HTTPS proxy certs were generated once at startup. Services added at runtime via API or LAN discovery got "not secure" in the browser because their SAN wasn't in the cert. Now the cert is regenerated on every service add/remove and swapped atomically via ArcSwap. In-flight connections are unaffected. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Numa
DNS you own. Everywhere you go.
A portable DNS resolver in a single binary. Block ads on any network, name your local services (frontend.numa), and override any hostname with auto-revert — all from your laptop, no cloud account or Raspberry Pi required.
Built from scratch in Rust. Zero DNS libraries. RFC 1035 wire protocol parsed by hand. One ~8MB binary, no PHP, no web server, no database — everything is embedded.
Quick Start
# Install
curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/razvandimescu/numa/main/install.sh | sh
# Run (port 53 requires root)
sudo numa
# Try it
dig @127.0.0.1 google.com # ✓ resolves normally
dig @127.0.0.1 ads.google.com # ✗ blocked → 0.0.0.0
Open the dashboard: http://numa.numa (or http://localhost:5380)
Or build from source:
git clone https://github.com/razvandimescu/numa.git && cd numa
cargo build --release
sudo ./target/release/numa
Why Numa
- Ad blocking that travels with you — 385K+ domains blocked via Hagezi Pro. Works on any network: coffee shops, hotels, airports.
- Local service proxy —
https://frontend.numainstead oflocalhost:5173. Auto-generated TLS certs, WebSocket support for HMR. Like/etc/hostsbut with a dashboard and auto-revert. - Path-based routing —
app.numa/api → :5001,app.numa/auth → :5002. Route URL paths to different backends with optional prefix stripping. Like nginx location blocks, zero config files. - LAN service discovery — Numa instances on the same network find each other automatically via mDNS. Access a teammate's
api.numafrom your machine. Opt-in via[lan] enabled = true. - Developer overrides — point any hostname to any IP, auto-reverts after N minutes. REST API with 25+ endpoints. Built-in diagnostics:
curl localhost:5380/diagnose/example.comtells you exactly how any domain resolves. - Sub-millisecond caching — cached lookups in 0ms. Faster than any public resolver.
- Live dashboard — real-time stats, query log, blocking controls, service management. LAN accessibility badges show which services are reachable from other devices.
- macOS + Linux —
numa installconfigures system DNS,numa service startruns as launchd/systemd service.
Local Service Proxy
Name your local dev services with .numa domains:
curl -X POST localhost:5380/services \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d '{"name":"frontend","target_port":5173}'
open http://frontend.numa # → proxied to localhost:5173
- HTTPS with green lock — auto-generated local CA + per-service TLS certs
- WebSocket — Vite/webpack HMR works through the proxy
- Health checks — dashboard shows green/red status per service
- LAN sharing — services bound to
0.0.0.0are automatically discoverable by other Numa instances on the network. Dashboard shows "LAN" or "local only" per service. - Path-based routing — route URL paths to different backends:
[[services]] name = "app" target_port = 3000 routes = [ { path = "/api", port = 5001 }, { path = "/auth", port = 5002, strip = true }, ]app.numa/api/users → :5001/api/users,app.numa/auth/login → :5002/login(stripped) - Persistent — services survive restarts
- Or configure in
numa.toml:
[[services]]
name = "frontend"
target_port = 5173
LAN Service Discovery
Run Numa on multiple machines. They find each other automatically:
Machine A (192.168.1.5) Machine B (192.168.1.20)
┌──────────────────────┐ ┌──────────────────────┐
│ Numa │ mDNS │ Numa │
│ services: │◄───────────►│ services: │
│ - api (port 8000) │ discovery │ - grafana (3000) │
│ - frontend (5173) │ │ │
└──────────────────────┘ └──────────────────────┘
From Machine B:
dig @127.0.0.1 api.numa # → 192.168.1.5
curl http://api.numa # → proxied to Machine A's port 8000
Enable LAN discovery:
numa lan on
Or in numa.toml:
[lan]
enabled = true
Uses standard mDNS (_numa._tcp.local on port 5353) — compatible with Bonjour/Avahi, silently dropped by corporate firewalls instead of triggering IPS alerts.
Hub mode — don't want to install Numa on every machine? Run one instance as a shared DNS server and point other devices to it:
# On the hub machine, bind to LAN interface
[server]
bind_addr = "0.0.0.0:53"
# On other devices, set DNS to the hub's IP
# They get .numa resolution, ad blocking, caching — zero install
How It Compares
| Pi-hole | AdGuard Home | NextDNS | Cloudflare | Numa | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ad blocking | Yes | Yes | Yes | Limited | 385K+ domains |
| Portable (travels with laptop) | No (appliance) | No (appliance) | Cloud only | Cloud only | Single binary |
| Developer overrides | No | No | No | No | REST API + auto-expiry |
| Local service proxy | No | No | No | No | .numa + HTTPS + WS |
| Path-based routing | No | No | No | No | Prefix match + strip |
| LAN service discovery | No | No | No | No | mDNS, opt-in |
| Data stays local | Yes | Yes | Cloud | Cloud | 100% local |
| Zero config | Complex | Docker/setup | Yes | Yes | Works out of the box |
| Self-sovereign DNS | No | No | No | No | pkarr/DHT roadmap |
How It Works
Query → Overrides → .numa TLD → Blocklist → Local Zones → Cache → Upstream
No DNS libraries. The wire protocol — headers, labels, compression pointers, record types — is parsed and serialized by hand. Runs on tokio + axum, async per-query task spawning.
Roadmap
- DNS proxy core — forwarding, caching, local zones
- Developer overrides — REST API with auto-expiry
- Ad blocking — 385K+ domains, live dashboard, allowlist
- System integration — macOS + Linux, launchd/systemd, Tailscale/VPN auto-discovery
- Local service proxy —
.numadomains, HTTP/HTTPS proxy, auto TLS, WebSocket - Path-based routing — URL prefix routing with optional strip, REST API
- LAN service discovery — mDNS auto-discovery (opt-in), cross-machine DNS + proxy
- pkarr integration — self-sovereign DNS via Mainline DHT (15M nodes)
- Global
.numanames — self-publish, DHT-backed, first-come-first-served
License
MIT
