Netgate Discussion Forum
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Search
    • Register
    • Login

    pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved pfBlockerNG
    54 Posts 7 Posters 3.7k Views
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • N
      newUser2pfSense @Gertjan
      last edited by

      @SteveITS I have always set 192.168.1.1 for all of my LAN computers DNS servers. I use Cloudflare DNS servers in pfSense.
      pfSense DNS Servers Settings.png

      @gertjan I do know which computer, and it's LAN IP address, that I'm using to run the nslookup command.

      S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • S
        SteveITS Galactic Empire @newUser2pfSense
        last edited by

        @newuser2pfsense said in pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN:

        I have always set 192.168.1.1 for all of my LAN computers DNS servers

        nslookup (and therefore your PC) doesn't seem to be using that...? Try giving it a specific server:

        nslookup google.com 192.168.1.1

        Pre-2.7.2/23.09: Only install packages for your version, or risk breaking it. Select your branch in System/Update/Update Settings.
        When upgrading, allow 10-15 minutes to restart, or more depending on packages and device speed.
        Upvote 👍 helpful posts!

        N 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • N
          newUser2pfSense @SteveITS
          last edited by

          @steveits Here is the output to nslookup google.com 192.168.1.1

          nslookup google.com 192.168.1.1
          Server: 192.168.1.1
          Address: 192.168.1.1#53

          Non-authoritative answer:
          Name: google.com
          Address: 172.253.122.138
          Name: google.com
          Address: 172.253.122.102
          Name: google.com
          Address: 172.253.122.139
          Name: google.com
          Address: 172.253.122.101
          Name: google.com
          Address: 172.253.122.113
          Name: google.com
          Address: 172.253.122.100
          Name: google.com
          Address: 2607:f8b0:4004:c1b::8b
          Name: google.com
          Address: 2607:f8b0:4004:c1b::8a
          Name: google.com
          Address: 2607:f8b0:4004:c1b::71
          Name: google.com
          Address: 2607:f8b0:4004:c1b::65

          S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • S
            SteveITS Galactic Empire @newUser2pfSense
            last edited by

            @newuser2pfsense OK. And if you try a hostname you think should be blocked what do you get?

            So far what we seem to have established is your test computer is using 127.0.0.53 for its DNS not the pfSense. Perhaps some sort of VPN or security software? Whatever it is, it is likely not using the pfSense DNS Resolver and hence you are not seeing sites be blocked.

            Pre-2.7.2/23.09: Only install packages for your version, or risk breaking it. Select your branch in System/Update/Update Settings.
            When upgrading, allow 10-15 minutes to restart, or more depending on packages and device speed.
            Upvote 👍 helpful posts!

            N 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • N
              newUser2pfSense @SteveITS
              last edited by

              @steveits pfBlockerNG-devel & Suricata are the only security packages I use on my pfSense box. I do not have any VPN software packages installed or configured in pfSense at present.

              I'm not sure what you might mean by trying a hostname that I think should be blocked. Could you please provide an example and I'll give it a go?

              S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • S
                SteveITS Galactic Empire @newUser2pfSense
                last edited by

                @newuser2pfsense I meant, on your PC. Something is getting the PC to use 127.0.0.53. I'm only guessing as what it is.

                re: blocked, your subject line was "pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking..." and you referenced email images...can you find a URL for one of those?

                Pre-2.7.2/23.09: Only install packages for your version, or risk breaking it. Select your branch in System/Update/Update Settings.
                When upgrading, allow 10-15 minutes to restart, or more depending on packages and device speed.
                Upvote 👍 helpful posts!

                N 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • bingo600B
                  bingo600 @SteveITS
                  last edited by bingo600

                  @steveits said in pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN:

                  Server: 127.0.0.53
                  What is this IP? Usually anything 127.x.x.x is "localhost" or "myself" indicating your computer is asking itself.

                  Linux systemd "DNS Resolver daemon"
                  It usually forwards to the "Real DNS received via DHCP", but it "annoyingly" caches "unresolved" names too.

                  Ie. if you have a "local DNS server" , and try to ping server3 , and get unresolvable .... You then remember that you forgot to enter server3's A record in your DNS server , and does that now.

                  When you now ping server3 on "whatever" it resolves , except on the machine you pinged it from , before making the A record .. It still uses the "cached unresolvable" 👎 - You have to restart the DNS Daemon or flush the cache.

