dnscrypt-proxy. 55 | 56 | ( recommend you to run script before connect wifi , Web Captive Portal will not show _in some case_ if you run script after connect wifi )
57 | ( no need to stop service just restart to get internet connection back ) 58 | 59 | ** Windows 10 v2004 ** 60 | - you need to enable NCSI Active Probing, detail in [Other problem](https://github.com/lessload/LESSLOAD-DNSCrypt#other-problem) 61 | - modify NCSI server got NCSI problem in some case. 62 | 63 | ** Windows 10 v20H2 the problem was gone. 64 | 65 | ## Pro 66 | - support Web Captive Portal, Normally `dnscrypt-proxy` may break web portal in many case. 67 | - easy to re-run dnscrypt-proxy by run `re-dnscrypt.bat` _[run as admin]_ 68 | - just script, no need more resource usage. 69 | - less DNS traffic leak ( `just 5s` `nearly 0 if you use static sdns://` ) 70 | - clean. 71 | 72 | ## Con 73 | - you need to config *.toml manual. ( [From this manual](https://github.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-proxy/wiki/Configuration) ) 74 | - Request PowerShell or Curl, work on Windows 8 or above. 75 | 76 | ## Other problem with this script 77 | - some anti-virus may block PowerShell to connect the internet. make it allow. 78 | - disable DNS Client service `(dnscache)` in windows will break internet connection of UWP apps, not recommend to do that. 79 | - Public wifi got NCSI problem on Windows 10 v2004. [for now. fix by run this in cmd
80 | `reg add "HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\NlaSvc\Parameters\Internet" /v "EnableActiveProbing" /t REG_DWORD /d "1" /f` 81 |
] 82 | 83 | ## v2 note 84 | - change script to download resolver before start `dnscrypt-proxy` to prevent `dnscrypt-proxy` stop it self when resolver was outdated. 85 | - change `powershell` to `curl` to download resolver. this improve speed and reduce cpu impact
86 | ( on Intel Atom `Invoke-WebRequest` make cpu ran at 100% speed, for `curl` run only 70% )
87 | ( in old Windows OS, you may need to install curl itself [official link here](https://curl.haxx.se/windows/) ) 88 | 89 | ## _DNS restrict + NCSI problem_ 90 | _In case of public wifi that restrict DNS_
91 | If you do not use your device too long, and `*.md` was outdate and 127.0.0.1 is still DNS of windows. 92 | `dnscrypt-proxy` will fail to update and stop themself. That why i make this script. 93 | This script will help you to fastly connect to your DNSCrypt as possible and set loopback, to prevent some DNS traffic leak. 94 | 95 | ( _temporary fix_ it by custom timout between script, as in `re-dnscrypt.bat` )
96 | ( to _fix it without_ custom timeout, your need to static `sdns://` in `dnscrypt-proxy.toml` )
97 | ( use `lessload-installer.bat` to reduce NCSI poll period before run `re-dnscrypt.bat` )
98 | _dnscrypt-proxy update method use or trust in [Microsoft NCSI](https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-networking/network-connection-status-indicator-ncsi-showing/02664ddf-4eac-449a-8318-bdae1a5bad3d) make it got problem_
99 | 100 | _Why NCSI is so importance. Because if your pc got NCSI alert it will break many function in windows
example -UWP-internet -Hotspot_ 101 | 102 | -- 103 |
104 | 105 | ## My network test condition 106 | - restrict dns by router for make it seem like some public wifi 107 | - block all Microsoft server (host & IP) for make it seem like company network, and test how NCSI really works. 108 | 109 | ## _Cool NCSI solution_ 110 | - https://github.com/dantmnf/NCSIOverride
( not test it yet, one day Microsoft will prevent this thing to work because of security or telemetry reason. maybe ) 111 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /lessload-installer.bat: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | @echo off 2 | net stop dnscrypt-proxy 3 | cd /d "%~dp0" 4 | xcopy .\win64 "C:\Program Files\dnscrypt-proxy-win64\" /h/i/c/k/e/r/y 5 | cd /d "C:\Program Files\dnscrypt-proxy-win64\" 6 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service uninstall 7 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service install 8 | for /F "tokens=3,*" %%A in ('netsh interface show interface ^| find "Dedicated" ^| find /i /v "Local Area"') do (netsh int ipv4 set dns name="%%B" static 127.0.0.1 primary validate=no && netsh int ipv6 set dns name="%%B" static ::1 primary validate=no) 9 | ipconfig /flushdns 10 | 11 | ::NCSI modify 12 | reg add "HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\NlaSvc\Parameters\Internet" /v "PassivePollPeriod" /t REG_DWORD /d "5" /f 13 | reg add "HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\NlaSvc\Parameters\Internet" /v "EnableActiveProbing" /t REG_DWORD /d "0" /f 14 | ::NCSI modify [need Manual config in Group Policy] 15 | reg add "HKLM\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\NetworkConnectivityStatusIndicator" /v UseGlobalDNS /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f 16 | 17 | pause 18 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /re-dnscrypt-v2.bat: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | :: LESSLOAD-DNSCrypt v2.3 beta 2 | @echo off 3 | cd /d "C:\Program Files\dnscrypt-proxy-win64\" 4 | echo x > "%Temp%\dnscrypt-check.txt" 5 | 6 | ::StopService 7 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service stop 8 | for /F "tokens=3,*" %%A in ('netsh interface show interface ^| find "Dedicated"') do (netsh int ipv4 set dns "%%B" dhcp && netsh int ipv6 set dns "%%B" dhcp) 9 | ipconfig /flushdns 10 | 11 | :OnlineTest 12 | ::use timeout can reduce cpu usage from 70 to 30% on Intel Atom. 13 | timeout /t 1 > nul 14 | cls 15 | echo [-Retest Connection-] 16 | ::Pastebin.com access denine sometime, please change to your host 17 | curl --silent --connect-timeout 1 https://pastebin.com/raw/RH3GW47Q -o %Temp%\dnscrypt-check.txt 18 | for /F "delims=:" %%I in (%Temp%\dnscrypt-check.txt) do (if [%%I]==[czd] (GoTo RunService) else (GoTo OnlineTest)) 19 | 20 | :RunService 21 | ::StartService 22 | ::Don't forget edit script to your file location 23 | start cmd /c "curl --silent https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-resolvers/master/v2/public-resolvers.md.minisig -o C:\Program Files\dnscrypt-proxy-win64\public-resolvers.md.minisig & curl --silent https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-resolvers/master/v2/relays.md -o C:\Program Files\dnscrypt-proxy-win64\relays.md & curl --silent https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-resolvers/master/v2/relays.md.minisig -o C:\Program Files\dnscrypt-proxy-win64\relays.md.minisig" 24 | curl --silent https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-resolvers/master/v2/public-resolvers.md -o C:\Program Files\dnscrypt-proxy-win64\public-resolvers.md 25 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service start 26 | for /F "tokens=3,*" %%A in ('netsh interface show interface ^| find "Connected" ^| find /i /v "Local Area"') do (netsh int ipv4 set dns name="%%B" static 127.0.0.1 primary validate=no && netsh int ipv6 set dns name="%%B" static ::1 primary validate=no) 27 | ipconfig /flushdns 28 | ::pause 29 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /re-dnscrypt.bat: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | :: LESSLOAD-DNSCrypt v1.0 2 | @echo off 3 | cd /d "C:\Program Files\dnscrypt-proxy-win64\" 4 | echo x > "%Temp%\dnscrypt-check.txt" 5 | 6 | ::StopService 7 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service stop 8 | for /F "tokens=3,*" %%A in ('netsh interface show interface ^| find "Dedicated" ^| find /i /v "Local Area"') do (netsh int ipv4 set dns "%%B" dhcp && netsh int ipv6 set dns "%%B" dhcp) 9 | ipconfig /flushdns 10 | 11 | :OfflineTest 12 | cls 13 | echo [-Retest Connection-] 14 | powershell -Command "Invoke-WebRequest https://pastebin.com/raw/RH3GW47Q -OutFile '%Temp%\dnscrypt-check.txt' -TimeoutSec 1" 15 | for /F "delims=:" %%I in (%Temp%\dnscrypt-check.txt) do (if /I "czd" == "%%I" (echo x > "%Temp%\dnscrypt-check.txt" && GoTo OnlineRun) else (GoTo OfflineTest)) 16 | 17 | :OnlineRun 18 | ::StartService 19 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service start 20 | ::you can remove timeout if you use static sdns:// 21 | timeout /t 5 /nobreak 22 | for /F "tokens=3,*" %%A in ('netsh interface show interface ^| find "Connected" ^| find /i /v "Local Area"') do (netsh int ipv4 set dns name="%%B" static 127.0.0.1 primary validate=no && netsh int ipv6 set dns name="%%B" static ::1 primary validate=no) 23 | ipconfig /flushdns 24 | ::pause 25 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/LICENSE: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | /* 2 | * ISC License 3 | * 4 | * Copyright (c) 2018-2020 5 | * Frank Denis 6 | * 7 | * Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any 8 | * purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above 9 | * copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. 10 | * 11 | * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES 12 | * WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF 13 | * MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR 14 | * ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES 15 | * WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN 16 | * ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF 17 | * OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 18 | */ 19 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/dnscrypt-proxy.exe: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lessload/DNSCrypt-reload/602b28f30df58b6422b3bcd59670c9aa9660d2e7/win64/dnscrypt-proxy.exe -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/example-blacklist.txt: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 2 | ########################### 3 | # Blacklist # 4 | ########################### 5 | 6 | ## Rules for name-based query blocking, one per line 7 | ## 8 | ## Example of valid patterns: 9 | ## 10 | ## ads.* | matches anything with an "ads." prefix 11 | ## *.example.com | matches example.com and all names within that zone such as www.example.com 12 | ## example.com | identical to the above 13 | ## =example.com | block example.com but not *.example.com 14 | ## *sex* | matches any name containing that substring 15 | ## ads[0-9]* | matches "ads" followed by one or more digits 16 | ## ads*.example* | *, ? and [] can be used anywhere, but prefixes/suffixes are faster 17 | 18 | ad.* 19 | ads.* 20 | banner.* 21 | banners.* 22 | creatives.* 23 | oas.* 24 | oascentral.* # inline comments are allowed after a pound sign 25 | stats.* 26 | tag.* 27 | telemetry.* 28 | tracker.* 29 | *.local 30 | eth0.me 31 | *.workgroup 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | ## Time-based rules 36 | 37 | # *.youtube.* @time-to-sleep 38 | # facebook.com @work 39 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/example-cloaking-rules.txt: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | ################################ 2 | # Cloaking rules # 3 | ################################ 4 | 5 | # The following example rules force "safe" (without adult content) search 6 | # results from Google, Bing and YouTube. 7 | # 8 | # This has to be enabled with the `cloaking_rules` parameter in the main 9 | # configuration file 10 | 11 | 12 | www.google.