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    how to resolve local hostname to ip in pfSense

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved DHCP and DNS
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    • JKnottJ
      JKnott @caigeliu
      last edited by

      @caigeliu

      Also, with some DHCP servers, such as pfSense, you can use the DHCP server to provide the host name the DNS server, in which case you don't have to worry about the address changing. However, without knowing more about what you have, I can't offer more advice.

      PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
      i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
      UniFi AC-Lite access point

      I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

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      • C
        caigeliu
        last edited by

        Th jknott. I cannot set in pfSense dhcp page because my dhcp is not in pfSense.

        "You can go to the Forwarder page in pfSense and at the bottom you'll find Host Overrides. ". I tried this page too. But it need hostname plus domainname. cannot be set as hostname only.

        Don't know how to bypass it without domain name input. Wish more helps.

        JKnottJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • JKnottJ
          JKnott @caigeliu
          last edited by

          @caigeliu

          You just use whatever domain name is used on your network. Do you not know what the domain name is?

          PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
          i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
          UniFi AC-Lite access point

          I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

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          • C
            caigeliu
            last edited by

            "You just use whatever domain name is used on your network."

            Then we have write full name like: host1.company.com. For example:
            "# ping host1.company.com" works.
            "# ping host1" not work
            But in LAN, we want to use hostname only, not full name.

            JKnottJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • JKnottJ
              JKnott @caigeliu
              last edited by

              @caigeliu said in how to resolve local hostname to ip in pfSense:

              But in LAN, we want to use hostname only, not full name.

              With a DNS server either will work. He wants to use whatever domain name is used on that network.

              PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
              i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
              UniFi AC-Lite access point

              I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

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              • C
                caigeliu
                last edited by

                Usually if we edit /etc/hosts of pfsense like "10.0.10.253 host1 host1.mydomain.com", we can "ping host1" in any machines of our LAN because pfSense is a gateway and DNS forwarder of our LAN. But in my case I can not "ping host1".

                Can anyone give me suggestions on how to make records in /etc/hosts of pfSense works for any of our LAN machines?

                JKnottJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • JKnottJ
                  JKnott @caigeliu
                  last edited by

                  @caigeliu said in how to resolve local hostname to ip in pfSense:

                  Can anyone give me suggestions on how to make records in /etc/hosts of pfSense works for any of our LAN machines?

                  I thought you said you had a forwarder on pfSense. If so, and you're using it for your DNS, it should happen automatically.

                  PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
                  i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
                  UniFi AC-Lite access point

                  I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

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                  • C
                    caigeliu
                    last edited by

                    The problem is that my pfsense dns forwarder doesn't read /etc/hosts of pfsesne. and we cannot "ping host1" from our LAN.

                    How to make records of /etc/hosts in pfsense being used by the pfsense dns forwarder?

                    JKnottJ bmeeksB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • JKnottJ
                      JKnott @caigeliu
                      last edited by

                      @caigeliu

                      It should. When you set up the DNS records, they get saved in /etc/hosts. Are you using pfSense as your DNS server?

                      PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
                      i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
                      UniFi AC-Lite access point

                      I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

                      bmeeksB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • bmeeksB
                        bmeeks @caigeliu
                        last edited by bmeeks

                        @caigeliu said in how to resolve local hostname to ip in pfSense:

                        The problem is that my pfsense dns forwarder doesn't read /etc/hosts of pfsesne. and we cannot "ping host1" from our LAN.

                        How to make records of /etc/hosts in pfsense being used by the pfsense dns forwarder?

                        You need to create host overrides within the DNS Resolver used by pfSense. That program is unbound, but you configure it under SERVICES > DNS RESOLVER.

                        You can use unbound in either resolver or forwarder mode, but resolver mode is how it works out-of-the-box and is the recommended way of using it.

                        If you are using the old DNS Fowarder (actually dnsmasq), then you configure that under SERVICES > DNS FORWARDER. That component is now disabled in the default out-of-the-box configuration.

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                        • bmeeksB
                          bmeeks @JKnott
                          last edited by bmeeks

                          @JKnott said in how to resolve local hostname to ip in pfSense:

                          @caigeliu

                          It should. When you set up the DNS records, they get saved in /etc/hosts. Are you using pfSense as your DNS server?

                          @JKnott, I believe that unbound now runs in a type of chroot jail under /var/ and has its own local /etc/hosts structure independent of the system path. Configuration information from the GUI config.xml file is used to create the files in the chroot jail.

