I understand there are API limitations, but isn't 15 minutes a lot for an object that orbits around the entire Earth in 90 minutes? On average you're going to be off by about a twelfth of the circumference of the Earth, or roughly the distance between Lisbon and Istanbul
edent · 7h ago
Yes. As I say in the post, you shouldn't use this for docking operations.
If you know of a DNS update which allows for per-minute updates for free, I'll happily move to it.
dahsameer · 3h ago
> As I say in the post, you shouldn't use this for docking operations
Remember people, DNS stands for "Definitely Not for Space-docking"
llimos · 41m ago
or "Docking Not Supported"
Levitating · 6h ago
> If you know of a DNS update which allows for per-minute updates for free, I'll happily move to it.
Why not setup your own name server?
zdw · 5h ago
This is the correct way - dynamic DNS servers frequently have very low TTLs set.
Serving DNS yourself is such an incredibly small bandwidth impact - most of the packets are in the 10's to 100's of bytes - and authoritative DNS servers do not do a lot of processing, just send back RR's from zones which are read at boot time, or updated in an in-memory database.
edent · 4h ago
I couldn't be bothered to set up a DNS server for such an ephemeral joke.
But I would love to read your blog post about setting one up and what you learned.
iwontberude · 4h ago
Coredns is so simple to configure and is a barebones container deployment.
edent · 4h ago
Cool! Please set it up and write a blog post about it.
I'm not being snarky. I've never set up something like that and I'm sure lots of people would be happy to ready about it.
hhh · 4h ago
hi, i haven’t made a video but i have some stuff set up for it:
zdw mentioned an "authoritative" server, i.e. a content DNS server. CloudFlare is not talking about content DNS servers there. It cannot decide from paragraph to paragraph what it is calling the DNS servers that it is talking about, but it is talking about proxy DNS servers, that respond with the actual grunt work of query resolution done.
People like me have been recommending not running public proxy DNS servers for the entirety of the 21st century thus far, and the world has taken some notice, although more work is required, world!
In any case, ANY queries do not work nearly as well for amplification attacks as they used to. Many people have read RFC 8482. I, for example, changed all of the DNS servers in djbwares to respond to ANY queries per RFC 8482 back in March 2019.
The task at hand in this discussion only involves running a content DNS server, serving LOC records from some file/database or other.
AdieuToLogic · 6h ago
> As I say in the post, you shouldn't use this for docking operations.
Brilliant. :-D
fouronnes3 · 6h ago
You totally could use it for docking. A real ISS docking manoeuvre takes several hours. Orbits are very predictable and I'm quite confident that the error you'd get projecting your orbit 15min into the future would be good enough to get within close radar range for the final approach. In fact you probably could do it, even if your spavecraft doesnt have DNS at all, and you have to do the DNS resolve from a ground laptop before you board it. Soyez can dock within 3 hours of lauch. Orbits are very predictable in this timeframe.
CobrastanJorji · 2h ago
If there's no timestamp, all you know is a Lat/Long that was accurate sometime in the last 15 minutes (or more, "best effort basis"). But you don't know when, and you don't know the altitude. That's gonna make using that information for docking...difficult.
edent · 6h ago
I shall make the suggestion to NASA that they start using this ;-)
05 · 5h ago
Sure they're predictable, but since you don't get the exact timestamp for those expired coordinates, it's still useless.
Oh, and accuracy is shit anyway (altitude is rounded to 10m)
metafunctor · 6h ago
It’s quite easy to run your own DNS server — I've found it a worthwhile exercise. Of course, you’ll need a server to run it on.
echoangle · 6h ago
> If you know of a DNS update which allows for per-minute updates for free, I'll happily move to it.
Does Cloudflare not allow this?
Abekkus · 4h ago
I'd say the API can take up to half a minute to propagate, so API updates every minute is running up against their own performance. If you're a free customer, they may block you after a while, but first they'd have to notice you, and I doubt one update per minute would bother them.
Abekkus · 4h ago
Cloudflare does this with an API. If you have any money, I'd suggest dnsimple.com instead.
verytrivial · 5h ago
I read the opening sentence as "I love DNS erotica" which indicates I've been inside too long and should go for a walk.
