I’ve wanted to install pihole so I can access my machines via DNS, currently I have names for my machines in my /etc/hosts files across some of my machines, but that means that I have to copy the configuration to each machine independently which is not ideal.
I’ve seen some popular options for top-level domain in local environments are *.box or *.local.
I would like to use something more original and just wanted to know what you guys use to give me some ideas.
do not use
.local
, as tempting as it may beuse
.home
personally“.home.arpa” for A records.
I run my own CA and DNS, and can create vanity TLDs like: a.git, a.webmail, b.sync, etc for internal services. These are CNAMEs pointing to A records.
RFC 6762 defines the TLDs you can use safely in a local-only context:
*.intranet
*.internal
*.private
*.corp
*.home
*.lanBe a selfhosting rebel, but stick to the RFCs!
How do you get https on those though? A lot of random stuff requires https these days.
https is not a problem. But you’ll need an internal CA and distributed its certificate to your hosts’ trust store.
.damo
I have an io domain - mylastname.io
AD domain is home.mylastname.io
A place I put most apps running on my Kubernetes cluster is *.apps.mylastname.io
I own both `mydomain.com` and `mydomain.net`, and the `.net` is all my internal services (eg `homeassistant.mydomain.net`). The public `.com` domain I use exclusively for email and a static site.
I had some old employer with a similar segmentation so it just made sense to me ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
.com lol. I got a 6 letter domain that makes for me. I should check out .local though. I could .com for my website and .local for my home network using the same domain name.
I mean… I use xtremeownage.com
But, ya know… I own it. Although, I use a few subdomains for my home-network, with a split-horizon DNS setup.
lastname. systems
I used to own lastname.cloud and foolishly let that expire. Its one of my biggest regrets.
i have owned a .com since 1997. i use that.
Technically every machine is supposed to have a registered TLD, even on a local network. That said, I use .lan
If you want to avoid problems, use TLD that are assigned for this purpose, for example
.home.arpa
or.home
or.lan
or.private
etc.Avoid using
.local
because its already used by mDNS.Nothing. I have all devices using tailscale DNS and I refer to things in my network by their host name directly.
I’ve never used DNS in my local network (because it’s additional burden to support, so I tried to avoid it), but couple of month ago when I needed several internal web-sites on standard http port, I’ve just came up with “localdomain.”
Yep, it’s non-standard too, but probability of it’s usage of gTLD is lowest among all other variants because of it’s usage in Unix world and how non-pretty it is :)
If DNS is a burden to support you’re doing it wrong. I set it up once and haven’t touched it since. Everything new that gets added “just works”.
It’s not like DNS is a huge burden by itself, it’s just approach of avoiding creation of critical services unless they become necessary. Because infrastructure around them is a burden: they needs additional firewall rules on middleboxes, monitoring, redundancy, IaC, backups etc.
I don’t fully follow that but like I said, sounds like you’re doing it wrong if you have to alter firewall rules every time you add a host because of DNS issues.
I am not speaking about maintainance of DNS zones (that’s easy), but about maintanance of authoritative DNS servers.
I own both mydomain.com as well as mydomain.me. I use the *.me as my local domain and *.com for the real world.