A fast and secure DoH (DNS-over-HTTPS) and ODoH (Oblivious DoH) server.
doh-proxy
is written in Rust, and has been battle-tested in production since February 2018. It doesn't do DNS resolution on its own, but can sit in front of any DNS resolver in order to augment it with DoH support.
- DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH) - Encrypts DNS queries using HTTPS
- JSON API Support - Compatible with Google DNS-over-HTTPS JSON API format
- Oblivious DoH (ODoH) - Provides additional privacy by hiding client IP addresses
- EDNS Client Subnet - Forward client IP information to upstream resolvers for geo-optimized responses
- High Performance - Built with Rust and Tokio for excellent performance
- Flexible Deployment - Can run standalone with built-in TLS or behind a reverse proxy
- Production Ready - Battle-tested in production environments since 2018
- Multiple IP Support - Supports multiple external IP addresses for load balancing
- Automatic Certificate Reloading - No downtime when updating TLS certificates
- Configurable Caching - TTL management with configurable min/max values
Precompiled tarballs and Debian packages for Linux/x86_64 can be downloaded here.
This requires the rust
compiler to be installed.
- With built-in support for HTTPS (default):
cargo install doh-proxy
- Without built-in support for HTTPS:
cargo install doh-proxy --no-default-features
# Simple setup with a local DNS resolver
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' -u 127.0.0.1:53
# With a specific public IP address
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' -u 127.0.0.1:53 -g 203.0.113.1
# With built-in TLS support
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' -u 127.0.0.1:53 -i /path/to/cert.pem -I /path/to/key.pem
USAGE:
doh-proxy [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
FLAGS:
-O, --allow-odoh-post Allow POST queries over ODoH even if they have been disabed for DoH
-K, --disable-keepalive Disable keepalive
-P, --disable-post Disable POST queries
-h, --help Prints help information
-V, --version Prints version information
OPTIONS:
-E, --err-ttl <err_ttl> TTL for errors, in seconds [default: 2]
-H, --hostname <hostname> Host name (not IP address) DoH clients will use to connect
-l, --listen-address <listen_address> Address to listen to [default: 127.0.0.1:3000]
-b, --local-bind-address <local_bind_address> Address to connect from
-c, --max-clients <max_clients> Maximum number of simultaneous clients [default: 512]
-C, --max-concurrent <max_concurrent> Maximum number of concurrent requests per client [default: 16]
-X, --max-ttl <max_ttl> Maximum TTL, in seconds [default: 604800]
-T, --min-ttl <min_ttl> Minimum TTL, in seconds [default: 10]
-p, --path <path> URI path [default: /dns-query]
-g, --public-address <public_address> External IP address(es) DoH clients will connect to (can be specified multiple times)
-j, --public-port <public_port> External port DoH clients will connect to, if not 443
-u, --server-address <server_address> Address to connect to [default: 9.9.9.9:53]
-t, --timeout <timeout> Timeout, in seconds [default: 10]
-I, --tls-cert-key-path <tls_cert_key_path>
Path to the PEM-encoded secret keys (only required for built-in TLS)
-i, --tls-cert-path <tls_cert_path>
Path to the PEM/PKCS#8-encoded certificates (only required for built-in TLS)
--enable-ecs Enable EDNS Client Subnet
--ecs-prefix-v4 <ecs_prefix_v4> IPv4 prefix length for EDNS Client Subnet [default: 24]
--ecs-prefix-v6 <ecs_prefix_v6> IPv6 prefix length for EDNS Client Subnet [default: 56]
Basic setup with custom DNS resolver:
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' -u 8.8.8.8:53 -g 203.0.113.1
Multiple IP addresses for load balancing:
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' -u 127.0.0.1:53 -g 203.0.113.1 -g 203.0.113.2 -g 2001:db8::1
This generates separate DNS stamps for each IP address, allowing clients to connect via any of them.
Production setup with TLS and custom limits:
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' \
-u 127.0.0.1:53 \
-l 0.0.0.0:443 \
-i /etc/letsencrypt/live/doh.example.com/fullchain.pem \
-I /etc/letsencrypt/live/doh.example.com/privkey.pem \
-c 1000 \
-C 32
Behind a reverse proxy (nginx/Caddy):
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' -u 127.0.0.1:53 -l 127.0.0.1:3000
The recommended deployment is behind a TLS termination proxy such as nginx, Caddy, HAProxy, or a CDN. This allows:
- Sharing port 443 with existing web services
- Leveraging existing TLS certificate management
- Using HTTP/2 and HTTP/3 features from the proxy
- Better DDoS protection and rate limiting
Example with nginx:
server {
listen 443 ssl http2;
server_name doh.example.com;
ssl_certificate /path/to/cert.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /path/to/key.pem;
location /dns-query {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:3000;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
}
}
Example with Caddy:
doh.example.com {
reverse_proxy /dns-query localhost:3000
}
For simpler deployments or when running on separate infrastructure:
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' \
-u 127.0.0.1:53 \
-l 0.0.0.0:443 \
-i /path/to/fullchain.pem \
-I /path/to/privkey.pem
Certificate Requirements:
- Certificates and keys must be in PEM/PKCS#8 format
- Can be stored in the same file or separately
- Automatically reloaded when changed (no restart needed)
If using ECDSA certificates that start with -----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY-----
, convert to PKCS#8:
openssl pkcs8 -topk8 -nocrypt -in example.key -out example.pkcs8.pem
Using Let's Encrypt with acme.sh:
# Install acme.sh
curl https://get.acme.sh | sh
# Get certificates
acme.sh --issue -d doh.example.com --webroot /var/www/html
# Run doh-proxy with Let's Encrypt certificates
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' \
-u 127.0.0.1:53 \
-i ~/.acme.sh/doh.example.com/fullchain.cer \
-I ~/.acme.sh/doh.example.com/doh.example.com.key
Note: Once HTTPS is enabled, HTTP connections will not be accepted. A sample self-signed certificate
localhost.pem
is available for testing.