6thbit · 4h ago
You’d be surprised but I’m pretty sure many people would dig this.
cmehdy · 3h ago
The numbers would definitely be setting A record in that domain!
theobreuerweil · 3h ago
If that’s a pun, it’s next level
messe · 4h ago
Is that not what this is?
Maybe a cold shower too.
edent · 4h ago
Please don't make me sign up as an OnlyFans creator…!
giancarlostoro · 3h ago
Onlyfans was never supposed to be for porn to be fair it just kind of became the profitable business for them
aidenn0 · 3h ago
Any media service that doesn't ban porn will become associated with it.
mschuster91 · 46m ago
Meh both Reddit and Twitter have copious amounts of porn, yet neither are commonly associated with porn.
byteknight · 4h ago
Gives a whole new meaning to its always DNS.
knadh · 3h ago
This is quite cool! I just added this to dns.toys [1]
Do all the tools use TXT records? Or are there any which use LOC, NAPTR, etc?
knadh · 2h ago
Yep, all tools return formatted strings as TXT records.
TMEHpodcast · 7h ago
Brilliant! This is both clever and educational. I immediately wondered if it would be possible to do something similar for JWST.
Unfortunately LOC DNS records top out at ~42 million meters (42,000 km altitude) and JWST is 38x further out (~1.5 million km away). So you can’t represent its location with a LOC altitude field. Maybe Hubble?
dotancohen · 17m ago
That probably because GSO is right about at that altitude.
firesteelrain · 7h ago
Not sure how that will work since JWST orbits the second Lagrange point.
It would be like asking for the GPS coordinates of the moon. NASA did test receiving weak GPS signals on the moon with LRO in 2023. It wouldn’t be useful for navigation though (not yet unless someone has like a way to do reverse GPS on the moon but not sure how that would work)
Reason this works for the ISS is because of the subsatellite point. It can receive GPS signals regardless of altitude above the Earth’s surface.
Also TLEs apply to the ISS because it’s earth orbiting.
TLEs are designed for satellites in Earth orbit, where they define position and velocity using orbital elements interpreted by models like SGP4.
echoangle · 6h ago
> It would be like asking for the GPS coordinates of the moon
No problem at all, just give the location where the moon is at the Zenith and use the distance as the altitude.
> Reason this works for the ISS is because of the subsatellite point. It can receive GPS signals regardless of altitude above the Earth’s surface.
No, wether the object can actually receive GPS signals is completely irrelevant to wether its location can be described in the GPS coordinate system.
You could describe the location of the Sun in GPS coordinates too, the altitude value would just be very large.
firesteelrain · 6h ago
You can use GPS to describe a point on Earth. To use the moon or sun is kind of weird because of their size to use GPS coordinates for this
I was referring to finding your position on the moon using Earth referenced GPS signals.
echoangle · 6h ago
> You can use GPS to describe a point on Earth.
No, you can describe any point in the universe using GPS coordinates. You just lose some resolution the further away from earth you are because it's basically spherical coordinates (like polar coordinates but for 3D).
And the system isn't inertial but earth-fixed, of course, so you would have to give the coordinates together with a time.
And if you're describing the location of the moon and the sun, you would probably pick their center of gravity.
firesteelrain · 6h ago
I believe this isn’t true otherwise NASA would be doing this
- Earth isn’t a universal reference
- GPS uses WGS84
- GPS is bound to the Earth’s surface and center
- It’s Geodetic
- There's no universal “equator” or “prime meridian” beyond Earth
- Space uses inertial frames or celestial coordinate systems (right ascension and declination, or galactic coordinates)
echoangle · 6h ago
That's exactly what I said. It isn't very practical for space ops, but you can absolutely give a current GPS position for every object you want.
firesteelrain · 6h ago
That’s conceptually misleading.
They are meaningless for things not near Earth because they’re tied to Earth's shape, rotation, and gravity field
gmiller123456 · 2h ago
There are a handful of Earth centered, geocentric standard reference frames. The most used today is the Geocentric Celestial Reference System (GCRS). It should be obvious that if you want to compute where to point a telescope, a transformation of coordinates will involve a step through such a coordinate system. GPS is it's own system, but there are transformations to and from the GCRS and GPS frames. Which one makes sense depends a lot on your application.
echoangle · 6h ago
I wouldn't call it meaningless if it can be converted back and forth with a (non-linear) transformation.
firesteelrain · 5h ago
You can do a lot of things…
therealpygon · 6h ago
I could build a house with my pinkie if I excuse the fact I’ll use a team of laborers to do the work and accept that they are so inaccurate that I would be lucky to end up with a shed… if I only cared about technicality.
netsharc · 6h ago
> NASA did test receiving weak GPS signals on the moon with LRO in 2023.