                  Or when hit enough times ... Kick that DNS daemon to He.. , and use settings from "good ole" resolv.conf

                  /Bingo

                  If you find my answer useful - Please give the post a 👍 - "thumbs up"

                  pfSense+ 23.05.1 (ZFS)

                  QOTOM-Q355G4 Quad Lan.
                  CPU  : Core i5 5250U, Ram : 8GB Kingston DDR3LV 1600
                  LAN  : 4 x Intel 211, Disk  : 240G SAMSUNG MZ7L3240HCHQ SSD

                  S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • N
                    newUser2pfSense @SteveITS
                    last edited by newUser2pfSense

                    @steveits For pfBlockerNG-devel, with my iPhone on my WLAN, many email images get blocked which is what pfBlockerNG-devel is designed to do when you choose the feeds you wish to use (I'm sure you already know this so please forgive me). I have pfBlockerNG-devel set for all of my interfaces, so with my desktop on my LAN, no email images get blocked which is not the way it's supposed to work. I can compare side-by-side emails displayed using my iPhone on my WLAN and my desktop on my LAN and they do not appear to be the same. My desktop LAN computer shows everything and my iPhone WLAN removes images (pictures).

                    I wonder if there is a setting in pfBlockerNG-devel that's causing this? Just a thought.

                    GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • GertjanG
                      Gertjan @newUser2pfSense
                      last edited by Gertjan

                      @newuser2pfsense said in pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN:

                      My desktop LAN computer shows everything and my iPhone WLAN removes images (pictures).
                      I wonder if there is a setting in pfBlockerNG-devel that's causing this?

                      What is the DNS your PC uses ?
                      On your PC, Windows I presume, what is the output of

                      ipconfig /all
                      

                      ?
                      If your PC is using 1.1.1.1 or 8.8.8.8 or who ever, it will by pass the pfSense DNS, so it will by pass pfblockerng-devel.

                      Typically, your Windows PC should show :

                      Carte Ethernet Ethernet :
                      
                      Suffixe DNS propre Ă  la connexion. . . : my-network.net
                         Description. . . . . . . . . . . . . . : Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (11) I219-LM
                         Adresse physique . . . . . . . . . . . : A4-BB-6D-BB-A6-A1
                         DHCP activé. . . . . . . . . . . . . . : Oui
                         Configuration automatique activée. . . : Oui
                         Adresse IPv6. . . . . . . . . . . . . .: 2001:470:1f13:dead:2::c7(préféré)
                         Bail obtenu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . : mercredi 23 novembre 2022 08:26:39
                         Bail expirant. . . . . . . . . . . . . : mercredi 23 novembre 2022 11:41:39
                         Adresse IPv6 de liaison locale. . . . .: fe80::daa9:bcf8:99cd:717e%9(préféré)
                         Adresse IPv4. . . . . . . . . . . . . .: 192.168.1.6(préféré)
                         Masque de sous-réseau. . . . . . . . . : 255.255.255.0
                         Bail obtenu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . : mardi 22 novembre 2022 14:45:44
                         Bail expirant. . . . . . . . . . . . . : jeudi 24 novembre 2022 08:26:38
                         Passerelle par défaut. . . . . . . . . : fe80::92ec:77ff:fe29:392c%9
                                                             192.168.1.1
                         Serveur DHCP . . . . . . . . . . . . . : 192.168.1.1
                         IAID DHCPv6 . . . . . . . . . . . : 346340205
                         DUID de client DHCPv6. . . . . . . . : 00-01-00-01-26-59-DF-8D-BB-BB-6D-BA-16-A1
                         Serveurs DNS. . .  . . . . . . . . . . : 192.168.1.1
                                                             2001:470:dead:5c0:2::1
                         NetBIOS sur Tcpip. . . . . . . . . . . : Activé
                      

                      Sorry, french, but you'll get the picture.

                      so my DNS is 'pfSEnse' == 192.168.1.1 (of course) and 2001:470:dead:5c0:2::1, that's my pfSense LAN IPv6.
                      So pfblockerng-devel works fine for my PC.

                      edit :

                      And keep in mind : your PC is also DNS caching !
                      So, if you doubt, use and abuse this command a lot :

                      ipconfig /flushdns
                      

                      No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                      Edit : and where are the logs ??

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • N
                        newUser2pfSense
                        last edited by

                        @Gertjan All of my desktop PCs, Linux flavors, have 192.168.1.1 hard set as their DNS server addresses which is my pfSense address. In pfSense, I've configured Cloudflare DNS servers 1.1.1.1, 1.0.0.1.

                        GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • GertjanG
                          Gertjan @newUser2pfSense
                          last edited by

                          @newuser2pfsense said in pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN:

                          All of my desktop PCs, Linux flavors, have 192.168.1.1 hard set as their DNS server addresses which is my pfSense address.

