digital-ocean-dynamic-dns v1.1.3
digital-ocean-dynamic-dns
Dynamically update Domain Records on Digital Ocean.
Installation
$ npm install -g digital-ocean-dynamic-dnsBasic Usage
You can specify an address with the -a parameter, or don't and dodd will use your public IP instead.
$ dodd -t <DigitalOceanApiToken> -a <someIp> -d <yourDomain.tld> -r <domainRecordTitle>$ dodd -t <DigitalOceanApiToken> -d <yourDomain.tld> -r <domainRecordTitle>Example with a specific IP
To change home.example.com to direct to 123.456.789.123:
$ dodd -t abc123def456ghi789 -a 123.456.789.123 -d example.com -r homeExample using the public IP
To change home.example.com to direct to whatever your public IP is:
$ dodd -t abc123def456ghi789 -d example.com -r homeCreate
If the -c or --create flag is set and the record does not exist under the given domain, it will be created.
$ dodd -t abc123def456ghi789 -d example.com -r home --createConfig file
Using the -f or --file option, all parameters can be set from a JSON file. It's possible to specify multiple domains when the JSON file contains an array of domains. Any arguments passed on the command line will also be applied but will be overridden by the file contents.
$ dodd -t abc123def456ghi789 -f /path/to/file.json/path/to/file.json
[
{
"domainName": "domain.tld",
"recordName": "record"
},
{
"token": "xyz987uvw654qrs321",
"domainName": "other.tld",
"recordName": "test"
}
]Run automatically
On Linux you can run dodd at boot and then repeatedly at a certain interval using systemd. Set up the command in systemd/dodd.service and set a time interal in systemd/dodd.timer. Then copy both to /etc/systemd/system/ and start them with
$ systemctl start dodd.service
$ systemctl start dodd.timerTo auto-start the service after boot run.
$ systemctl enable dodd.service
$ systemctl enable dodd.timerThe above will run dodd with the parameters defined in dodd.service after boot, as soon as the network is available. After that it will run the same command regularly as defined by the interval in the dodd.timer file (hourly by default).
You can veryify that the dodd timer is active by running systemctl list-timers.
More Options
There are more optional parameters. Use dodd --help for details.
$ dodd --help
Usage: dodd [options]
Options:
-h, --help output usage information
-t, --token <token> Your Digital Ocean API token
-a, --address <address> The address the DNS record should direct to. Uses the public IP if none is provided.
-d, --domainName <domainName> The domain name itself (<domainName>.tld)
-r, --recordName <recordName> The name of the comain record (<recordName>.domain.tld)
-y, --recordType <recordType> The type of DNS record (A, CNAME, TXT, ...). Defaults to A.
-l, --recordTtl <recordTtl> The time to live for the record, in seconds. Deafults to 1800.
-p, --recordPriority <recordPriority> The priority of the host (SRV and MX records only).
-o, --recordPort <recordPort> The port that the service is accessible on (SRV records only).
-w, --recordWeight <recordWeight> The weight of records with the same priority (SRV records only).
-c, --create Create a new domain record if none exists. Creates the domain RECORD, not a domain.