Encrypted DNS Server can handle both DNSCrypt and DoH on the same port:
# In encrypted-dns-server.toml
[tls]
upstream_addr = "127.0.0.1:3000"
This provides:
- Support for both DNSCrypt and DoH protocols
- Built-in DNS caching
- Server-side filtering
- Connection reuse and DDoS protection
location /dns-query {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:3000;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Connection "";
}
backend doh_backend
mode http
server doh1 127.0.0.1:3000 check
The server supports Google's DNS-over-HTTPS JSON API format, making it compatible with applications that use this format.
Send GET requests to /dns-query
with Accept: application/dns-json
header:
# Query A records
curl -H "Accept: application/dns-json" \
"http://localhost:3000/dns-query?name=example.com&type=1"
# Query with multiple parameters
curl -H "Accept: application/dns-json" \
"http://localhost:3000/dns-query?name=example.com&type=28&cd=1&do=1"
name
- Domain name to query (required)type
- DNS record type (default: 1 for A records)cd
- Disable DNSSEC validation (0 or 1)do
- Request DNSSEC data (0 or 1)edns_client_subnet
- Client subnet for EDNS
{
"Status": 0,
"TC": false,
"RD": true,
"RA": true,
"AD": false,
"CD": false,
"Question": [{
"name": "example.com",
"type": 1
}],
"Answer": [{
"name": "example.com",
"type": 1,
"TTL": 300,
"data": "93.184.216.34"
}]
}
EDNS Client Subnet (ECS) is a DNS extension that allows the DoH proxy to forward client IP information to upstream DNS resolvers. This enables geo-optimized DNS responses by allowing authoritative nameservers to return results based on the client's actual location rather than the proxy's location.
Enable ECS support with the following command-line options:
--enable-ecs
- Enable EDNS Client Subnet functionality--ecs-prefix-v4 <length>
- IPv4 prefix length (default: 24)--ecs-prefix-v6 <length>
- IPv6 prefix length (default: 56)
-
Client IP Extraction: The proxy extracts the client's IP address from:
X-Forwarded-For
header (takes the first IP if multiple are present)X-Real-IP
header- Direct connection IP (if no headers are present)
-
IP Truncation: For privacy, client IPs are truncated to the configured prefix length:
- IPv4: Default /24 (e.g., 192.168.1.100 → 192.168.1.0/24)
- IPv6: Default /56 (e.g., 2001:db8::1 → 2001:db8::/56)
-
DNS Query Enhancement: The truncated client subnet is added to outgoing DNS queries using the EDNS0 Client Subnet option (RFC 7871).
-
Geo-Optimized Responses: Upstream resolvers and authoritative nameservers can use this information to return geographically appropriate results.
Basic ECS setup:
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' -u 8.8.8.8:53 --enable-ecs
Custom prefix lengths for more privacy:
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' -u 8.8.8.8:53 \
--enable-ecs \
--ecs-prefix-v4 16 \
--ecs-prefix-v6 48
Behind nginx with ECS enabled:
server {
listen 443 ssl http2;
server_name doh.example.com;
location /dns-query {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:3000;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
}
}
Testing ECS functionality:
# With X-Forwarded-For header
curl -H "X-Forwarded-For: 1.2.3.4" \
-H "Accept: application/dns-json" \
"https://doh.example.com/dns-query?name=example.com&type=1"
# The DNS query sent to upstream will include ECS: 1.2.0.0/24
- IP Truncation: Client IPs are never sent in full. The default settings provide a good balance between geolocation accuracy and privacy.
- Opt-in Only: ECS is disabled by default and must be explicitly enabled.
- Header Trust: Only trust X-Forwarded-For and X-Real-IP headers from known reverse proxies.
- Logging: The proxy does not log client IPs when ECS is enabled, but upstream resolvers might.
For maximum privacy, avoid enabling ECS or use larger prefix values (smaller subnets) like /8 for IPv4 or /32 for IPv6.
Oblivious DoH is similar to Anonymized DNSCrypt, but for DoH. It requires relays, but also upstream DoH servers that support the protocol.
This proxy supports ODoH termination (not relaying) out of the box.