                          In that case, any host name to be resolved on any of your LAN devices should wind up in the

                          1ebc7749-3044-4798-a1d6-b95b67186abf-image.png

                          == DNS Reply page.

                          Look also at the

                          3291f6ac-d91c-4739-85dd-cbd8c771d394-image.png

                          where the red lines mean : host found in a DNSBL, so blocked.

                          Blocked, for me, means : let's take a listed "upu.samsungelectronics.com" (it's in the list) as an example :

                          C:\Users\Gauche>nslookup upu.samsungelectronics.com
                          Server :   pfSense.mynet.net
                          Address:  192.168.1.1
                          
                          Name :    upu.samsungelectronics.com
                          Address:  0.0.0.0
                          

                          so it got back 0.0.0.0 which means it was blocked.

                          No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                          Edit : and where are the logs ??

                          N 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • N
                            newUser2pfSense @Gertjan
                            last edited by

                            @gertjan In the pfBlockerNG > Reports > DNS Reply, I can see both my LAN and WLAN device IP addresses contacting different Domains. I'm also seeing a lot of 127.0.0.1 traffic from my router/pfSense host name to different Domains, for example:
                            Domains.png

                            In the pfBlockerNG > Reports > Unified, I can see blocked Destinations, for example:
                            Blocked.png
                            My Roku is reaching out every minute, WOW! That's disturbing.

                            I ran an nslookup on one of the destinations listed in the Unified tab, see below:
                            :~$ nslookup e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Server: 127.0.0.53
                            Address: 127.0.0.53#53

                            Non-authoritative answer:
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 23.212.251.142
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 23.212.251.135
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 23.212.251.145
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 23.212.251.138
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 23.212.251.140
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 23.212.251.136
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 23.212.251.148
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 23.212.251.147
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 23.212.251.143
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 2600:1408:c400:11::17cd:6b45
                            Name: e91869.dsca.akamaiedge.net
                            Address: 2600:1408:c400:11::17cd:6b54

                            S GertjanG 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • S
                              SteveITS Galactic Empire @newUser2pfSense
                              last edited by

                              @newuser2pfsense re:Roku, some devices/appliances like that will retry automatically if they can’t connect.

                              Re:Akamai, that’s a content delivery network for major web sites. It has servers all over.

                              Pre-2.7.2/23.09: Only install packages for your version, or risk breaking it. Select your branch in System/Update/Update Settings.
                              When upgrading, allow 10-15 minutes to restart, or more depending on packages and device speed.
                              Upvote 👍 helpful posts!

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • GertjanG
                                Gertjan @newUser2pfSense
                                last edited by Gertjan

                                @newuser2pfsense said in pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN:

                                My Roku is reaching out every minute, WOW! That's disturbing.

                                Wait until you meet my "samsung' smart TV ......
                                Not disturbing.
                                It's "they" who want to know what "you" are doing with your device.
                                You had a discount (they made it cheaper) when you bought that device, and you give them now 'information" they can "use" (and believe me, they do).
                                And you know this is true, as you and I would do the same thing.
                                And when you and I wouldn't do this, then our share holders would convince use that it needs to be done (otherwise we wouldn't have share holder == no starting capital == no new gadgets (TV) etc etc).
                                Btw : not that I'm against all this. It's just so you should know what is really happening - and why.

                                @newuser2pfsense said in pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN:

                                I'm also seeing a lot of 127.0.0.1 traffic from my router/pfSense host name to different Domains

                                Could be part of the CNAME resolving.
                                Your 'PC' asks for facebook.com.
                                The resolver gets a lot of answers back, some or all are CNAME's.
                                The the resolver 'unwinds' these CNAME, to get finally a A (or AAAA) back. This process is used for CDN access == you wind up using the closest, or fastest facebook server.

                                Or you are using :

                                d25c1fbb-ead2-48de-84bf-0799f230eb08-image.png

                                so ones a host name was looked up, unbound will keep this host info up to date in your local unbound cache. You see unbound asking to itself (== 127.0.0.1) : who is edgekey.net ?
                                Just to refresh the DNS info, as all DNS info has a time out == not good after xx minutes.

                                No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                                Edit : and where are the logs ??

                                N F 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • N
                                  newUser2pfSense @Gertjan
                                  last edited by

                                  @gertjan Here is my Services > DNS Resolver > General Settings:
                                  Services_DNS-Resolver_General-Settings.png

                                  Here is my Services > DNS Resolver > Advanced Settings:
                                  Services_DNS-Resolver_Advanced-Settings.png

                                  Everything checked appropriately?

                                  GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • GertjanG
                                    Gertjan @newUser2pfSense
                                    last edited by Gertjan

                                    @newuser2pfsense

                                    @newuser2pfsense

                                    Looking fine.

