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

    pi-hole

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
    48 Posts 7 Posters 6.0k 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.
    • AndyRHA
      AndyRH @Summer
      last edited by

      @Summer I think maybe I was not clear.

      A client with 2 DNS entries, .1 and .2. It will try .1 and wait a short time for a reply then try .2. It is possible for .2 to reply first.

      Based on the question, it sounds like you have the clients pointed at pfSense and pfSense pointed at PiHole, PiHole pointed to a public DNS server. I feel that method has too many points to troubleshoot (Others may disagree). I went with redundant PiHoles and supply that list to the clients. pfSense does its own thing and just goes to a public DNS server.

      There are very many ways to do DNS with blocking. Of the many ways there is more than one good solution.

      o||||o
      7100-1u

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • M
        MoonKnight @johnpoz
        last edited by

        @johnpoz said in pi-hole:

        @Summer I highly doubt docker support will be added to pfsense.

        I use pihole myself, and pfblocker as well.

        If you want to run pihole on some box on your network, do so.. Just point your clients to the pihole, and then have the pihole forward to pfsense for dns.

        Hi @johnpoz
        May I ask you, could you please share your setting of how you have setup your pi-hole and pfsense?
        Only if you have time, would be nice with some picture of your settings of pfsense and pi-hole.
        I'm planning to try out pi-hole, but not sure about all the setting in pi-hole and some in pfsense.
        I also using DNS Resolver with DoT. And Quad9 dns servers.

        Thanks in advanced

        --- 24.11 ---
        Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU D-1518 @ 2.20GHz
        Kingston DDR4 2666MHz 16GB ECC
        2 x HyperX Fury SSD 120GB (ZFS-mirror)
        2 x Intel i210 (ports)
        4 x Intel i350 (ports)

        johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • johnpozJ
          johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @MoonKnight
          last edited by johnpoz

          @MoonKnight I don't have anything special setup in unbound, it just resolves.. Pretty much out of the box in that respect.. I do have some other settings like serve-zero, prefetch, qname min, etc. But none of that has anything to do with how pihole works. Or what it does, to pfsense pihole is just another client.

          Pihole I have setup to forward to a pfsense IP.

          pihole.jpg

          My clients get handed the pihole IP in dhcp, 192.168.3.10, the 192.168.3.0/24 is my "dmz" network if you will.. Its just really another segment. I called it dmz just because at one point I had another pi in this segment that was serving ntp to the internet via being a member of the ntp pool. I have shut that down, but haven't bothered ever changing what I call that interface ;) Even though I have nothing in that network that is exposed to the public internet any more. I could prob rename it to pi-segment or something.. There are 3 pi's in that network.. The rules are locked down for that segment, so if I was going to fire up something I exposed to the public internet, it would be isolated from the rest of my networks.

          What you have unbound do, be it resolve, forward, forward via dot, etc has no bearing on who is asking it be it just a normal client on your network or pihole asking for some other client that asked it.

          An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
          If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
          Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
          SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

          M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
          • M
            MoonKnight @johnpoz
            last edited by

            @johnpoz
            Thank you very much. I'm going to try this out later ๐Ÿ‘ ๐Ÿ˜Š ๐Ÿค

            --- 24.11 ---
            Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU D-1518 @ 2.20GHz
            Kingston DDR4 2666MHz 16GB ECC
            2 x HyperX Fury SSD 120GB (ZFS-mirror)
            2 x Intel i210 (ports)
            4 x Intel i350 (ports)

            S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • S
              Summer @MoonKnight
              last edited by

              @johnpoz thank you for detailed explanation, it make sense.

              Just last doubt, setting up a NAT rule on pfsense to redirect incoming DNS traffic to pi-hole host should do the same job than setting up dns on each client?

              johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • stephenw10S
                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                last edited by

                Yes you can redirect DNS if clients are hard coded to use something. Some device always use 8.8.8.8 for example.

                https://docs.netgate.com/pfsense/en/latest/recipes/dns-redirect.html

                That shows redirecting to pfSense but it could be an external server like a Pi-hole.

                Steve

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • johnpozJ
                  johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Summer
                  last edited by johnpoz

                  @Summer keep in mind a redirection to pihole, if the clients are on the same network could lead to clients not liking the answer coming from a different IP then what they sent too.

                  redirect.jpg

                  that is from client on my 192.168.3 network... Now if the client is on a different network than the pihole, they wouldn't know that it was redirected.

                  Also a redirection doesn't get rid of the non optimal flow pattern I gave as example where pfsense is involved in the traffic for no good reason. While it can get your pihole to see the IP of the client for the eye-candy. You still have the non optimal flow of traffic having to go through pfsense when there is no point to doing that..

