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    Blocking sites with DNS

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved DHCP and DNS
    30 Posts 9 Posters 13.6k Views
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    • GruensFroeschliG
      GruensFroeschli
      last edited by

      well you "could" resolve all the names to IP's and then create an alias which contains all these IP's and make a block rule with as destination these IP's.

      But this seems to be a bit of work.
      Also if the IP the a name changes….

      We do what we must, because we can.

      Asking questions the smart way: http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

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      • H
        hoba
        last edited by

        You even can use hostnames in the hostaliases. The only "glitch" when doing this is that the hostnames are only resolved once on filterreloads and I think it won't work for hosts that resolve to multiple IPs. You will see a better solution for this in the next version so for now use it at your own risk.

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        • M
          mojo-chan
          last edited by

          Guess I'll wait for the next version then.

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          • jahonixJ
            jahonix
            last edited by

            What do you think is gonna change in the next version in regard to DNS resolution or blacklist handling?

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            • H
              hoba
              last edited by

              You will be able to use hostnames in hostsaliases which will be frequently checked for changes. If a change is detected the filter will be reloaded to update the IPs in the alias. I think Scott already has some code for this in RELENG_1 iirc.

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              • jahonixJ
                jahonix
                last edited by

                Cool! That's gonna make some fancy stuff.
                But Releng to release is still a looong way to go, I'm afraid.

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                • H
                  hoba
                  last edited by

                  There is one more thing to keep in mind when using this kind of blocking. If x.com is hosted on the same IP like y.com and you want to block x.com it will block y.com as well as it blocks the IP that got resolved.

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                  • M
                    mojo-chan
                    last edited by

                    Really the point of doing it at the DNS level is that it doesn't matter if a sites IP changes, or if it is shared with another site. The DNS Forwarder just sees "doubleclick.net" and returns 127.0.0.1.

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                    • H
                      hoba
                      last edited by

                      You can already do it this way, however then you have to make sure your clients can't manually use exrternal DNS-Servers but firewallrules will help you with that as well.

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                      • M
                        mojo-chan
                        last edited by

                        Well I don't really care if they use external DNS servers because it's only ad-blocking, a nice extra if they go for DHCP. It's just a shame there is no way to bulk-add domains, but at least I get can the most common ones.

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                        • GruensFroeschliG
                          GruensFroeschli
                          last edited by

                          firefox and "adblock plus" ;)

                          We do what we must, because we can.

                          Asking questions the smart way: http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

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                          • C
                            cybrsrfr
                            last edited by

                            DNS blocking is one of the options that OpenDNS provides.
                            Steps
                            1. Point your DNS to OpenDNS's DNS servers.
                            2. Sign up for a free account.
                            3. Define your IP or use DNS-O-Matic to keep dynamic IPs in synch.
                            4. Choose what you want to have blocked.

                            For more details go to:
                            http://forum.pfsense.org/index.php/topic,2703.msg44709.html#msg44709

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                            • M
                              mojo-chan
                              last edited by

                              OpenDNS looks interesting, except their stupid advertising on unknown domains. Maybe I could write a rule to block that…

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                              • S
                                sullrich
                                last edited by

                                @mojo-chan:

                                OpenDNS looks interesting, except their stupid advertising on unknown domains. Maybe I could write a rule to block that…

                                They gotta pay the bills somehow..  I imagine they use some bandwidth..

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                                • S
                                  SCL
                                  last edited by

                                  i just upgraded from 1.01 to 1.2 (new install with liveCD on a p3 with 3 nic's) and domainoverwrite doesn't seem to work : i entered ciao.de and "mapped" it to 0.0.0.0 -> flushed the (win)client dnscache with ipconfig /flushdns, then nslookup ciao.de, pfsense returns the real ip instead of 0.0.0.0/n/A. any ideas to solve this ? 1.01 worked!

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                                  • C
                                    cybrsrfr
                                    last edited by

                                    I'm not sure if 0.0.0.0 is a completely valid address. Try something like 127.0.0.1 and see if that makes any difference.

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                                    • H
                                      hoba
                                      last edited by

                                      Not sure if you literally showed us what you tested but in case you tried to resolve "www.ciao.de" and only entered a mapping for "ciao.de" the behaviour is correct. Don't forget to add a "www.ciao.de" mapping as well to make sure both names are sent to 127.0.0.1.

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                                      • S
                                        SCL
                                        last edited by

                                        i tried to add "ciao.de", "www.ciao.de", changed the ip to 127.0.0.1, even to my local ip, nothing helped. changing the machine, to see if its not the winbox, i used the debianmachine, no success.

                                        edit: i just added "ciao.de", then tested "nslookup ciao.de" -> response was the real ip, instead of 127.0.0.1

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                                        • L
                                          Lyttek
                                          last edited by

                                          I wrote about this in a different post and can confirm the bug, doing exactly the same thing.

                                          In previous versions, there were two methods of forwarding: by host, and by entire domain.

                                          To block www.yahoo.com for instance:

                                          first method: enter 'www' in the host field, 'yahoo.com' in the domain field, and '0.0.0.0' for the IP (blocked only www.yahoo.com)
                                          second method: enter 'yahoo.com' in domain, '0.0.0.0' for ip.  (This blocked anything on that domain)

                                          With pfsense 1.2, the second method fails.  Only 'host' type forwarding works, returning '0.0.0.0' as the IP.  Using the 'entire domain' method fails, returning the actual public IP.

                                          Don't bother with 'why don't you use X method'… I'm just reporting a bug.

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                                          • H
                                            hoba
                                            last edited by

                                            Did you try adding "yahoo" as host and "com" as domain?

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