+ doc: clients

This commit is contained in:
Simon Zolin 2019-04-24 17:58:04 +03:00
parent 218f51092c
commit 6a7b1aba8b
1 changed files with 138 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -12,6 +12,12 @@ Contents:
* Updating
* Get version command
* Update command
* Device Names and Per-client Settings
* Per-client settings
* Get list of clients
* Add client
* Update client
* Delete client
* Enable DHCP server
* "Check DHCP" command
* "Enable DHCP" command
@ -420,3 +426,135 @@ Step 2.
If we would set a different IP address, we'd need to replace the IP address for the current network configuration. But currently this step isn't necessary.
ip addr replace dev eth0 192.168.0.1/24
## Device Names and Per-client Settings
When a client requests information from DNS server, he's identified by IP address.
Administrator can set a name for a client with a known IP and also override global settings for this client. The name is used to improve readability of DNS logs: client's name is shown in UI next to its IP address. The names are loaded from 3 sources:
* automatically from "/etc/hosts" file. It's a list of `IP<->Name` entries which is loaded once on AGH startup from "/etc/hosts" file.
* automatically using rDNS. It's a list of `IP<->Name` entries which is added in runtime using rDNS mechanism when a client first makes a DNS request.
* manually configured via UI. It's a list of client's names and their settings which is loaded from configuration file and stored on disk.
### Per-client settings
UI provides means to manage the list of known clients (List/Add/Update/Delete) and their settings. These settings are stored in configuration file as an array of objects.
Notes:
* `name`, `ip` and `mac` values are unique.
* `ip` & `mac` values can't be set both at the same time.
* If `mac` is set and DHCP server is enabled, IP is taken from DHCP lease table.
* If `use_global_settings` is true, then DNS responses for this client are processed and filtered using global settings.
* If `use_global_settings` is false, then the client-specific settings are used to override (disable) global settings. For example, if global setting `parental_enabled` is true, then per-client setting `parental_enabled:false` can disable Parental Control for this specific client.
### Get list of clients
Request:
GET /control/clients
Response:
200 OK
{
clients: [
{
name: "client1"
ip: "..."
mac: "..."
use_global_settings: true
filtering_enabled: false
parental_enabled: false
safebrowsing_enabled: false
safesearch_enabled: false
}
]
auto_clients: [
{
name: "host"
ip: "..."
source: "etc/hosts" || "rDNS"
}
]
}
### Add client
Request:
POST /control/clients/add
{
name: "client1"
ip: "..."
mac: "..."
use_global_settings: true
filtering_enabled: false
parental_enabled: false
safebrowsing_enabled: false
safesearch_enabled: false
}
Response:
200 OK
Error response (Client already exists):
400
### Update client
Request:
POST /control/clients/update
{
name: "client1"
data: {
name: "client1"
ip: "..."
mac: "..."
use_global_settings: true
filtering_enabled: false
parental_enabled: false
safebrowsing_enabled: false
safesearch_enabled: false
}
}
Response:
200 OK
Error response (Client not found):
400
### Delete client
Request:
POST /control/clients/delete
{
name: "client1"
}
Response:
200 OK
Error response (Client not found):
400