* forcesafesearch.google.com 13 | 14 | www.bing.com strict.bing.com 15 | 16 | yandex.ru familysearch.yandex.ru # inline comments are allowed after a pound sign 17 | 18 | =duckduckgo.com safe.duckduckgo.com 19 | 20 | www.youtube.com restrictmoderate.youtube.com 21 | m.youtube.com restrictmoderate.youtube.com 22 | youtubei.googleapis.com restrictmoderate.youtube.com 23 | youtube.googleapis.com restrictmoderate.youtube.com 24 | www.youtube-nocookie.com restrictmoderate.youtube.com 25 | 26 | # Multiple IP entries for the same name are supported. 27 | # In the following example, the same name maps both to IPv4 and IPv6 addresses: 28 | 29 | localhost 127.0.0.1 30 | localhost ::1 31 | 32 | # For load-balancing, multiple IP addresses of the same class can also be 33 | # provided using the same format, one pair per line. 34 | 35 | # ads.* 192.168.100.1 36 | # ads.* 192.168.100.2 37 | # ads.* ::1 38 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/example-dnscrypt-proxy.toml: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 2 | ############################################## 3 | # # 4 | # dnscrypt-proxy configuration # 5 | # # 6 | ############################################## 7 | 8 | ## This is an example configuration file. 9 | ## You should adjust it to your needs, and save it as "dnscrypt-proxy.toml" 10 | ## 11 | ## Online documentation is available here: https://dnscrypt.info/doc 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | ################################## 16 | # Global settings # 17 | ################################## 18 | 19 | ## List of servers to use 20 | ## 21 | ## Servers from the "public-resolvers" source (see down below) can 22 | ## be viewed here: https://dnscrypt.info/public-servers 23 | ## 24 | ## If this line is commented, all registered servers matching the require_* filters 25 | ## will be used. 26 | ## 27 | ## The proxy will automatically pick the fastest, working servers from the list. 28 | ## Remove the leading # first to enable this; lines starting with # are ignored. 29 | 30 | # server_names = ['scaleway-fr', 'google', 'yandex', 'cloudflare'] 31 | 32 | 33 | ## List of local addresses and ports to listen to. Can be IPv4 and/or IPv6. 34 | ## Example with both IPv4 and IPv6: 35 | ## listen_addresses = ['127.0.0.1:53', '[::1]:53'] 36 | 37 | listen_addresses = ['127.0.0.1:53'] 38 | 39 | 40 | ## Maximum number of simultaneous client connections to accept 41 | 42 | max_clients = 250 43 | 44 | 45 | ## Switch to a different system user after listening sockets have been created. 46 | ## Note (1): this feature is currently unsupported on Windows. 47 | ## Note (2): this feature is not compatible with systemd socket activation. 48 | ## Note (3): when using -pidfile, the PID file directory must be writable by the new user 49 | 50 | # user_name = 'nobody' 51 | 52 | 53 | ## Require servers (from static + remote sources) to satisfy specific properties 54 | 55 | # Use servers reachable over IPv4 56 | ipv4_servers = true 57 | 58 | # Use servers reachable over IPv6 -- Do not enable if you don't have IPv6 connectivity 59 | ipv6_servers = false 60 | 61 | # Use servers implementing the DNSCrypt protocol 62 | dnscrypt_servers = true 63 | 64 | # Use servers implementing the DNS-over-HTTPS protocol 65 | doh_servers = true 66 | 67 | 68 | ## Require servers defined by remote sources to satisfy specific properties 69 | 70 | # Server must support DNS security extensions (DNSSEC) 71 | require_dnssec = false 72 | 73 | # Server must not log user queries (declarative) 74 | require_nolog = true 75 | 76 | # Server must not enforce its own blacklist (for parental control, ads blocking...) 77 | require_nofilter = true 78 | 79 | # Server names to avoid even if they match all criteria 80 | disabled_server_names = [] 81 | 82 | 83 | ## Always use TCP to connect to upstream servers. 84 | ## This can be useful if you need to route everything through Tor. 85 | ## Otherwise, leave this to `false`, as it doesn't improve security 86 | ## (dnscrypt-proxy will always encrypt everything even using UDP), and can 87 | ## only increase latency. 88 | 89 | force_tcp = false 90 | 91 | 92 | ## SOCKS proxy 93 | ## Uncomment the following line to route all TCP connections to a local Tor node 94 | ## Tor doesn't support UDP, so set `force_tcp` to `true` as well. 95 | 96 | # proxy = 'socks5://127.0.0.1:9050' 97 | 98 | 99 | ## HTTP/HTTPS proxy 100 | ## Only for DoH servers 101 | 102 | # http_proxy = 'http://127.0.0.1:8888' 103 | 104 | 105 | ## How long a DNS query will wait for a response, in milliseconds. 106 | ## If you have a network with *a lot* of latency, you may need to 107 | ## increase this. Startup may be slower if you do so. 108 | ## Don't increase it too much. 10000 is the highest reasonable value. 109 | 110 | timeout = 5000 111 | 112 | 113 | ## Keepalive for HTTP (HTTPS, HTTP/2) queries, in seconds 114 | 115 | keepalive = 30 116 | 117 | 118 | ## Response for blocked queries. Options are `refused`, `hinfo` (default) or 119 | ## an IP response. To give an IP response, use the format `a:,aaaa:`. 120 | ## Using the `hinfo` option means that some responses will be lies. 121 | ## Unfortunately, the `hinfo` option appears to be required for Android 8+ 122 | 123 | # blocked_query_response = 'refused' 124 | 125 | 126 | ## Load-balancing strategy: 'p2' (default), 'ph', 'first' or 'random' 127 | 128 | # lb_strategy = 'p2' 129 | 130 | ## Set to `true` to constantly try to estimate the latency of all the resolvers 131 | ## and adjust the load-balancing parameters accordingly, or to `false` to disable. 