I doubt very much that the position of the ISS in the article is being sent from the ISS at real time. It's more likely calculated using NORAD / Celestrak orbital elements plus orbital calculations.
I remember having a Windows desktop app to show the satellites locations, I'd have to download those text files to keep the information accurate. For the information beyond the snapshot, the app has to calculate distance and trajectory to estimate "If NORAD said it was here at this point in time, and heading that way with that speed, then right now it should be around here.". A bit like "If a train left Chicago 5 hours ago going 60 mph, where is it now?".
> doubt very much that the position of the ISS in the article is being sent from the ISS at real time. It's more likely calculated using NORAD / Celestrak orbital elements plus orbital calculations.
Yes, this is how the referenced site knows the approximate position of the ISS via TLEs. TLEs are updated regularly for space objects
echoangle · 6h ago
That doesn't matter for the problem at hand though. You can calculate the current GPS coordinates from any TLE, even if they aren't derived from GPS measurements but from Satellite Laser Ranging or some other method.
firesteelrain · 6h ago
You can derive Lat and Lon and Altitude on Earth. Thats the one point of the TLEs. But they aren’t GPS derived coordinates.
echoangle · 6h ago
Yes, but you don't need GPS derived coordinates for the DNS LOC entry.
firesteelrain · 6h ago
Correct because the site referenced uses N2YO which is using NASA provided TLEs which some backend that provides an API. GPS and TLEs are not the same.
TMEHpodcast · 7h ago
Yes, I realize not-having initially understood what LOC DNS actually is. As mentioned, this could of course be applied to Hubble.
firesteelrain · 6h ago
Any MEO or LEO satellite
Hubble operates in LEO so it’s eligible
politelemon · 6h ago
Looking at the RFC it's never explained why this is needed. Or was needed back in 1996, perhaps something to go with universities and data center logistics back then?
echoangle · 6h ago
> Looking at the RFC it's never explained why this is needed.
Chapter 5.1 (Suggested Uses) has at least some vague suggestions:
> Some uses for the LOC RR have already been suggested, including the
> USENET backbone flow maps, a "visual traceroute" application showing
> the geographical path of an IP packet, and network management
> applications that could use LOC RRs to generate a map of hosts and
> routers being managed.
edent · 6h ago
RFCs are, in my experience, vague about the problem they're attempting to solve.
There's no reason this couldn't be a human-readable string like "42 Wallaby Way, Sidney".
Could you calculate the position from the Ephemeris data in realtime instead of using an API? This would allow you to return the current location on every request potentially.
lordnacho · 5h ago
Is there any service on the ISS that the public can interact with? Maybe you could use response times to figure out where it is that way.
It's pretty likely there will be a slow-scan TV event in mid-July, where the station will be transmitting images you can pick up with a radio. These are nice because you don't neeed a license - anyone with a radio that can pick up the right frequencies can receive.
crazygringo · 4h ago
That's what I thought this was going to be from the title -- some kind of DNS response time triangulation from a device on the ISS itself, because DNS was allowed past a firewall or something...
It's still a fun little project, but definitely feeling a little disappointed in comparison to what the title felt like it suggested to me...
croes · 5h ago
Depends on the hops between you and the target
xyst · 2h ago
Great post, definitely something I can setup on my personal recursive DNS resolver. Yet another toy I can throw on to my rpi :)
IndrekR · 7h ago
Considering the ISS orbits in ~90 minutes, the 15 minute TTL is quite a long time.
xkcd1963 · 51m ago
TLDR; use an API
harha_ · 6h ago
It's just an API that utilizes DNS, not that interesting imo.
If you know of a DNS update which allows for per-minute updates for free, I'll happily move to it.
Remember people, DNS stands for "Definitely Not for Space-docking"
Why not setup your own name server?
Serving DNS yourself is such an incredibly small bandwidth impact - most of the packets are in the 10's to 100's of bytes - and authoritative DNS servers do not do a lot of processing, just send back RR's from zones which are read at boot time, or updated in an in-memory database.