                                    Please, take one minute, read https://forum.netgate.com/topic/176060/dns-reslution-error-just-on-pfsense-box/3?_=1669305464894 and tell me why you think you need to forward ?

                                    And I'll be silly : I'm using default parameters, and pfBlockerng-devel just blocks fine (for me) ^^

                                    edit : and it was said many times by now : if you forward, disable DNSSEC (all DNSSEC related stuff) as only a resolver can do DNSSEC.

                                    No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                                    Edit : and where are the logs ??

                                    N 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • N
                                      newUser2pfSense @Gertjan
                                      last edited by newUser2pfSense

                                      @gertjan I read the post your provided. I am forwarding, at least the way I read the entry for the checkbox, "If this option is set, DNS queries will be forwarded to the upstream DNS servers defined under System > General Setup...", because I thought pfSense would use the DNS servers that I want it to use, not my ISP DNS servers, but the ones that I define only. I'm not a big proponent of using the Google's DNS servers or my ISP's DNS servers. I'm glad that pfSense gives me a choice. Anyway, maybe I have the incorrect understanding of the language for that checkbox. Here is my DNS Forwarder page. Now I'm a little confused. I don't have it selected so I'm not forwarding?
                                      DNS Forwarder.png

                                      Before I uncheck Enable DNSSEC Support, I just want to make sure I understand (remember, I'm no network guru) that the unbound DNS Resolver does DNSSEC already?

                                      GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • F
                                        FrankM @Gertjan
                                        last edited by

                                        @gertjan

                                        And then they wonder why we try to block their snooping!

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • GertjanG
                                          Gertjan @newUser2pfSense
                                          last edited by

                                          @newuser2pfsense said in pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN:

                                          Here is my DNS Forwarder page. Now I'm a little confused. I don't have it selected so I'm not forwarding?

                                          pfSense contains an forwarder, dnsmasq (the name of the process).
                                          It still present and isn't activated by default. You don't need to use the forwarder (and if you do, disable the resolver/unbound first with the top most check box on it's settings page !). See it as as a extra possibility to do "DNS".

                                          Unbound, the resolver can do both. So unbound can resolve, or forward.
                                          The checkbox discussed above is the main switch between these two functionalities.
                                          It can resolve, that's why pfSense included it several years ago, and it can do forwarding for those who like to do, have no choice, or whatever.

                                          @newuser2pfsense said in pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN:

                                          at least the way I read the entry for the checkbox, "If this option is set, DNS queries will be forwarded to the upstream DNS servers defined under System > General Setup...", because I thought pfSense would use the DNS servers that I want it to use, not my ISP DNS servers , but the ones that I define only.

                                          And you are correct.

                                          @newuser2pfsense said in pfBlockerNG-devel Not Blocking Malvertizing on LAN:

                                          Before I uncheck Enable DNSSEC Support, I just want to make sure I understand (remember, I'm no network guru) that the unbound DNS Resolver does DNSSEC already?

                                          See it like this :
                                          If you want to use DNSSEC you need to use the unbound as a resolver, not a forwarder.
                                          To answer the question : why is this so ? you need to understand what dnssec is, what it isn't.
                                          Just keep in mind what's easy to remember : dnssec needs resolving, not forwarding.

                                          No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                                          Edit : and where are the logs ??

                                          N 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • N
                                            newUser2pfSense @Gertjan
                                            last edited by newUser2pfSense

                                            @gertjan Maybe I should have asked it like this. Seeing I have Cloudflare DNS servers entered in pfSense to use instead of any others, in Services > DNS Resolver > General Settings, if I uncheck DNS Query Forwarding - Enable Forwarding Mode, will pfSense continue to use the Cloudflare DNS servers I entered or different DNS servers?

                                            As well, from the below screenshot, apparently if I uncheck Enable Forwarding Mode, the box right below, Use SSL/TLS for outgoing DNS Queries to Forwarding Servers, my DNS queries will no longer be encrypted? Do I have to uncheck that as well or if it remains checked, will my DNS queries still be encrypted?
                                            DNS Query Forwarding.png

                                            I did a test with DNS Leak Test dot com [https://www.dnsleaktest.com/]. I found that with the Enable Forwarding Mode checked, this is the result of the Extended Test:
                                            DNS Leak Test.png

                                            When I uncheck the Enable Forwarding Mode, the DNS Extended Leak Test shows:
                                            DNS Leak Test 2.png

                                            GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • First post
                                              Last post
                                            Copyright 2025 Rubicon Communications LLC (Netgate). All rights reserved.