However, ephemeral keys are currently only stored in memory. In a load-balanced configuration, sticky sessions must be used.
Currently available ODoH relays only use POST
queries.
So, POST
queries have been disabled for regular DoH queries, accepting them is required to be compatible with ODoH relays.
This can be achieved with the --allow-odoh-post
command-line switch.
- DoH can be easily detected and blocked using SNI inspection. As a mitigation, DoH endpoints should preferably share the same virtual host as existing, popular websites, rather than being on dedicated virtual hosts.
- When using DoH, DNS stamps should include a resolver IP address in order to remove a dependency on non-encrypted, non-authenticated, easy-to-block resolvers.
- Unlike DNSCrypt where users must explicitly trust a DNS server's public key, the security of DoH relies on traditional public Certificate Authorities. Additional root certificates (required by governments, security software, enterprise gateways) installed on a client immediately make DoH vulnerable to MITM. In order to prevent this, DNS stamps should include the hash of the parent certificate.
- TLS certificates are tied to host names. But domains expire, get reassigned and switch hands all the time. If a domain originally used for a DoH service gets a new, possibly malicious owner, clients still configured to use the service will blindly keep trusting it if the CA is the same. As a mitigation, the CA should sign an intermediate certificate (the only one present in the stamp), itself used to sign the name used by the DoH server. While commercial CAs offer this, Let's Encrypt currently doesn't.
- Make sure that the front-end supports at least HTTP/2 and TLS 1.3.
- Internal DoH servers still require TLS certificates. So, if you are planning to deploy an internal server, you need to set up an internal CA, or add self-signed certificates to every single client.
Use the online DNS stamp calculator to compute the stamp for your server.
Add it to the [static]
section of dnscrypt-proxy
and check that everything works as expected.
Then, start dnscrypt-proxy
with the -show-certs
command-line flag to print the hashes for your certificate chain.
Here is an example output:
[NOTICE] Advertised cert: [CN=dohtrial.att.net,O=AT&T Services\, Inc.,L=Dallas,ST=Texas,C=US] [f679e8451940f06141854dc94e1eb79fa5e04463c15b88f3b392da793c16c353]
[NOTICE] Advertised cert: [CN=DigiCert Global CA G2,O=DigiCert Inc,C=US] [f61e576877da9650294cccb5f96c75fcb71bda1bbc4646367c4ebeda89d7318f]
The first printed certificate is the certificate of the server itself. The next line is the one that signed that certificate. As you keep going down, you are getting closer to the certificate authority.
Unless you are using intermediate certificates, your safest option is probably to include the last printed hash certificate in your DNS stamp.
Go back to the online DNS stamp calculator, and copy&paste the hash (in this example: f61e576877da9650294cccb5f96c75fcb71bda1bbc4646367c4ebeda89d7318f
).
If you are using Let's Encrypt, the last line is likely to be:
Advertised cert: [CN=Let's Encrypt Authority R3,O=Let's Encrypt,C=US] [444ebd67bb83f8807b3921e938ac9178b882bd50aadb11231f044cf5f08df7ce]
There you have it. Your certificate hash is 444ebd67bb83f8807b3921e938ac9178b882bd50aadb11231f044cf5f08df7ce
.
This Go code snippet can also compute the hash of certificates given a .der
file.
- Let's Encrypt E1:
cc1060d39c8329b62b6fbc7d0d6df9309869b981e7e6392d5cd8fa408f4d80e6
- Let's Encrypt R3:
444ebd67bb83f8807b3921e938ac9178b882bd50aadb11231f044cf5f08df7ce
- Let's Encrypt R10:
e644ba6963e335fe765cb9976b12b10eb54294b42477764ccb3a3acca3acb2fc
- ZeroSSL:
9a3a34f727deb9bca51003d9ce9c39f8f27dd9c5242901c2bab1a44e635a0219
Port already in use:
# Check what's using port 3000
lsof -i :3000
# Or use a different port
doh-proxy -l 127.0.0.1:3001 ...
Certificate errors:
- Ensure certificate file contains the full chain
- Convert ECDSA keys to PKCS#8 format
- Check file permissions (readable by the doh-proxy user)
DNS resolution failures:
- Verify the upstream DNS server is reachable
- Check firewall rules for port 53 (UDP/TCP)
- Test with:
dig @127.0.0.1 -p 53 example.com
For high-traffic deployments:
doh-proxy -H 'doh.example.com' \
-u 127.0.0.1:53 \
-c 10000 \ # Max clients
-C 100 \ # Max concurrent streams per client
-t 30 # Timeout in seconds
Compatible DoH clients include:
- dnscrypt-proxy - Supports both DNSCrypt and DoH
- cloudflared - Cloudflare's DoH proxy
- Firefox, Chrome, Edge (native DoH support)
- doh-client - Rust DoH client
- Android 9+ and iOS 14+ (native DoH support)
doh-proxy
powers several public DNS services including:
doh.crypto.sx
- Public DNS resolver- Many other services listed in public encrypted DNS servers
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit pull requests or open issues on GitHub.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.