132 | 133 | # lb_estimator = true 134 | 135 | 136 | ## Log level (0-6, default: 2 - 0 is very verbose, 6 only contains fatal errors) 137 | 138 | # log_level = 2 139 | 140 | 141 | ## log file for the application 142 | 143 | # log_file = 'dnscrypt-proxy.log' 144 | 145 | 146 | ## Use the system logger (syslog on Unix, Event Log on Windows) 147 | 148 | # use_syslog = true 149 | 150 | 151 | ## Delay, in minutes, after which certificates are reloaded 152 | 153 | cert_refresh_delay = 240 154 | 155 | 156 | ## DNSCrypt: Create a new, unique key for every single DNS query 157 | ## This may improve privacy but can also have a significant impact on CPU usage 158 | ## Only enable if you don't have a lot of network load 159 | 160 | # dnscrypt_ephemeral_keys = false 161 | 162 | 163 | ## DoH: Disable TLS session tickets - increases privacy but also latency 164 | 165 | # tls_disable_session_tickets = false 166 | 167 | 168 | ## DoH: Use a specific cipher suite instead of the server preference 169 | ## 49199 = TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 170 | ## 49195 = TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 171 | ## 52392 = TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305 172 | ## 52393 = TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305 173 | ## 4865 = TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 174 | ## 4867 = TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 175 | ## 176 | ## On non-Intel CPUs such as MIPS routers and ARM systems (Android, Raspberry Pi...), 177 | ## the following suite improves performance. 178 | ## This may also help on Intel CPUs running 32-bit operating systems. 179 | ## 180 | ## Keep tls_cipher_suite empty if you have issues fetching sources or 181 | ## connecting to some DoH servers. Google and Cloudflare are fine with it. 182 | 183 | # tls_cipher_suite = [52392, 49199] 184 | 185 | 186 | ## Fallback resolvers 187 | ## These are normal, non-encrypted DNS resolvers, that will be only used 188 | ## for one-shot queries when retrieving the initial resolvers list, and 189 | ## only if the system DNS configuration doesn't work. 190 | ## No user application queries will ever be leaked through these resolvers, 191 | ## and they will not be used after IP addresses of resolvers URLs have been found. 192 | ## They will never be used if lists have already been cached, and if stamps 193 | ## don't include host names without IP addresses. 194 | ## They will not be used if the configured system DNS works. 195 | ## Resolver supporting DNSSEC are recommended. 196 | ## 197 | ## People in China may need to use 114.114.114.114:53 here. 198 | ## Other popular options include 8.8.8.8 and 1.1.1.1. 199 | ## 200 | ## If more than one resolver are specified, they will be tried in sequence. 201 | 202 | fallback_resolvers = ['9.9.9.9:53', '8.8.8.8:53'] 203 | 204 | 205 | ## Always use the fallback resolver before the system DNS settings. 206 | 207 | ignore_system_dns = true 208 | 209 | 210 | ## Maximum time (in seconds) to wait for network connectivity before 211 | ## initializing the proxy. 212 | ## Useful if the proxy is automatically started at boot, and network 213 | ## connectivity is not guaranteed to be immediately available. 214 | ## Use 0 to not test for connectivity at all (not recommended), 215 | ## and -1 to wait as much as possible. 216 | 217 | netprobe_timeout = 60 218 | 219 | ## Address and port to try initializing a connection to, just to check 220 | ## if the network is up. It can be any address and any port, even if 221 | ## there is nothing answering these on the other side. Just don't use 222 | ## a local address, as the goal is to check for Internet connectivity. 223 | ## On Windows, a datagram with a single, nul byte will be sent, only 224 | ## when the system starts. 225 | ## On other operating systems, the connection will be initialized 226 | ## but nothing will be sent at all. 227 | 228 | netprobe_address = '9.9.9.9:53' 229 | 230 | 231 | ## Offline mode - Do not use any remote encrypted servers. 232 | ## The proxy will remain fully functional to respond to queries that 233 | ## plugins can handle directly (forwarding, cloaking, ...) 234 | 235 | # offline_mode = false 236 | 237 | 238 | ## Additional data to attach to outgoing queries. 239 | ## These strings will be added as TXT records to queries. 240 | ## Do not use, except on servers explicitly asking for extra data 241 | ## to be present. 242 | 243 | # query_meta = ["key1:value1", "key2:value2", "key3:value3"] 244 | 245 | 246 | ## Automatic log files rotation 247 | 248 | # Maximum log files size in MB - Set to 0 for unlimited. 249 | log_files_max_size = 10 250 | 251 | # How long to keep backup files, in days 252 | log_files_max_age = 7 253 | 254 | # Maximum log files backups to keep (or 0 to keep all backups) 255 | log_files_max_backups = 1 256 | 257 | 258 | 259 | ######################### 260 | # Filters # 261 | ######################### 262 | 263 | ## Note: if you are using dnsmasq, disable the `dnssec` option in dnsmasq if you 264 | ## configure dnscrypt-proxy to do any kind of filtering (including the filters 265 | ## below and blacklists). 266 | ## But you can still choose resolvers that do DNSSEC validation. 267 | 268 | 269 | ## Immediately respond to IPv6-related queries with an empty response 270 | ## This makes things faster when there is no IPv6 connectivity, but can 271 | ## also cause reliability issues with some stub resolvers. 272 | 273 | block_ipv6 = false 274 | 275 | 276 | ## Immediately respond to A and AAAA queries for host names without a domain name 277 | 278 | block_unqualified = true 279 | 280 | 281 | ## Immediately respond to queries for local zones instead of leaking them to 282 | ## upstream resolvers (always causing errors or timeouts). 283 | 284 | block_undelegated = true 285 | 286 | 287 | ## TTL for synthetic responses sent when a request has been blocked (due to 288 | ## IPv6 or blacklists). 