                  Clients should just point to pihole.. If you want to also redirect traffic when they try and use some other dns - ok that is good, but the redirection should be done using 127.0.0.1 as the redirection. So even when client is on the same network as pihole it doesn't know it was redirected to some other IP..

                  redirectloop.jpg

                  While the redirection works now even for clients on the same network as the pihole, pihole now doesn't know the client IP that was asking.

                  An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                  If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                  Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                  SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

                  K 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • AndyRHA
                    AndyRH
                    last edited by

                    This is the detailed write-up on how I setup redirect to PiHole that I posted a while back and still use. The clients do not complain when trying to talk to 8.8.8.8 and are really talking to 192.168.42.126.

                    https://forum.netgate.com/topic/156453/pfsense-dns-redirect-to-local-dns-server?_=1663853296484

                    o||||o
                    7100-1u

                    johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • johnpozJ
                      johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @AndyRH
                      last edited by

                      @AndyRH said in pi-hole:

                      https://forum.netgate.com/topic/156453/pfsense-dns-redirect-to-local-dns-server?_=1663853296484

                      yeah your using a source nat when the pihole is on the same network as the client, not really needed unless the client is on the same network as the pihole. But it is a work around for sure for that scenario, where clients might try a different ns other then what they pointed too.

                      Curious why your response time was 70 ms when everything was local, when you tried 1.2.3.4 - which is a good test for redirection ;) And while you can fool just dumb clients, if human tried that they should know right away they are being redirected..

                      Notice in my test the time was 0 ms, which would be typical for local resolution of a cached item, be it you forwarded to pihole or not.

                      A bit off topic - but good info none the less. 2 easy tests for redirection. Try something that for sure is not a NS, like your 1.2.3.4 test - if you get an answer you know some dns shenanigans is being done.. Another way is to query directly an authoritative NS for something - if you do not see the auth flag, then you know you have been redirected as well.

                      redirectdns.jpg

                      So there 3 things that should stand out to anyone in this 2nd query that something is off in the response. One there is no aa flag, which if you did actually talk to the authoritative ns for a domain should be there. 2nd is the ttl is not full, when you talk to an authoritative ns the ttl will always be the full ttl.. And 3rd a response time that doesn't make sense for talking to some NS out on the internet.. In my case its 0, but it could also just be too good to be true.. Ie your only really talking to some ns in your isp network. and not the actual authoritative ns for some domain that could be on the other side of the planet.

                      Another thing you can spot cname resolution. If you actually talked the auth ns for domain, and the record you looking for is a cname that points else where, all you will get back is the cname, if you were redirected you will normally get the full resolution of that cname as well.

                      An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                      If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                      Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                      SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

                      AndyRHA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • AndyRHA
                        AndyRH @johnpoz
                        last edited by

                        @johnpoz said in pi-hole:

                        Curious why your response time was 70 ms

                        I never noticed the time. Guessing, I would have to say it was not cached and the response from the internet slow. This weekend when I have time I will poke around and make sure it is not a FW delay.
                        A problem I did not notice until yesterday is pfSense round robins the DNS server it redirects to, I had 2 of 3 down and response from DNS was unreliable. I also discovered a phone game is using a hard coded DNS server different from the phone settings. Kind of a mixed bag. Things not redirected worked just fine.

                        o||||o
                        7100-1u

                        M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • M
                          MoonKnight @AndyRH
                          last edited by MoonKnight

                          @johnpoz
                          I just fall of the rock here :)
                          I got my pi-hole working on one of my vlans, VL30, the pihole is there. I manage to redirect VL90 poiting to pihole at VL30. (different subnet)
                          This this NAT rule:
                          d4538b75-315f-4901-bc12-45e00dc6d9c0-image.png

                          I made the same rule only for my LAN network, like this:
                          66688be6-fe1c-49d9-8144-6c888bd19312-image.png

                          LAN use this subnet: 10.10.10.0/24
                          VL30 use this: 10.10.30.0/24 <------ Pi-hole IP: 10.10.30.200
                          VL90 use this: 172.16.90.0/24

                          So the question is. Is this the right way to do it. My PI-Hole points to pfsense IP, so pfsense can to the resolving and forwarding to Quad9 IP.

                          And this is from the query log, log from my UniFi G2 Pro controller. I see it reacting out for google dns 8.8.8.8
                          I have a redirect rule in pfsense for preventing my IOT devices to talk to other dns then only the one pfsense forwaring to, in this case Quad9.
                          Maybe I'm terrible wrong, but it is a way to check that?

