This is a fork of https://github.com/cbednarski/hostess
An idempotent command-line utility for managing your /etc/hosts* file.
hostess add local.example.com 127.0.0.1
hostess add staging.example.com 10.0.2.16
Why? Because you edit /etc/hosts for development, testing, and debugging.
Because sometimes DNS doesn't work in production. And because editing
/etc/hosts by hand is a pain. Put hostess in your Makefile or deploy scripts
and call it a day.
* And C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts on Windows.
Note: 0.4.0 has backwards incompatible changes in the API and CLI. See
CHANGELOG.md for details.
hostess is distributed as pre-built binaries attached to each GitHub
release. They are statically linked
(CGO disabled), so there are no runtime dependencies, and each one is published
alongside a .sha256 checksum and a Sigstore
build-provenance attestation you can verify.
Binaries are built for linux-amd64, linux-arm64, linux-arm, darwin-amd64,
darwin-arm64, windows-amd64, and windows-arm64. Each asset is named
hostess-<version>-<os>-<arch>.
With the GitHub CLI you can grab the newest release for your platform in one step:
PLATFORM="linux-amd64" # or linux-arm64, linux-arm, darwin-amd64, darwin-arm64
gh release download --repo monetr/hostess --pattern "hostess-*-${PLATFORM}"
chmod +x hostess-*-"${PLATFORM}"
sudo mv hostess-*-"${PLATFORM}" /usr/local/bin/hostess
Without it, download straight from the latest release (fill in the version shown there):
VERSION="v0.5.3" # the latest tag from the releases page
PLATFORM="linux-amd64"
curl -fsSL -o hostess \
"https://github.com/monetr/hostess/releases/download/${VERSION}/hostess-${VERSION}-${PLATFORM}"
chmod +x hostess
sudo mv hostess /usr/local/bin/hostess
Download hostess-<version>-windows-amd64.exe (or windows-arm64) from the
latest release, or use the
GitHub CLI:
gh release download --repo monetr/hostess --pattern "hostess-*-windows-amd64.exe"
Rename it to hostess.exe and put it somewhere on your PATH. Remember the hosts
file is protected, so run it from an elevated (Run as administrator) prompt.
Every release binary ships with a matching .sha256 checksum and a
build-provenance attestation, so you can confirm a download is intact and was
actually built by this repo's release workflow:
# Checksum: download the .sha256 asset next to the binary, then
sha256sum -c hostess-v0.5.3-linux-amd64.sha256
# Provenance, using the GitHub CLI:
gh attestation verify hostess-v0.5.3-linux-amd64 --repo monetr/hostess
Build from source with a recent version of Go:
git clone https://github.com/monetr/hostess
cd hostess
make install
Run hostess or hostess -h to see a full list of commands.
Note The hosts file is protected. On unixes you will need to use sudo or
run the hostess command as root. On Windows, you will need to run hostess
from an elevated prompt (right click and Run as administrator).
On unixes, hostess follows the format specified by man hosts, with one line
per IP address:
127.0.0.1 localhost hostname2 hostname3
127.0.1.1 machine.name
# 10.10.20.30 some.host
On Windows, hostess writes each hostname on its own line.
127.0.0.1 localhost
127.0.0.1 hostname2
127.0.0.1 hostname3
hostess may be configured via environment variables.
-
HOSTESS_FMTmay be set towindowsorunixto override platform detection for the hosts file format. See Behavior, above, for details -
HOSTESS_PATHmay be set to override platform detection for the location of the hosts file. By default this isC:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hostson Windows and/etc/hostseverywhere else.
It's possible for your hosts file to include overlapping entries for IPv4 and IPv6. This is an uncommon case so the CLI ignores this distinction. The hostess library includes logic that differentiates between these cases.
I hope my software is useful, readable, fun to use, and helps you learn something new. I maintain this software in my spare time. I rarely merge PRs because I am both lazy and a snob. Bug reports, fixes, questions, and comments are welcome but expect a delayed response. No refunds. 👻