But I would love to read your blog post about setting one up and what you learned.
I'm not being snarky. I've never set up something like that and I'm sure lots of people would be happy to ready about it.
https://youtu.be/AJ2Q12vYojY https://youtu.be/GoPWuJR6Npc
and i host https://dnsroleplay.club which lets you answer real people’s dns requests, there should be links to the github for how it’s done
People like me have been recommending not running public proxy DNS servers for the entirety of the 21st century thus far, and the world has taken some notice, although more work is required, world!
* https://jdebp.uk/FGA/proxy-server-ip-addresses.html
In any case, ANY queries do not work nearly as well for amplification attacks as they used to. Many people have read RFC 8482. I, for example, changed all of the DNS servers in djbwares to respond to ANY queries per RFC 8482 back in March 2019.
The task at hand in this discussion only involves running a content DNS server, serving LOC records from some file/database or other.
Brilliant. :-D
Oh, and accuracy is shit anyway (altitude is rounded to 10m)
Does Cloudflare not allow this?
Maybe a cold shower too.
Do all the tools use TXT records? Or are there any which use LOC, NAPTR, etc?
Unfortunately LOC DNS records top out at ~42 million meters (42,000 km altitude) and JWST is 38x further out (~1.5 million km away). So you can’t represent its location with a LOC altitude field. Maybe Hubble?
It would be like asking for the GPS coordinates of the moon. NASA did test receiving weak GPS signals on the moon with LRO in 2023. It wouldn’t be useful for navigation though (not yet unless someone has like a way to do reverse GPS on the moon but not sure how that would work)
Reason this works for the ISS is because of the subsatellite point. It can receive GPS signals regardless of altitude above the Earth’s surface.
Also TLEs apply to the ISS because it’s earth orbiting.
TLEs are designed for satellites in Earth orbit, where they define position and velocity using orbital elements interpreted by models like SGP4.
No problem at all, just give the location where the moon is at the Zenith and use the distance as the altitude.
> Reason this works for the ISS is because of the subsatellite point. It can receive GPS signals regardless of altitude above the Earth’s surface.
No, wether the object can actually receive GPS signals is completely irrelevant to wether its location can be described in the GPS coordinate system.
You could describe the location of the Sun in GPS coordinates too, the altitude value would just be very large.
I was referring to finding your position on the moon using Earth referenced GPS signals.
No, you can describe any point in the universe using GPS coordinates. You just lose some resolution the further away from earth you are because it's basically spherical coordinates (like polar coordinates but for 3D). And the system isn't inertial but earth-fixed, of course, so you would have to give the coordinates together with a time.
And if you're describing the location of the moon and the sun, you would probably pick their center of gravity.
- Earth isn’t a universal reference
- GPS uses WGS84
- GPS is bound to the Earth’s surface and center
- It’s Geodetic
- There's no universal “equator” or “prime meridian” beyond Earth
- Space uses inertial frames or celestial coordinate systems (right ascension and declination, or galactic coordinates)
They are meaningless for things not near Earth because they’re tied to Earth's shape, rotation, and gravity field
I doubt very much that the position of the ISS in the article is being sent from the ISS at real time. It's more likely calculated using NORAD / Celestrak orbital elements plus orbital calculations.
I remember having a Windows desktop app to show the satellites locations, I'd have to download those text files to keep the information accurate. For the information beyond the snapshot, the app has to calculate distance and trajectory to estimate "If NORAD said it was here at this point in time, and heading that way with that speed, then right now it should be around here.". A bit like "If a train left Chicago 5 hours ago going 60 mph, where is it now?".
Nowadays it's all online of course: https://in-the-sky.org/satmap_worldmap.php .
Yes, this is how the referenced site knows the approximate position of the ISS via TLEs. TLEs are updated regularly for space objects
Hubble operates in LEO so it’s eligible
Chapter 5.1 (Suggested Uses) has at least some vague suggestions:
> Some uses for the LOC RR have already been suggested, including the
> USENET backbone flow maps, a "visual traceroute" application showing
> the geographical path of an IP packet, and network management
> applications that could use LOC RRs to generate a map of hosts and
> routers being managed.
There's no reason this couldn't be a human-readable string like "42 Wallaby Way, Sidney".
It's still a fun little project, but definitely feeling a little disappointed in comparison to what the title felt like it suggested to me...