Move the supported systemd path to two services: an owner-user bangerd for orchestration and a narrow root helper for bridge/tap, NAT/resolver, dm/loop, and Firecracker ownership. This removes repeated sudo from daily vm and image flows without leaving the general daemon running as root. Add install metadata, system install/status/restart/uninstall commands, and a system-owned runtime layout. Keep user SSH/config material in the owner home, lock file_sync to the owner home, and move daemon known_hosts handling out of the old root-owned control path. Route privileged lifecycle steps through typed privilegedOps calls, harden the two systemd units, and rewrite smoke plus docs around the supported service model. Verified with make build, make test, make lint, and make smoke on the supported systemd host path.
5 KiB
DNS routing — resolving <vm>.vm hostnames from the host
banger's owner daemon runs a local DNS server on 127.0.0.1:42069 that
answers queries under the .vm zone. Every VM you create gets a
record:
devbox.vm → 172.16.0.9 (whatever guest IP it was assigned)
With that plus host-side DNS routing, you can:
ssh root@devbox.vm
curl http://devbox.vm:3000
from anywhere on the host without copy-pasting guest IPs.
Supported path
The supported host-side path is:
systemdon the hostbangerd.servicerunning as the owner userbangerd-root.servicerunning as the privileged host helpersystemd-resolvedhandling.vmrouting viaresolvectl
If you're on a non-systemd host or a host without systemd-resolved,
the recipes below are best-effort guidance, not the primary supported
deployment model.
systemd-resolved hosts — nothing to configure
If your host uses systemd-resolved (most modern Linux desktops —
Ubuntu ≥18.04, Fedora, Arch with the service enabled), banger
auto-wires it. When the banger services start, the owner daemon asks
the root helper to apply the equivalent of:
sudo resolvectl dns <bridge> 127.0.0.1:42069
sudo resolvectl domain <bridge> ~vm
sudo resolvectl default-route <bridge> no
against the banger bridge (br-fc by default). systemd-resolved
routes only .vm lookups to banger's DNS; everything else goes to
your normal upstream. No other changes needed.
Verify: resolvectl status br-fc should list 127.0.0.1:42069 under
Current DNS Server and ~vm under DNS Domain.
Stopping or uninstalling the services reverts the bridge's
resolvectl state on shutdown:
sudo banger daemon stop
sudo banger system uninstall
Non-systemd-resolved hosts
banger detects resolvectl's absence and skips the auto-wire. You
configure your own resolver. Below are recipes for the common cases.
They can be useful in local experiments, but this is outside banger's
supported host/runtime path.
In every case the goal is the same: route .vm queries to
127.0.0.1 port 42069, leave everything else alone.
dnsmasq
Add a stanza to your dnsmasq config (e.g.
/etc/dnsmasq.d/banger-vm.conf):
server=/vm/127.0.0.1#42069
Reload dnsmasq (sudo systemctl reload dnsmasq or equivalent) and
test:
dig devbox.vm
NetworkManager with dnsmasq plugin
Same file as above; NetworkManager picks it up automatically if it's
configured to use the dnsmasq plugin (dns=dnsmasq in
/etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf). Restart NetworkManager
after editing.
Raw /etc/resolv.conf
If you edit resolv.conf directly, there's no per-domain routing —
you'd have to point ALL DNS through banger, which you probably don't
want. Install dnsmasq instead and use the stanza above.
macOS (if you ever run banger on a Linux VM hosted on macOS)
macOS supports per-TLD resolvers out of the box. Create
/etc/resolver/vm (as root):
nameserver 127.0.0.1
port 42069
No daemon reload needed — scutil --dns should list .vm under
"Resolver configurations" immediately.
Windows/WSL
WSL2 inherits the Windows resolver by default and cannot be told to
route .vm anywhere. Options:
- Run banger inside WSL but resolve manually:
ssh root@172.16.0.9. - Set up
dnsmasqon the WSL distro and point its resolv.conf at it; then follow the dnsmasq recipe above.
Verifying the DNS server
Regardless of host-side routing, you can always query banger's DNS server directly:
dig @127.0.0.1 -p 42069 devbox.vm
Returns the guest IP if the VM is running. If it returns NXDOMAIN, the VM either doesn't exist under that name or isn't running yet.
banger vm list shows the VM names banger knows about.
Troubleshooting
resolvectlerrors about "system has not been booted with systemd as init system" — you're probably inside a container or on a non-systemdhost. Manual resolver setup may still work, but that's outside the supported path.- Port 42069 already in use — another daemon is bound there
(previous banger instance not shut down cleanly, or an unrelated
app).
ss -ulpn | grep 42069shows who.sudo banger daemon stopstops both banger services and cleans up banger's own listener. devbox.vmresolves but SSH hangs — DNS is fine; the VM might not be up yet or the bridge NAT is misconfigured.banger vm ssh devboxuses the guest IP directly and bypasses DNS — try that to isolate.- Changes to
default_dnsdon't affect.vmresolution —default_dnsis the upstream the GUEST uses; it's unrelated to host-side.vmrouting.
Port and bridge tuning
| Setting | Default | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| DNS listen addr | 127.0.0.1:42069 |
Not configurable in v1. Edit internal/vmdns/server.go if you really need to change it. |
| Bridge name | br-fc |
Configurable via bridge_name in ~/.config/banger/config.toml. |
| Bridge IP | 172.16.0.1 |
Configurable via bridge_ip. |
| Resolver route domain | ~vm |
Not configurable. |