Your Raspberry Pi Projects

@Speedster quick test would be to disable the "DNS client" on your Windows boxes (requires some registry changes) and then rebooting.
Should fix it for you
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I'm needing some help with pi-hole, pretty pleae. I've set it up and everything seems to be working just fine. The issue is I've got the router (Huawei B618) taking care of DHCP and have set DNS on the router to the pi-hole IP. Devices connecting to the router don't seem to be going via pi-hole though?
So you got the extra setting to set preferred DNS on the router. Did you try flushing DNS cache on the client? And maybe terminating the DHCP lease and reconnecting the client.

You can see what DNS server the client is using with "ipconfig /all". Once your Pi-hole shows as the DNS server, you're good to go.
 
So you got the extra setting to set preferred DNS on the router. Did you try flushing DNS cache on the client? And maybe terminating the DHCP lease and reconnecting the client.

You can see what DNS server the client is using with "ipconfig /all". Once your Pi-hole shows as the DNS server, you're good to go.
Thanks. As I mentioned earlier, the client shows the router as the server, not the pi-hole. It works for most of the clients on the network, but some were still not being pushed via the pi-hole - could be DNS cache issues on those clients, but I will give it a couple of days to sort itself out.
 
@Speedster Have you considered just sticking a pi zero to the B618 and power it from the USB port on the router? You can then set it as the DHCP server, and it will be portable hen you move the device to the different location without having to reconfigure anything.

I used to power mine from the B618's port. I now have VDSL so I am running it from my VDSL routers port.
 
Thanks. As I mentioned earlier, the client shows the router as the server, not the pi-hole. It works for most of the clients on the network, but some were still not being pushed via the pi-hole - could be DNS cache issues on those clients, but I will give it a couple of days to sort itself out.
It's also worth flushing the DNS cache via the Pi-Hole server. Also double-checking to ensure that no equipment has a secondary DNS server specified.

That said - if my experience is anything to go by :) - there is no one-size-fits-all solutions. Ultimately one has to resolve the problems associated with each of the "offending" devices on a one-by-one basis.
 
That's a pretty sweet solution. Everything seems to be working just dandy this morning though, so I think we're good for now.
 
Quick update - the Pi-hole is working brilliantly today. I must admit, I'm a bit surprised by the number of queries it's processed so far. Small office of 4 people, and 25 000 queries in the first day
 
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Quick update - the Pi-hole is working brilliantly today. I must admit, I'm a bit surprised by the number of queries it's processed so far. Small office of 4 people, and 25 000 queries in the first day
This is mine with just 2 of us at home. A lot of the blocking is just Netflix presentation tracking though... I am always annoyed using my mobile on another network, so much junk and ads.Screenshot_20210504_205540_sterrenburg.github.flutterhole.jpg
 
This is mine with just 2 of us at home. A lot of the blocking is just Netflix presentation tracking though... I am always annoyed using my mobile on another network, so much junk and ads.
NextDNS might help you with that problem.
 
NextDNS might help you with that problem.
Didn't think it was a problem? I use CloudFlare and OpenDNS as the providers on the Pi-Hole. NextDNS seems like an ad blicking DNS which is the job the Pi-Hole is already doing. Or am I missing some benefit of using it?
 
Sorry, it's been a long day at work. You mean using NextDNS on my mobile as the DNS provider?

I do have Blokada installed but it likes to disable itself...
 
Didn't think it was a problem? I use CloudFlare and OpenDNS as the providers on the Pi-Hole. NextDNS seems like an ad blicking DNS which is the job the Pi-Hole is already doing. Or am I missing some benefit of using it?
When you’re not on your network, it solves ad blocking.
 
Sorry, it's been a long day at work. You mean using NextDNS on my mobile as the DNS provider?

I do have Blokada installed but it likes to disable itself...
Think of it as a hosted Pi-Hole, definitely not a replacement for a VPN though.
 
After setting up Pi-Hole at the office, I've got Adguard Home going at home (want to compare the two). Adguard is working as planned, except that all the queries are shown as coming from my external IP (currently 105.186.228.xxx) meaning I can't configure rules per device. Anyone else had this issue?
 
After setting up Pi-Hole at the office, I've got Adguard Home going at home (want to compare the two). Adguard is working as planned, except that all the queries are shown as coming from my external IP (currently 105.186.228.xxx) meaning I can't configure rules per device. Anyone else had this issue?

That's the IP you get for devices on your home network?

I will assume your DHCP is on your router, and your router is the DNS relay to which you have pointed to AGH. Normally in this setup, the AGH will logs all queries coming from the router's IP instead of clients. Why yours is the external IP is strange.

Anyway, you can set the DNS server on the DHCP settings so that each client will call the AGH directly instead of using the router. This is what I do.
 
That's the IP you get for devices on your home network?

I will assume your DHCP is on your router, and your router is the DNS relay to which you have pointed to AGH. Normally in this setup, the AGH will logs all queries coming from the router's IP instead of clients. Why yours is the external IP is strange.

Anyway, you can set the DNS server on the DHCP settings so that each client will call the AGH directly instead of using the router. This is what I do.
Only way I could get this to work was to use adguard for DHCP. Router doesn't have many options for it's DHCP / DNS config
 
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