Settings for the most responsive browsing?
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Oh and btw what option am I supposed to use in "DNS Resolution Behavior"?
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@octopuss said in Settings for the most responsive browsing?:
It's always the first time I open a website that's slow.
who exactly are you forwarding too? When you forward you are at the mercy of how fast they respond, there is nothing pfsense can do about that.
I would suggest you turn on logging so you can see how long it takes to get a response..
Once its been looked up then pfsense would cache it.. If it takes 2 seconds to get a response.. That is how long it takes, and pfsense can do nothing about that..
"DNS Resolution Behavior"?
Default is fine.. That is pretty meaningless to anything other than pfsense.. That has nothing to do with what happens when a client on your network asks pfsense for something.
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@johnpoz I use my ISP's DNS server for logical reasons. They have a really good network and the servers are like 1km away, unlike whatever else I might be using, like Google DNS that are located in who knows what hole.
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@octopuss Oh and I have no idea what unbound is and where to find it, sorry.
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@octopuss said in Settings for the most responsive browsing?:
s DNS server for logical reasons
And its quite possible their dns just blows.. If it takes you 2 seconds to get a response asking for www.raceface.com for example.
Why don't you try just resolving vs forwarding.. Or forward to a major player quad9, cloudflare, google, etc..
When you forward how fast something is answered is completely on who you asked.. If they do not have it cached, they have to resolve it before they answer you, etc.
If you enable logging you can get an idea on how long it takes to get responses for stuff. you could use something like dnsbench to test how fast your isp dns is in general, etc.
It is the resolver in pfsense - the one you stated you have set to forward.
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@octopuss
My fault.'unbound' is the name of the program that does the DNS resolving, or forwarding.
Its like people that say 'apache' or 'nginx' when they talk about their web server.
Or "Microsoft Word 365" when they talk about their text editor.
Or, very known, 'iptables' when they talk about their firewall (on a Linux OS).It's this process that listens in your LAB interfaces for DNS requests, and talks to the 'Internet' DNS servers, or the DNS servers you want to forward to, like the ISP DNS servers
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@johnpoz Uh, ok, why is it called something else than what's in the web config I do not understand, but it's confusing as hell.
My other reasoning for using their DNS servers is that the "local" ones are most likely to work 24/7 even if there is an outage somewhere in the world and whatever else I might add might not be available.
But I am of course open to suggestions.
I try to avoid anything Google like plague, so what else is out there that's fast and available in most countries? OpenDNS maybe?P.S. Why does raceface.com open immediatelly despite rebooting pfSense and the main switch? I thought that should reset it to the default slowness.
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@octopuss said in Settings for the most responsive browsing?:
I try to avoid anything Google like plague, so what else is out there that's fast and available in most countries? OpenDNS maybe?
What about : just resolve ?!!
The default DNS setup, the one that came with pfSense, with you adding nothing, will work just fine - out of the box. -
@gertjan Sure, but I have no idea what the defaults are, having changed a ton of settings since installing the thing :D
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@johnpoz said in Settings for the most responsive browsing?:
server:
log-queries: yes
log-replies: yesSo what do I do with this? I have it set, but where do I go in the logs and what should I see?
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@octopuss in the log section.. Let me enable logging, I don't leave it setup.. Lot of logs for no reason unless troubleshooting something.
edit:
Mar 13 05:50:21 unbound 8231 [8231:2] info: 192.168.9.100 www.raceface.com. A IN NOERROR 0.139835 0 91 Mar 13 05:50:21 unbound 8231 [8231:2] info: 192.168.9.100 www.raceface.com. A IN
There is my client asking, and the response.
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@johnpoz ok I don't know where this is.
All I found is Status-System Logs-System-DNS Resolver, where it looks like this:
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@octopuss and what is it that your not understanding.. you see your client ask.. see the gdprcdn.b-cdn.net A IN, that is 1.100 asking for that..
Then above that you see where the reply and how long it took to lookup .004280 or 4ms
see there at the end where took 1.76 and 1.72 those taking long time to get answer
Most likely since you didn't get a response it was asked for multiple times..
I would prob run dnsbench against your ISP dns your using to see what sort of responses you get to random stuff being asked.. But if you asked your dns, and it took 1.7 seconds to get an answer.. There is nothing pfsense can do about that..
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@johnpoz Your log looks completely different and is readable. What I have on my end makes no sense to me.
But this gets me nowhere anyway.I'll try connecting my PC directly to the AP and try different DNS servers too.
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@octopuss its the same log..
I just did a copy of specific record as text..
I hid my work vpn info there - freaking stupid work laptop queries for that like crazy..
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@octopuss said in Settings for the most responsive browsing?:
But this gets me nowhere anyway.
It shows that it took pfsense 1.7 seconds to get an answer for that fqdn.. That is on where your asking, not pfsense..
Look in your status for resolver - are you seeing timeouts, what is the RTT and RTO etc..
I resolve so I see all the ns I am talking to - you forward so you will only see where your forwarding too..
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I have tried to replace the ISP's DNS servers with Cloudflare, and the resolution, as seen in the browser console, is anything from a few miliseconds to half a second.
I don't know, I guess this is just how it works.
I won't bother with it anymore. -
@johnpoz said in Settings for the most responsive browsing?:
I resolve so I see all the ns I am talking to - you forward so you will only see where your forwarding too..
What happens if I don't enable forwarding? I won't be able to specify what DNS servers to use, right? What's used in that situation then?
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@octopuss said in Settings for the most responsive browsing?:
What's used in that situation then?
Unbound resolves... Which means it talks to the actual authoritative ns for whatever domain your looking for.
This is the default setting.. Works like this
Hey root server what is the NS for .com tld, ok thanks
Hey NS for .com, what is the NS for domain.com, ok thanks
Hey NS for domain.com what is the A record for www.domain.com
This info is cached.. It now knows the NS for any .com, it knows the ns for domain.com if you then go and say lookup otherthing.domain.com it will just directly as one of the authoritative NS for domain.com If you want to look up otherdomain.com it already knows the NS for .com and ask them for otherdomain.com
Once the NS for a domain are known, it will ask them directly for what your looking for, the only time it talks to roots is to look up the NS for another tld, it only talks to gltd servers when it needs to look up NS for a different domain that those servers know about, there are different gtld serves for all the tlds, ie .com, .net, .org, .info, etc.
Resolving has to happen somewhere to look up anything... if you forward to your ISP and he doesn't have it cached, it has to be resolved.. Either the isp has a resolver, or they have to forward to somewhere else, there has to be a resolver somewhere in the chain..
Maybe your isp dns resolving sucks, or maybe they are forwarding else where, and they resolve.. When you use unbound as a resolver you just cut out all the middle men, and just talk directly to the roots and the authoritative ns for what your wanting to look up.
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@johnpoz I see. So if I don't enable forwarding, pfSense will choose a random DNS server it finds by some algorithm or what?
Cloudflare is, judging by what I can google up, the fastest and best, but unless I enable forwarding, I can't use it. That sounds like something noone wants?