Automate hosts file updates on Linux and MacOS.

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README.md

Auto Update Ad-blocking Hosts file on Linux and Mac

Automate the hosts file process with cronjobs.

Purpose of Hosts Files

Hosts files will reroute unwanted traffic from ad farms, behavioral tracking firms and malware sites to a blackhole; routing to 0.0.0.0 (localhost; your PC) when a request is made to a URL on the blacklist.

Which means any traffic that would have left your system for that destination, is sent inward, to your localhost and then abandoned.

Despite what some may suggest, hosts files are not "1980s technology" and still very useful today, as an additional layer of security.

Hosts file are a useful redundancy when coupled with ad blockers like uBlock Origin and uMatrix - while debugging or 'Temporarily Allow All on this Site' with Noscript can open you up to underlying attacks or privacy intrusions.

In-browser filters won't protect you if the browser itself is phoning home.

If you have an up-to-date hosts file, the risk is severely lessened.

Auto Hosts will automate the setup process for maintaining an up to date hosts file, by:

  • Installing a weekly cronjob to pull fresh/updated copies of Steven Black's Host file and LocalFigurez Firefox Telemetry List (default is every Sunday at 7:22pm)
  • Appends Facebook trackers, Linkedin ads, Google fonts, Firefox telemetry and other harvester sites that curated lists for whatever reason, have not added to their blacklists
  • Refreshes DNS to instantiate the re-routed changes (Mac Only)
  • If Devdom is installed, append all local virtualhosts
  • Uninstall offers the ability to revert to a fresh hosts file and undo any changes made by Autohosts; a backup will be copied to /tmp
  • Add custom filters from ~/autohosts on your desktop

Installing: Install

Firefox Snooping list by LocalFigurez added in v1.1.0

For those of us who want our browser to behave like a browser and not a GPS anklet, this list will prove useful by blocking a plethora of tracking URLs. A few of which, some Firefox users have noticed seem to phone home even when the setting is toggled off in about:config.

Custom filters added in v1.3.0

You can easily append any domain you want to blacklist directly from your home directory. Your custom preferences will be stored with each subsequent update - set it and forget it!

To Install

git clone https://github.com/angela-d/autohosts.git && cd autohosts && sudo ./autohosts

To upgrade an existing install

v1.3.0 - present

  • A fresh install of Autohosts is recommended, due to the functional changes of custom filters

v1.1.0 - present:

  • You do not need to uninstall the prior version
  • Simply re-run Autohosts: bash git clone https://github.com/angela-d/autohosts.git /tmp && cd autohosts ./autohosts

Versions prior to 1.1.0:

  • Clone the repo to /tmp: bash git clone https://github.com/angela-d/autohosts.git /tmp && cd autohosts ./uninstall-autohosts Then: bash ./autohosts

The script will take care of the rest!


Adding custom filters

Custom filters are loaded to your home directory: ~/autohosts/custom_filters or /home/your_username/autohosts/custom_filters

  • This file can be edited in your favorite text editor; command-line modifications are not necessary!

Adjust the cron time

If your computer is not powered on when the cron is scheduled, you'll miss the update. Ensure the cronjob is set for a time when you're most likely to have it on. You can adjust it by running:

crontab -e

and modifying the dates to suit.

Cron legend:

* * * * * = minute, hour, day of month, month

(* = every, so 5 straight stars is equal to every minute of every hour of every day and every month.. which you should never run while pulling 3rd party content!)

Uninstalling: Install

Note: Because this script has to modify /etc/hosts - it needs elevated privileges (running as root or a sudo user). Scripts that require elevated privilenges should be read an analyzed so you know what's being done to your system! Read the source code of this script (and any others requiring such permissions) before you install.

Alternative uses with Hosts files