                          a0fe327d-b37a-4026-a0fb-6a8d743df77f-image.png

                          --- 24.11 ---
                          Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU D-1518 @ 2.20GHz
                          Kingston DDR4 2666MHz 16GB ECC
                          2 x HyperX Fury SSD 120GB (ZFS-mirror)
                          2 x Intel i210 (ports)
                          4 x Intel i350 (ports)

                          johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • johnpozJ
                            johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @MoonKnight
                            last edited by

                            @MoonKnight I wouldn't use the ! rule myself..

                            An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                            If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                            Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                            SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

                            M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • M
                              MoonKnight @johnpoz
                              last edited by MoonKnight

                              @johnpoz
                              If i remove ! noting hits pi-hole from my LAN network.

                              EDIT:
                              Looks like I had to disable all my "DNS" rules to get i working with Pihole.
                              All inside the red circle i have to disable

                              6f2d41e6-cf59-4819-86dd-94b576e2402b-image.png

                              --- 24.11 ---
                              Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU D-1518 @ 2.20GHz
                              Kingston DDR4 2666MHz 16GB ECC
                              2 x HyperX Fury SSD 120GB (ZFS-mirror)
                              2 x Intel i210 (ports)
                              4 x Intel i350 (ports)

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • stephenw10S
                                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                last edited by

                                You need at least some redirect rule to catch anything that's hard coded to use some other DNS server. It doesn't have to be an inverted match rule, it could just match all DNS traffic.

                                M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • M
                                  MoonKnight @stephenw10
                                  last edited by

                                  @stephenw10
                                  Hi,
                                  Well I believe the both rules in the middle are the ones that are redirecting everting else to DNS, The once with 127.0.0.1. So if I change 127.0.0.1 to pi-hole IP, it should be okay then?
                                  And remove the first rule (pi-hole) but the problem could be the second and third rule (destination = LAN address)

                                  --- 24.11 ---
                                  Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU D-1518 @ 2.20GHz
                                  Kingston DDR4 2666MHz 16GB ECC
                                  2 x HyperX Fury SSD 120GB (ZFS-mirror)
                                  2 x Intel i210 (ports)
                                  4 x Intel i350 (ports)

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • stephenw10S
                                    stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                    last edited by

                                    Well those are firewall rules. You'd need to make that change on the NAT rules.

                                    M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • M
                                      MoonKnight @stephenw10
                                      last edited by

                                      @stephenw10

                                      This is my NAT rules for redirect other DNS back to 127.0.0.1 (inside red circle)
                                      The rule in the top is pi-hole rule I made to redirect all DNS to pi-hole. I hade to disable second rule to make my LAN hit pi-hole.

                                      b362560c-ab6b-4e0d-ab4d-7994d38d0a1c-image.png

                                      --- 24.11 ---
                                      Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU D-1518 @ 2.20GHz
                                      Kingston DDR4 2666MHz 16GB ECC
                                      2 x HyperX Fury SSD 120GB (ZFS-mirror)
                                      2 x Intel i210 (ports)
                                      4 x Intel i350 (ports)

                                      johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • stephenw10S
                                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                        last edited by

                                        Are you passing the pihole IP to client to use for DNS via DHCP anyway?

                                        That second rule should do nothing if the first rule is enabled. They both match the same traffic.

                                        M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • M
                                          MoonKnight @stephenw10
                                          last edited by MoonKnight

                                          @stephenw10
                                          Yes, I have setup DNS in the DHCP server, so all my clients in LAN got the Pi-Hole IP.

                                          --- 24.11 ---
                                          Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU D-1518 @ 2.20GHz
                                          Kingston DDR4 2666MHz 16GB ECC
                                          2 x HyperX Fury SSD 120GB (ZFS-mirror)
                                          2 x Intel i210 (ports)
                                          4 x Intel i350 (ports)

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • johnpozJ
                                            johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @MoonKnight
                                            last edited by

                                            @MoonKnight that second rule has nothing to do with anything.. And should never work with any sane dot client.. One of the major points of dot is to prevent mitm sort of dns tampering.. The dot server would present a cert, and that cert name needs to match the CN of the dot server your talking to, and it should be signed by a CA the dot client trusts.

                                            If some dot client doesn't validate this - then is pretty useless in the sense of what dot is suppose to help accomplish, secure your dns traffic, and actually validate your talking to the dns you want to talk too.

                                            BTW, I am not really aware of any common user "client" that uses dot, that is more a server thing for forwarding, clients normally use doh vs dot. But the same thing comes into play - part of the whole use of tls and certs is validation of who your talking too, redirection to some other thing would defeat part of the reason someone might want to use those protocols.

                                            Unless you knew what dot server some client was wanting to talk too, and setup the certs to present that name to the client, and signed that cert with a ca the client trusts that sort of redirection should fail - if the dot client was actually checking, if the dot client doesn't check - its a pretty shitty client.

                                            An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                                            If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                                            Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                                            SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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