To setup your computer to work with *.test domains, e.g. project.test, awesome.test and so on, without having to add to your hosts file each time.
- Homebrew
- Mountain Lion -> High Sierra
brew install dnsmasq
mkdir -pv $(brew --prefix)/etc/
echo 'address=/.test/127.0.0.1' >> $(brew --prefix)/etc/dnsmasq.conf
echo 'port=53' >> $(brew --prefix)/etc/dnsmasq.conf
sudo brew services start dnsmasq
sudo mkdir -v /etc/resolver
sudo bash -c 'echo "nameserver 127.0.0.1" > /etc/resolver/test'
That's it! You can run scutil --dns to show all of your current resolvers, and you should see that all requests for a domain ending in .test will go to the DNS server at 127.0.0.1
Also, if the DNS entries you're trying to create don't actually exist, then you don't need to add 127.0.0.1 to your network preferences DNS order. If your domain suffix is
blah
, make sure that you add thenameserver 127.0.0.1
to/etc/resolver/blah
for the OS X resolver fallback to work.See this for more info.