iPhone: add entry to /etc/hosts without jailbreaking

Cyrille picture Cyrille · Sep 19, 2011 · Viewed 43.1k times · Source

For my development process I need to access a webserver which is behind a VPN and has no DNS entry. What I was doing on 4.x was to edit /etc/hosts on the iPhone, and add it to the hosts file.

Now I'm on 5.0 beta, and don't want to jailbreak for now just for this purpose.

Is there a way I can add a line to /etc/hosts, just for development purposes (the final, distribution application does not need this hack), without jailbreaking? Can I use other means (declare a fake DNS entry by some unknown means at application launch, for example)?

Answer

John K. Chow picture John K. Chow · Dec 17, 2013

EDIT: If you're willing to purchase a small license, I recommend using Charles Proxy, a web debugging proxy tool. It will also resolve domains from your local /etc/hosts, and it gives a lot of bonus features (i.e. inspect requests/responses and throttle network speeds). I only stumbled upon this tool from a WWDC video and I'm not affiliated with the product at all. I recommend reading Chris Ching's tutorial for iPhone and Charles Proxy to get you started.


To add to Ramon's answer, a way around it is to setup your local computer as a DNS server and have your iPhone point to your computer as a DNS server. This would also work for Android devices as well

The instructions are for Mac OSX via Homebrew:

  1. brew install dnsmasq
    • dnsmasq is a lightweight dns server that will fallback to the original DNS server when it encounters an unknown domain
  2. Add the line address=/.your.domain.com/10.0.0.5 to the file /usr/local/etc/dnsmasq.conf
    • The IP Address 10.0.0.5 is whatever the IP address assigned to your local computer by your router. You can find this via Network Utility (if you want to be fancy, you can assign a static IP to your local computer in your router)
  3. sudo dnsmasq
    • This starts dnsmasq process, and it will listen on the DNS ports
  4. Assign your local computer and your router as your DNS servers for your computer via System Preferences -> Network -> Advanced -> DNS Tab
    • You'll have two entries, one for your local computer (127.0.0.1) and one for your router. The reason why you include your router's IP is dnsmasq will fulfill unknown entries through the other known DNS servers. Without the router entry, you're whatever devices connected to you dnsmasq won't know how to connect to the internet.
  5. Set your local computer's IP Address as your DNS Server your iPhone, go to Settings -> Wi-Fi -> Info icon for your connected router -> DNS

Some things to consider:

  • If you shut down your machine, your iPhone won't connect to the internet anymore. Make sure to reset your iPhone's DNS server to your router's IP
  • By default dnsmasq will look at your /etc/hosts, so if you had pointed your.domain.com to 127.0.0.1, your iPhone will resolve your.domain.com to 127.0.0.1, which means you won't connect to anything. To change this behaviour edit uncomment the #no-hosts line in the dnsmasq config.

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