289 | 290 | reject_ttl = 600 291 | 292 | 293 | 294 | ################################################################################## 295 | # Route queries for specific domains to a dedicated set of servers # 296 | ################################################################################## 297 | 298 | ## Example map entries (one entry per line): 299 | ## example.com 9.9.9.9 300 | ## example.net 9.9.9.9,8.8.8.8,1.1.1.1 301 | 302 | # forwarding_rules = 'forwarding-rules.txt' 303 | 304 | 305 | 306 | ############################### 307 | # Cloaking rules # 308 | ############################### 309 | 310 | ## Cloaking returns a predefined address for a specific name. 311 | ## In addition to acting as a HOSTS file, it can also return the IP address 312 | ## of a different name. It will also do CNAME flattening. 313 | ## 314 | ## Example map entries (one entry per line) 315 | ## example.com 10.1.1.1 316 | ## www.google.com forcesafesearch.google.com 317 | 318 | # cloaking_rules = 'cloaking-rules.txt' 319 | 320 | ## TTL used when serving entries in cloaking-rules.txt 321 | 322 | # cloak_ttl = 600 323 | 324 | 325 | ########################### 326 | # DNS cache # 327 | ########################### 328 | 329 | ## Enable a DNS cache to reduce latency and outgoing traffic 330 | 331 | cache = true 332 | 333 | 334 | ## Cache size 335 | 336 | cache_size = 4096 337 | 338 | 339 | ## Minimum TTL for cached entries 340 | 341 | cache_min_ttl = 2400 342 | 343 | 344 | ## Maximum TTL for cached entries 345 | 346 | cache_max_ttl = 86400 347 | 348 | 349 | ## Minimum TTL for negatively cached entries 350 | 351 | cache_neg_min_ttl = 60 352 | 353 | 354 | ## Maximum TTL for negatively cached entries 355 | 356 | cache_neg_max_ttl = 600 357 | 358 | 359 | 360 | ################################## 361 | # Local DoH server # 362 | ################################## 363 | 364 | [local_doh] 365 | 366 | ## dnscrypt-proxy can act as a local DoH server. By doing so, web browsers 367 | ## requiring a direct connection to a DoH server in order to enable some 368 | ## features will enable these, without bypassing your DNS proxy. 369 | 370 | ## Addresses that the local DoH server should listen to 371 | 372 | # listen_addresses = ['127.0.0.1:3000'] 373 | 374 | 375 | ## Path of the DoH URL. This is not a file, but the part after the hostname 376 | ## in the URL. By convention, `/dns-query` is frequently chosen. 377 | ## For each `listen_address` the complete URL to access the server will be: 378 | ## `https://` (ex: `https://127.0.0.1/dns-query`) 379 | 380 | # path = "/dns-query" 381 | 382 | 383 | ## Certificate file and key - Note that the certificate has to be trusted. 384 | ## See the documentation (wiki) for more information. 385 | 386 | # cert_file = "localhost.pem" 387 | # cert_key_file = "localhost.pem" 388 | 389 | 390 | 391 | ############################### 392 | # Query logging # 393 | ############################### 394 | 395 | ## Log client queries to a file 396 | 397 | [query_log] 398 | 399 | ## Path to the query log file (absolute, or relative to the same directory as the config file) 400 | ## Non non-Windows systems, can be /dev/stdout to log to the standard output (and set log_files_max_size to 0) 401 | 402 | # file = 'query.log' 403 | 404 | 405 | ## Query log format (currently supported: tsv and ltsv) 406 | 407 | format = 'tsv' 408 | 409 | 410 | ## Do not log these query types, to reduce verbosity. Keep empty to log everything. 411 | 412 | # ignored_qtypes = ['DNSKEY', 'NS'] 413 | 414 | 415 | 416 | ############################################ 417 | # Suspicious queries logging # 418 | ############################################ 419 | 420 | ## Log queries for nonexistent zones 421 | ## These queries can reveal the presence of malware, broken/obsolete applications, 422 | ## and devices signaling their presence to 3rd parties. 423 | 424 | [nx_log] 425 | 426 | ## Path to the query log file (absolute, or relative to the same directory as the config file) 427 | 428 | # file = 'nx.log' 429 | 430 | 431 | ## Query log format (currently supported: tsv and ltsv) 432 | 433 | format = 'tsv' 434 | 435 | 436 | 437 | ###################################################### 438 | # Pattern-based blocking (blacklists) # 439 | ###################################################### 440 | 441 | ## Blacklists are made of one pattern per line. Example of valid patterns: 442 | ## 443 | ## example.com 444 | ## =example.com 445 | ## *sex* 446 | ## ads.* 447 | ## ads*.example.* 448 | ## ads*.example[0-9]*.com 449 | ## 450 | ## Example blacklist files can be found at https://download.dnscrypt.info/blacklists/ 451 | ## A script to build blacklists from public feeds can be found in the 452 | ## `utils/generate-domains-blacklists` directory of the dnscrypt-proxy source code. 453 | 454 | [blacklist] 455 | 456 | ## Path to the file of blocking rules (absolute, or relative to the same directory as the config file) 457 | 458 | # blacklist_file = 'blacklist.txt' 459 | 460 | 461 | ## Optional path to a file logging blocked queries 462 | 463 | # log_file = 'blocked.log' 464 | 465 | 466 | ## Optional log format: tsv or ltsv (default: tsv) 467 | 468 | # log_format = 'tsv' 469 | 470 | 471 | 472 | ########################################################### 473 | # Pattern-based IP blocking (IP blacklists) # 474 | ########################################################### 475 | 476 | ## IP blacklists are made of one pattern per line. Example of valid patterns: 477 | ## 478 | ## 127.* 479 | ## fe80:abcd:* 480 | ## 192.168.1.4 481 | 482 | [ip_blacklist] 483 | 484 | ## Path to the file of blocking rules (absolute, or relative to the same directory as the config file) 485 | 486 | # blacklist_file = 'ip-blacklist.txt' 487 | 488 | 489 | ## Optional path to a file logging blocked queries 490 | 491 | # log_file = 'ip-blocked.log' 492 | 493 | 494 | ## Optional log format: tsv or ltsv (default: tsv) 495 | 496 | # log_format = 'tsv' 497 | 498 | 499 | 500 | ###################################################### 501 | # Pattern-based whitelisting (blacklists bypass) # 502 | ###################################################### 503 | 504 | ## Whitelists support the same patterns as blacklists 505 | ## If a name matches a whitelist entry, the corresponding session 506 | ## will bypass names and IP filters. 507 | ## 508 | ## Time-based rules are also supported to make some websites only accessible at specific times of the day. 509 | 510 | [whitelist] 511 | 512 | ## Path to the file of whitelisting rules (absolute, or relative to the same directory as the config file) 513 | 514 | # whitelist_file = 'whitelist.txt' 515 | 516 | 517 | ## Optional path to a file logging whitelisted queries 518 | 519 | # log_file = 'whitelisted.log' 520 | 521 | 522 | ## Optional log format: tsv or ltsv (default: tsv) 523 | 524 | # log_format = 'tsv' 525 | 526 | 527 | 528 | ########################################## 529 | # Time access restrictions # 530 | ########################################## 531 | 532 | ## One or more weekly schedules can be defined here. 533 | ## Patterns in the name-based blocklist can optionally be followed with @schedule_name 534 | ## to apply the pattern 'schedule_name' only when it matches a time range of that schedule. 535 | ## 536 | ## For example, the following rule in a blacklist file: 537 | ## *.youtube.* @time-to-sleep 538 | ## would block access to YouTube only during the days, and period of the days 539 | ## define by the 'time-to-sleep' schedule. 540 | ## 541 | ## {after='21:00', before= '7:00'} matches 0:00-7:00 and 21:00-0:00 542 | ## {after= '9:00', before='18:00'} matches 9:00-18:00 543 | 544 | [schedules] 545 | 546 | # [schedules.'time-to-sleep'] 547 | # mon = [{after='21:00', before='7:00'}] 548 | # tue = [{after='21:00', before='7:00'}] 549 | # wed = [{after='21:00', before='7:00'}] 550 | # thu = [{after='21:00', before='7:00'}] 551 | # fri = [{after='23:00', before='7:00'}] 552 | # sat = [{after='23:00', before='7:00'}] 553 | # sun = [{after='21:00', before='7:00'}] 554 | 555 | # [schedules.'work'] 556 | # mon = [{after='9:00', before='18:00'}] 557 | # tue = [{after='9:00', before='18:00'}] 558 | # wed = [{after='9:00', before='18:00'}] 559 | # thu = [{after='9:00', before='18:00'}] 560 | # fri = [{after='9:00', before='17:00'}] 561 | 562 | 563 | 564 | ######################### 565 | # Servers # 566 | ######################### 567 | 568 | ## Remote lists of available servers 569 | ## Multiple sources can be used simultaneously, but every source 570 | ## requires a dedicated cache file. 571 | ## 572 | ## Refer to the documentation for URLs of public sources. 573 | ## 574 | ## A prefix can be prepended to server names in order to 575 | ## avoid collisions if different sources share the same for 576 | ## different servers. In that case, names listed in `server_names` 577 | ## must include the prefixes. 578 | ## 579 | ## If the `urls` property is missing, cache files and valid signatures 580 | ## must be already present; This doesn't prevent these cache files from 581 | ## expiring after `refresh_delay` hours. 582 | 583 | [sources] 584 | 585 | ## An example of a remote source from https://github.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-resolvers 586 | 587 | [sources.'public-resolvers'] 588 | urls = ['https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-resolvers/master/v2/public-resolvers.md', 'https://download.dnscrypt.info/resolvers-list/v2/public-resolvers.md'] 589 | cache_file = 'public-resolvers.md' 590 | minisign_key = 'RWQf6LRCGA9i53mlYecO4IzT51TGPpvWucNSCh1CBM0QTaLn73Y7GFO3' 591 | prefix = '' 592 | 593 | ## Anonymized DNS relays 594 | 595 | [sources.'relays'] 596 | urls = ['https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-resolvers/master/v2/relays.md', 'https://download.dnscrypt.info/resolvers-list/v2/relays.md'] 597 | cache_file = 'relays.md' 598 | minisign_key = 'RWQf6LRCGA9i53mlYecO4IzT51TGPpvWucNSCh1CBM0QTaLn73Y7GFO3' 599 | refresh_delay = 72 600 | prefix = '' 601 | 602 | ## Quad9 over DNSCrypt - https://quad9.net/ 603 | 604 | # [sources.quad9-resolvers] 605 | # urls = ['https://www.quad9.net/quad9-resolvers.md'] 606 | # minisign_key = 'RWQBphd2+f6eiAqBsvDZEBXBGHQBJfeG6G+wJPPKxCZMoEQYpmoysKUN' 607 | # cache_file = 'quad9-resolvers.md' 608 | # prefix = 'quad9-' 609 | 610 | ## Another example source, with resolvers censoring some websites not appropriate for children 611 | ## This is a subset of the `public-resolvers` list, so enabling both is useless 612 | 613 | # [sources.'parental-control'] 614 | # urls = ['https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-resolvers/master/v2/parental-control.md', 'https://download.dnscrypt.info/resolvers-list/v2/parental-control.md'] 615 | # cache_file = 'parental-control.md' 616 | # minisign_key = 'RWQf6LRCGA9i53mlYecO4IzT51TGPpvWucNSCh1CBM0QTaLn73Y7GFO3' 617 | 618 | 619 | 620 | 621 | ######################################### 622 | # Servers with known bugs # 623 | ######################################### 624 | 625 | [broken_implementations] 626 | 627 | # Cisco servers currently cannot handle queries larger than 1472 bytes, and don't 628 | # truncate reponses larger than questions as expected by the DNSCrypt protocol. 629 | # This prevents large responses from being received, and breaks relaying. 630 | # A workaround for the first issue will be applied to servers in list below. 631 | # Do not change that list until the bugs are fixed server-side. 632 | 633 | broken_query_padding = ['cisco', 'cisco-ipv6', 'cisco-familyshield'] 634 | 635 | 636 | 637 | 638 | ################################ 639 | # Anonymized DNS # 640 | ################################ 641 | 642 | [anonymized_dns] 643 | 644 | ## Routes are indirect ways to reach DNSCrypt servers. 645 | ## 646 | ## A route maps a server name ("server_name") to one or more relays that will be 647 | ## used to connect to that server. 648 | ## 649 | ## A relay can be specified as a DNS Stamp (either a relay stamp, or a 650 | ## DNSCrypt stamp), an IP:port, a hostname:port, or a server name. 651 | ## 652 | ## The following example routes "example-server-1" via `anon-example-1` or `anon-example-2`, 653 | ## and "example-server-2" via the relay whose relay DNS stamp 654 | ## is "sdns://gRIxMzcuNzQuMjIzLjIzNDo0NDM". 655 | ## 656 | ## !!! THESE ARE JUST EXAMPLES !!! 657 | ## 658 | ## Review the list of available relays from the "relays.md` file, and, for each 659 | ## server you want to use, define the relays you want connections to go through. 660 | ## 661 | ## Carefully choose relays and servers so that the are run by different entities. 662 | ## 663 | ## "server_name" can also be set to "*" to define a default route, but this is not 664 | ## recommended. if you do so, keep "server_names" short and distinct from relays. 665 | 666 | # routes = [ 667 | # { server_name='example-server-1', via=['anon-example-1', 'anon-example-2'] }, 668 | # { server_name='example-server-2', via=['sdns://gRIxMzcuNzQuMjIzLjIzNDo0NDM'] } 669 | # ] 670 | 671 | 672 | ## Optional, local, static list of additional servers 673 | ## Mostly useful for testing your own servers. 674 | 675 | [static] 676 | 677 | # [static.'myserver'] 678 | # stamp = 'sdns:AQcAAAAAAAAAAAAQMi5kbnNjcnlwdC1jZXJ0Lg' 679 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/example-forwarding-rules.txt: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | ################################## 2 | # Forwarding rules # 3 | ################################## 4 | 5 | ## This is used to route specific domain names to specific servers. 6 | ## The general format is: 7 | ## [:port] [, [:port]...] 8 | ## IPv6 addresses can be specified by enclosing the address in square brackets. 9 | 10 | ## In order to enable this feature, the "forwarding_rules" property needs to 11 | ## be set to this file name inside the main configuration file. 12 | 13 | ## Blocking IPv6 may prevent local devices from being discovered. 14 | ## If this happens, set `block_ipv6` to `false` in the main config file. 15 | 16 | ## Forward *.lan, *.local, *.home, *.internal and *.localdomain to 192.168.1.1 17 | # lan 192.168.1.1 18 | # local 192.168.1.1 19 | # home 192.168.1.1 20 | # internal 192.168.1.1 21 | # localdomain 192.168.1.1 22 | 23 | ## Forward queries for example.com and *.example.com to 9.9.9.9 and 8.8.8.8 24 | # example.com 9.9.9.9,8.8.8.8 25 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/example-ip-blacklist.txt: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | ############################## 2 | # IP blacklist # 3 | ############################## 4 | 5 | ## Response containing blacklisted IP addresses will be blocked 6 | ## 7 | ## Sample feed of suspect IP addresses: https://github.com/stamparm/ipsum 8 | ## Use only one of the levels from that list. 1 is not very reliable 9 | ## (may have a lot of false positives), 8 is the most reliable subset. 10 | 11 | 163.5.1.4 12 | 94.46.118.* 13 | [fe80:53:*] # IPv6 prefix example 14 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/example-whitelist.txt: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 2 | ########################### 3 | # Whitelist # 4 | ########################### 5 | 6 | ## Rules for name-based query whitelisting, one per line 7 | ## 8 | ## Example of valid patterns: 9 | ## 10 | ## ads.* | matches anything with an "ads." prefix 11 | ## *.example.com | matches example.com and all names within that zone such as www.example.com 12 | ## example.com | identical to the above 13 | ## =example.com | whitelists example.com but not *.example.com 14 | ## *sex* | matches any name containing that substring 15 | ## ads[0-9]* | matches "ads" followed by one or more digits 16 | ## ads*.example* | *, ? and [] can be used anywhere, but prefixes/suffixes are faster 17 | 18 | tracker.debian.org 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | ## Time-based rules 23 | 24 | # *.youtube.* @time-to-play 25 | # facebook.com @play 26 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/localhost.pem: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY----- 2 | MIIEvgIBADANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASCBKgwggSkAgEAAoIBAQDb7g6EQhbfby97 3 | k4oMbZTzdi2TWFBs7qK/QwgOu+L6EhNHPO1ZEU29v0APFBFJO5zyyAk9bZ9k9tPB 4 | bCuVVI9jEUfLH3UCjEQPG6XI2w++uVh0yALvc/uurCvRHVlle/V7cAoikndc2SjE 5 | RQUALbACIqwD5g0F77BYwcsreB4GH253/R6Q2/CJZ4jNHPjkocOJiVr3ejA0kkoN 6 | MXpGUXWcrVVk20M2A1CeO7HAulLRcklEdoHE3v46pjp0iZK0F9LyZX1U1ql+4QL3 7 | iQttoZ4tMg83lFHSt4G9PrpIhzXr9W4NW822faSvrIwwN/JbItUmRa7n/3+MkuJQ 8 | IGGNDayXAgMBAAECggEBANs0fmGSocuXvYL1Pi4+9qxnCOwIpTi97Zam0BwnZwcL 9 | Bw4FCyiwV4UdX1LoFIailT9i49rHLYzre4oZL6OKgdQjQCSTuQOOHLPWQbpdpWba 10 | w/C5/jr+pkemMZIfJ6BAGiArPt7Qj4oKpFhj1qUj5H9sYXkNTcOx8Fm25rLv6TT9 11 | O7wg0oCpyG+iBSbCYBp9mDMz8pfo4P3BhcFiyKCKeiAC6KuHU81dvuKeFB4XQK+X 12 | no2NqDqe6MBkmTqjNNy+wi1COR7lu34LPiWU5Hq5PdIEqBBUMjlMI6oYlhlgNTdx 13 | SvsqFz3Xs6kpAhJTrSiAqscPYosgaMQxo+LI26PJnikCgYEA9n0OERkm0wSBHnHY 14 | Kx8jaxNYg93jEzVnEgI/MBTJZqEyCs9fF6Imv737VawEN/BhesZZX7bGZQfDo8AT 15 | aiSa5upkkSGXEqTu5ytyoKFTb+dJ/qmx3+zP6dPVzDnc8WPYMoUg7vvjZkXXJgZX 16 | +oMlMUW1wWiDNI3wP19W9Is6xssCgYEA5GqkUBEns6eTFJV0JKqbEORJJ7lx5NZe 17 | cIx+jPpLkILG4mOKOg1TBx0wkxa9cELtsNsM+bPtu9OqRMhsfPBmsXDHhJwg0Z6G 18 | eDTfYYPkpRhwZvl6jBZn9sLVR9wfg2hE+n0lfV3mceg336KOkwAehDU84SWZ2e0S 19 | esqkpbHJa+UCgYA7PY0O8POSzcdWkNf6bS5vAqRIdSCpMjGGc4HKRYSuJNnJHVPm 20 | czNK7Bcm3QPaiexzvI4oYd5G09niVjyUSx3rl7P56Y/MjFVau+d90agjAfyXtyMo 