                          JKnottJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • JKnottJ
                            JKnott @bmeeks
                            last edited by

                            @bmeeks

                            Either way, if you create the DNS records, they should be available to every device using the DNS server.

                            I hope you didn't directly edit the hosts file, instead of doing it in the GUI.

                            PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
                            i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
                            UniFi AC-Lite access point

                            I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

                            bmeeksB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • bmeeksB
                              bmeeks @JKnott
                              last edited by bmeeks

                              @JKnott said in how to resolve local hostname to ip in pfSense:

                              I hope you didn't directly edit the hosts file, instead of doing it in the GUI.

                              Sounds like he was directly editing the /etc/hosts file. That will work for DNS lookups on the local firewall (although it is still bad practice), but external clients asking a DNS server on the firewall for addresses won't get those host entries. They will instead get whatever the DNS server has it in its own internal databases.

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                              • C
                                caigeliu
                                last edited by

                                thank both jknott and bmeeks.
                                We use dns forwarder in pfsense, not dns resolver. I edit /etc/hosts in pfsense and added record like "10.0.10.251 host1 host1.mydomain.com". And the pfsesne is our LAN DNS server.

                                We cannot make "# ping host1" works in our LAN.

                                Maybe I have to switch to DNS resolver?

                                JKnottJ bmeeksB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • JKnottJ
                                  JKnott @caigeliu
                                  last edited by

                                  @caigeliu

                                  The solution has already been provided. Don't edit /etc/hosts directly. Create the records on the forwarder page. That way, you can use pfSense as your DNS server. It will return the address for anything that you've added and, failing that, get the info from whatever DNS server it points to.

                                  PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
                                  i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
                                  UniFi AC-Lite access point

                                  I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • bmeeksB
                                    bmeeks @caigeliu
                                    last edited by bmeeks

                                    @caigeliu said in how to resolve local hostname to ip in pfSense:

                                    thank both jknott and bmeeks.
                                    We use dns forwarder in pfsense, not dns resolver. I edit /etc/hosts in pfsense and added record like "10.0.10.251 host1 host1.mydomain.com". And the pfsesne is our LAN DNS server.

                                    We cannot make "# ping host1" works in our LAN.

                                    Maybe I have to switch to DNS resolver?

                                    No, if you are still using the old DNS Forwarder in pfSense, then go to SERVICES > DNS FORWARDER and then scroll down that page until you see the section for Host Overrides. Create new host entries there and you should be good to go (assuming that all of your LAN clients are pointed to the pfSense firewall for their DNS services).

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                                    • C
                                      caigeliu
                                      last edited by

                                      "No, if you are still using the old DNS Forwarder in pfSense, then go to SERVICES > DNS FORWARDER and then scroll down that page until you see the section for Host Overrides. Create new host entries there and you should be good to go (assuming that all of your LAN clients are pointed to the pfSense firewall for their DNS services)."

                                      I have done exactly too. But it only works for "# ping host1.mydomain.com", not work for "#ping host1".

                                      We want "# ping host1" work in our LAN. pfSense is our dns server. we use dns forwarder.

                                      JKnottJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • JKnottJ
                                        JKnott @caigeliu
                                        last edited by

                                        @caigeliu said in how to resolve local hostname to ip in pfSense:

                                        But it only works for "# ping host1.mydomain.com", not work for "#ping host1"

                                        That's a function of the client, not the server. In the client, there should be a place where the local domain is specified. With that, when you only specify the host, the domain is automagically appended. This is why I earlier said to use the same domain name as the network already uses. So, if the LAN is part of mydomain.com, then you would use that in configuring the DNS records, as you were trying to do earlier. That is, in the forwarder host overrides, you would create a record for host1 with host1 in the host box and mydomain.com in the domain box.

                                        PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
                                        i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
                                        UniFi AC-Lite access point

                                        I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • C
                                          caigeliu
                                          last edited by

                                          "That's a function of the client, not the server. ".

                                          I think it should be a function of DNS server. Is there a function in pfsense DNS forwarder that when query of "host1" is received by the dns forwarder, the dns forwarder automatically search host1.mydomain.com and return that IP to user?

                                          JKnottJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • JKnottJ
                                            JKnott @caigeliu
                                            last edited by

                                            @caigeliu

                                            No, it's a client function as I described above. