dnscrypt-proxy-android/CHANGELOG.md

14 KiB

Changelog

unreleased

2.1.1-2

Fixed

Removed

  • dct-ru2 resolver (ceased resolver).
  • pf-dnscrypt resolver (unresponsive resolver).
  • zackptg5-us-il-ipv4 resolver (ceased resolver).

2.1.1-1

Added

  • uninstall.sh file for dnscrypt-proxy folder removal after module uninstallation (Android 7 and below at the moment).
  • update.json file for enable the new auto-update feature from Magisk v24+.
  • dct-at1 resolver (DNSCrypt | IPv4 only | Non-logging | Non-filtering | DNSSEC | Vienna, Austria.).
  • dct-de1 resolver (DNSCrypt | IPv4 only | Non-logging | Non-filtering | DNSSEC | Düsseldorf, Germany.).
  • dns.digitalsize.net resolver (A public, non-tracking, non-filtering DNS resolver with DNSSEC enabled and hosted in Germany (https://dns.digitalsize.net)).
  • dnswarden-asia-uncensor-dcv4 resolver (dnscrypt-server. No logging, No filtering, support DNSSEC, located in Singapore. by Bhanu Pratap).
  • dnswarden-eu-uncensor-dcv4 resolver (dnscrypt-server. No logging, No filtering, support DNSSEC, located in Germany. by Bhanu Pratap).
  • dnswarden-us-uncensor-dcv4 resolver (dnscrypt-server. No logging, No filtering, support DNSSEC, located in USA (Dallas). by Bhanu Pratap).
  • Optimized relays.

Changed

  • Project migrated to GitHub.

Removed

  • zackptg5-us-pit-ipv4 resolver (unresponsive resolver).

2.1.1

Upstream

This is a bugfix only release, addressing regressions introduced in version 2.1.0:

  • When using DoH, cached responses were not served any more when experiencing connectivity issues. This has been fixed.
  • Time attributes in allow/block lists were ignored. This has been fixed.
  • The TTL as served to clients is now rounded and starts decreasing before the first query is received.
  • Time-based rules are properly handled again in generate-domains-blocklist.
  • DoH/ODoH: entries with an IP address and using a non-standard port used to require help from a bootstrap resolver. This is not the case any more.

Added

  • Optimized relays.

Removed

  • dama.no-osl-s04 resolver (unresponsive resolver).
  • dama.no-sa-a80 resolver (unresponsive resolver).
  • kenshiro resolver (unresponsive resolver, no more lucenera resolvers).
  • suami resolver (unresponsive resolver, no more lucenera resolvers).

2.1.0

Upstream

  • dnscrypt-proxy now includes support for Oblivious DoH.
  • If the proxy is overloaded, cached and synthetic queries now keep being served, while non-cached queries are delayed.
  • A deprecation warning was for fallback_resolvers.
  • Source URLs are now randomized.
  • On some platforms, redirecting the application log to a file was not compatible with user switching; this has been fixed.
  • fallback_resolvers was renamed to bootstrap_resolvers for clarity. Please update your configuration file accordingly.

Added

  • DNS Rebind Protection with blocked-ips.txt file enabled by default.
  • UncensoredDNS (Unicast) in addition to UncensoredDNS (Anycast) as bootstrap_resolvers.
  • ams-dnscrypt-nl resolver (Resolver in Amsterdam. Dnscrypt protocol. Non-logging, non-filtering, DNSSEC).
  • altername resolver (Protocol: DNSCrypt IPv4 | Features: Non-logging, Non-filtering, DNSSEC, EmerDNS | Location: Moscow, Russia).
  • dama.no-osl-s04 resolver (DNSCrypt server located in Oslo/Norway. Link-speed 100 Mbit/s. Non-censoring, non-logging, DNSSEC-capable.).
  • dama.no-sa-a80 resolver (DNSCrypt Server located in Sandefjord/Norway. non-censoring, non-logging, DNSSEC-capable).
  • dct-ru1 resolver (DNSCrypt | IPv4 only | Non-logging | Non-filtering | DNSSEC | Saint Petersburg, Russia.).
  • dct-ru2 resolver (DNSCrypt | IPv4 only | Non-logging | Non-filtering | DNSSEC | Moscow, Russia.).
  • dns.watch resolver (Free, uncensored, non-logging server in Germany. https://dns.watch).
  • gombadi-syd resolver (Protocol: DNSCrypt IPv4 | Features: Non-logging, Non-filtering, DNSSEC, Unbound | Location: Sydney, AU).
  • kenshiro resolver (dnscrypt-server. No logging, No filtering, support DNSSEC, located in Amsterdam. by lucenera).
  • pf-dnscrypt resolver (by post-factum | Zürich, Switzerland | Non-logging | Non-filtering | DNSSEC | https://dns.post-factum.tk).
  • plan9-ns2 resolver (DNSCrypt server in Florida, USA. Non-logging, non-filtering, DNSSEC, anonymized. info - https://jlongua.github.io/plan9-dns/).
  • pryv8boi resolver (By pryv8, non Logging, uncensored, DNSSEC - hosted on contabo servers).
  • resolver4.dns.openinternet.io resolver (DNSCrypt resolver on dedicated hardware, colocated at Sonic.net in Santa Rosa, CA in the United States. No log, no filter, DNSSEC. Uses Sonic's recusrive DNS servers as upstream resolvers (but is not affiliated with Sonic in any way). Provided by https://openinternet.io).
  • suami resolver (dnscrypt-server. No logging, No filtering, support DNSSEC, located in Frankfurt. by lucenera).
  • zackptg5-us-il-ipv4 resolver (DNSSEC/unfiltered/non-logged. Hosted on Vultr in Chicago, IL. Running the official Docker image by @zackptg5).
  • zackptg5-us-pit-ipv4 resolver (DNSSEC/unfiltered/non-logged. Hosted on TeraSwitch in Pittsburgh, PA. Running the official Docker image by @zackptg5).
  • Optimized relays.

Changed

  • The path of the config. files from /data/media/0/dnscrypt-proxy to /storage/emulated/0/dnscrypt-proxy (fix for log issues on A11+ and an issue on A6- where the config. files could not be modified).
  • Set dnscrypt-proxy.log level from 2 to 0 (but keep it disabled by default).

Removed

  • dama.no-osl-s04 resolver (unresponsive resolver).
  • dama.no-sa-a80 resolver (unresponsive resolver).
  • kenshiro resolver (unresponsive resolver, no more lucenera resolvers).
  • suami resolver (unresponsive resolver, no more lucenera resolvers).

2.0.45

Upstream

  • Configuration changes (to be required in versions 2.1.x):
    • [blacklist] has been renamed to [blocked_names]
    • [ip_blacklist] has been renamed to [blocked_ips]
    • [whitelist] has been renamed to [allowed_names]
    • generate-domains-blacklist.py has been renamed to generate-domains-blocklist.py, and the configuration files have been renamed as well.
  • dnscrypt-proxy -resolve has been completely revamped, and now requires the configuration file to be accessible. It will send a query to an IP address of the dnscrypt-proxy server by default. Sending queries to arbitrary servers is also supported with the new -resolve name,address syntax.
  • Relay lists can be set to * for automatic relay selection. When a wildcard is used, either for the list of servers or relays, the proxy ensures that relays and servers are on distinct networks.
  • Lying resolvers are detected and reported.
  • New return code: NOT_READY for queries received before the proxy has been initialized.
  • Server lists can't be older than a week any more, even if directory permissions are incorrect and cache files cannot be written.
  • macOS/arm64 is now officially supported.
  • New feature: allowed_ips, to configure a set of IP addresses to never block no matter what DNS name resolves to them.
  • Hard-coded IP addresses can be immediately returned for test queries sent by operating systems in order to check for connectivity and captive portals. Such responses can be sent even before an interface is considered as enabled by the operating system. This can be configured in a new section called [captive_portals].
  • On Linux, OpenBSD and FreeBSD, listen_addresses can now include IP addresses that haven't been assigned to an interface yet.
  • The logo has been tweaked to look fine on a dark background.
  • generate-domains-blocklist.py: regular expressions are now ignored in time-based entries.
  • Minor bug fixes and logging improvements.
  • Cloaking plugin: if an entry has multiple IP addresses for a type, all the IP addresses are now returned instead of a random one.
  • Static entries can now include DNSCrypt relays.
  • Name blocking: aliases relying on SVCB and HTTPS records can now be blocked in addition to aliases via regular CNAME records.
  • EDNS-Client-Subnet information can be added to outgoing queries. Instead of sending the actual client IP, ECS information is user configurable, and IP addresses will be randomly chosen for every query.
  • Initial DoH queries are now checked using random names in order to properly measure CDNs such as Tencent that ignore the padding.
  • DoH: the max-stale cache control directive is now present in queries.
  • Logs can now be sent to /dev/stdout instead of actual files.
  • User switching is now supported on macOS.
  • New download mirror (https://download.dnscrypt.net) for resolvers, relays and parental-control.

Added

  • allowed-ips.txt and blocked-ips.txt files (as placeholder).
  • Cleanup unneeded binary files after the installation.
  • acsacsar-ams-ipv4 resolver (Public non-censoring, non-logging, DNSSEC-capable, DNSCrypt-enabled DNS resolver hosted on Scaleway by acsacsar).
  • arvind-io resolver (Public resolver by EnKrypt (https://arvind.io). Hosted in Bangalore, India. Non-logging, non-filtering, supports DNSSEC.).
  • bcn-dnscrypt resolver (Resolver in Barcelona, Spain. DNSCrypt protocol. Non-logging, non-filtering, DNSSEC.).
  • d0wn-tz-ns1 resolver (Server provided by Martin 'd0wn' Albus) Hosted by Aptus Solutions Ltd. in Tanzania.
  • dnscrypt.be resolver (Resolver in Leuven, Belgium (UCLL Campus Proximus). Non-logging/DNSSEC/Uncensored. https://dnscrypt.be Maintained by Sigfried (https://sigfried.be) hosted by ISW Leuven (https://iswleuven.be)).
  • dnscrypt.ca-1 resolver (Free, Canadian, uncensored, no-logs, encrypted, and DNSSEC validated. DNS service for your pleasure.).
  • dnscrypt.ca-2 resolver (Free, Canadian, uncensored, no-logs, encrypted, and DNSSEC validated. DNS service for your pleasure.).
  • dnscrypt.one resolver (Non-logging, non-censoring, DNSSEC-capable DNSCrypt resolver hosted in Germany (Nuremberg), https://dnscrypt.one).
  • dnscrypt.pl resolver (Free | No filtering | Zero logs | DNSSEC | Poland | https://dnscrypt.pl/).
  • ev-canada resolver (Non-logging, uncensored DNS resolver provided by evilvibes.com Location: Vancouver, Canada).
  • freetsa.org-ipv4 resolver (Non-logged/Uncensored provided by www.freetsa.org. Support for DNS and DNS-over-TLS (DoT)).
  • jp.tiar.app resolver (Non-Logging, Non-Filtering DNSCrypt server in Japan. No ECS, Support DNSSEC).
  • moulticast-ca-ipv4 resolver (Public | Non-filtering | Non-logging | DNSSEC aware | Hosted in Canada | Operated by @herver (Github) | https://moulticast.net/dnscrypt/).
  • moulticast-de-ipv4 resolver (Public | Non-filtering | Non-logging | DNSSEC aware | Hosted in Germany | Operated by @herver (Github) | https://moulticast.net/dnscrypt/).
  • moulticast-fr-ipv4 resolver (Public | Non-filtering | Non-logging | DNSSEC aware | Hosted in France | Operated by @herver (Github) | https://moulticast.net/dnscrypt/).
  • moulticast-sg-ipv4 resolver (Public | Non-filtering | Non-logging | DNSSEC aware | Hosted in Singapore | Operated by @herver (Github) | https://moulticast.net/dnscrypt/).
  • moulticast-uk-ipv4 resolver (Public | Non-filtering | Non-logging | DNSSEC aware | Hosted in UK | Operated by @herver (Github) | https://moulticast.net/dnscrypt/).
  • plan9-dns resolver (Resolver in New Jersey, USA. DNSCrypt protocol. Non-logging, non-filtering, DNSSEC, anonymized. Running the official Docker image on Vultr by @jlongua1).
  • pwoss.org-dnscrypt resolver (No filter | No logs | DNSSEC | Nuremberg, Germany (netcup) | Maintained by https://pwoss.org/ (Dan)).
  • sarpel-dns-istanbul resolver (No-filter | No-logs | Uncensored | Hosted in Istanbul(Turkey) on Cloudeos).
  • serbica resolver (Public DNSCrypt server in the Netherlands by https://litepay.ch).
  • ventricle.us resolver (Public DNSCrypt resolver provided by Jacob Henner. Hosted by Digital Ocean, New York).
  • Optimized relays.

Changed

  • Magisk 20.4+ required.
  • Disabled direct_cert_fallback option to prevent direct connections through the resolvers for failed certificate retrieved via relay.
  • Reduced the max. query waiting time from 1500 to 1000 ms.
  • Renamed blacklist.txt into blocked-names.txt.
  • Renamed whitelist.txt into allowed-names.txt.

Removed

2.0.44

Upstream

  • More updates to the set of block lists, thanks again to IceCodeNew.
  • Netprobes and listening sockets are now ignored when the -list, -list-all, -show-certs or -check command-line switches are used.
  • tls_client_auth was renamed to doh_client_x509_auth. A section with the previous name is temporarily ignored if empty, but will error out if not.
  • Unit tests are now working on 32-bit systems. Thanks to Will Elwood and @lifenjoiner.

2.0.43

Upstream

  • Built-in support for DNS64 translation has been implemented. (Contributed by Sergey Smirnov, thanks!)
  • Connections to DoH servers can be authenticated using TLS client certificates (Contributed by Kevin O'Sullivan, thanks!)
  • Multiple stamps are now allowed for a single server in resolvers and relays lists.
  • Android: the time zone for log files is now set to the system time zone.
  • Quite a lot of updates and additions have been made to the example domain block lists. Thanks to IceCodeNew!
  • Cached configuration files can now be temporarily used if they are out of date, but bootstraping is impossible. Contributed by lifenjoiner, thanks!
  • Precompiled macOS binaries are now notarized.
  • generate-domains-blacklists now tries to deduplicate entries clobbered by wildcard rules. Thanks to Huhni!
  • generate-domains-blacklists can now directly write lists to a file with the -o command-line option.
  • cache files are now downloaded as the user the daemon will be running as. This fixes permission issues at startup time.
  • Forwarded queries are now subject to global timeouts, and can be forced to use TCP.
  • The ct parameter has been removed from DoH queries, as Google doesn't require it any more.
  • Service installation is now supported on FreeBSD.
  • When stored into a file, service logs now only contain data from the most recent launch. This can be changed with the new log_file_latest option.

Added

Changed

  • Magisk 20+ required.