21 | BVtnAGGnBtUiMvP4GGT06xcZMnnmCqpEbBaZQ/7N8Bdwnxh5sqlMdtX2hwKBgAhL 22 | hyQRO2vezgyVUN50A6WdZLq4lVZGIq/bqkzcWhopZaebDc4F5doASV9OGBsXkyI1 23 | EkePLTcA/NH6pVX0NQaEnfpG4To7k46R/PrBm3ATbyGONdEYjzX65VvytoJDKx4d 24 | pVrkKhZA5KaOdLcJ7hHHDSrv/qJXZbBn44rQ5guxAoGBAJ6oeUsUUETakxlmIhmK 25 | xuQmWqLf97BKt8r6Z8CqHKWK7vpG2OmgFYCQGaR7angQ8hmAOv6jM56XhoagDBoc 26 | UoaoEyo9/uCk6NRUkUMj7Tk/5UQSiWLceVH27w+icMFhf1b7EmmNfk+APsiathO5 27 | j4edf1AinVCPwRVVu1dtLL5P 28 | -----END PRIVATE KEY----- 29 | -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- 30 | MIIDAjCCAeoCCQCptj0+TjjIJjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQsFADBDMREwDwYDVQQKDAhE 31 | TlNDcnlwdDEaMBgGA1UECwwRTG9jYWwgdGVzdCBzZXJ2ZXIxEjAQBgNVBAMMCWxv 32 | Y2FsaG9zdDAeFw0xOTExMTgxNDA2MzBaFw0zMzA3MjcxNDA2MzBaMEMxETAPBgNV 33 | BAoMCEROU0NyeXB0MRowGAYDVQQLDBFMb2NhbCB0ZXN0IHNlcnZlcjESMBAGA1UE 34 | AwwJbG9jYWxob3N0MIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEA2+4O 35 | hEIW328ve5OKDG2U83Ytk1hQbO6iv0MIDrvi+hITRzztWRFNvb9ADxQRSTuc8sgJ 36 | PW2fZPbTwWwrlVSPYxFHyx91AoxEDxulyNsPvrlYdMgC73P7rqwr0R1ZZXv1e3AK 37 | IpJ3XNkoxEUFAC2wAiKsA+YNBe+wWMHLK3geBh9ud/0ekNvwiWeIzRz45KHDiYla 38 | 93owNJJKDTF6RlF1nK1VZNtDNgNQnjuxwLpS0XJJRHaBxN7+OqY6dImStBfS8mV9 39 | VNapfuEC94kLbaGeLTIPN5RR0reBvT66SIc16/VuDVvNtn2kr6yMMDfyWyLVJkWu 40 | 5/9/jJLiUCBhjQ2slwIDAQABMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBCwUAA4IBAQA6Vz5HnGuy8jZz 41 | 5i8ipbcDMCZNdpYYnxgD53hEKOfoSv7LaF0ztD8Kmg3s5LHv9EHlkK3+G6FWRGiP 42 | 9f6IbtRITaiVQP3M13T78hpN5Qq5jgsqjR7ZcN7Etr6ZFd7G/0+mzqbyBuW/3szt 43 | RdX/YLy1csvjbZoNNuXGWRohXjg0Mjko2tRLmARvxA/gZV5zWycv3BD2BPzyCdS9 44 | MDMYSF0RPiL8+alfwLNqLcqMA5liHlmZa85uapQyoUI3ksKJkEgU53aD8cYhH9Yn 45 | 6mVpsrvrcRLBiHlbi24QBolhFkCSRK8bXes8XDIPuD8iYRwlrVBwOakMFQWMqNfI 46 | IMOKJomU 47 | -----END CERTIFICATE----- 48 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/service-install.bat: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | @set @_cmd=1 /* 2 | @echo off 3 | setlocal EnableExtensions 4 | title DNSCrypt-Proxy 5 | 6 | whoami /groups | findstr "S-1-16-12288" >nul && goto :admin 7 | if "%~1"=="RunAsAdmin" goto :error 8 | 9 | echo Requesting privileges elevation for managing the dnscrypt-proxy service . . . 10 | cscript /nologo /e:javascript "%~f0" || goto :error 11 | exit /b 12 | 13 | :error 14 | echo. 15 | echo Error: Administrator privileges elevation failed, 16 | echo please manually run this script as administrator. 17 | echo. 18 | goto :end 19 | 20 | :admin 21 | pushd "%~dp0" 22 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service install 23 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service start 24 | popd 25 | echo. 26 | echo Thank you for using DNSCrypt-Proxy! 27 | 28 | :end 29 | set /p =Press [Enter] to exit . . . 30 | exit /b */ 31 | 32 | // JScript, restart batch script as administrator 33 | var objShell = WScript.CreateObject('Shell.Application'); 34 | var ComSpec = WScript.CreateObject('WScript.Shell').ExpandEnvironmentStrings('%ComSpec%'); 35 | objShell.ShellExecute(ComSpec, '/c ""' + WScript.ScriptFullName + '" RunAsAdmin"', '', 'runas', 1); 36 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/service-restart.bat: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | @set @_cmd=1 /* 2 | @echo off 3 | setlocal EnableExtensions 4 | title DNSCrypt-Proxy 5 | 6 | whoami /groups | findstr "S-1-16-12288" >nul && goto :admin 7 | if "%~1"=="RunAsAdmin" goto :error 8 | 9 | echo Requesting privileges elevation for managing the dnscrypt-proxy service . . . 10 | cscript /nologo /e:javascript "%~f0" || goto :error 11 | exit /b 12 | 13 | :error 14 | echo. 15 | echo Error: Administrator privileges elevation failed, 16 | echo please manually run this script as administrator. 17 | echo. 18 | goto :end 19 | 20 | :admin 21 | pushd "%~dp0" 22 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service stop 23 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service start 24 | popd 25 | echo. 26 | echo Thank you for using DNSCrypt-Proxy! 27 | 28 | :end 29 | set /p =Press [Enter] to exit . . . 30 | exit /b */ 31 | 32 | // JScript, restart batch script as administrator 33 | var objShell = WScript.CreateObject('Shell.Application'); 34 | var ComSpec = WScript.CreateObject('WScript.Shell').ExpandEnvironmentStrings('%ComSpec%'); 35 | objShell.ShellExecute(ComSpec, '/c ""' + WScript.ScriptFullName + '" RunAsAdmin"', '', 'runas', 1); 36 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /win64/service-uninstall.bat: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | @set @_cmd=1 /* 2 | @echo off 3 | setlocal EnableExtensions 4 | title DNSCrypt-Proxy 5 | 6 | whoami /groups | findstr "S-1-16-12288" >nul && goto :admin 7 | if "%~1"=="RunAsAdmin" goto :error 8 | 9 | echo Requesting privileges elevation for managing the dnscrypt-proxy service . . . 10 | cscript /nologo /e:javascript "%~f0" || goto :error 11 | exit /b 12 | 13 | :error 14 | echo. 15 | echo Error: Administrator privileges elevation failed, 16 | echo please manually run this script as administrator. 17 | echo. 18 | goto :end 19 | 20 | :admin 21 | pushd "%~dp0" 22 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service stop 23 | dnscrypt-proxy.exe -service uninstall 24 | popd 25 | echo. 26 | echo Thank you for using DNSCrypt-Proxy! 27 | 28 | :end 29 | set /p =Press [Enter] to exit . . . 30 | exit /b */ 31 | 32 | // JScript, restart batch script as administrator 33 | var objShell = WScript.CreateObject('Shell.Application'); 34 | var ComSpec = WScript.CreateObject('WScript.Shell').ExpandEnvironmentStrings('%ComSpec%'); 35 | objShell.ShellExecute(ComSpec, '/c ""' + WScript.ScriptFullName + '" RunAsAdmin"', '', 'runas', 1); 36 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------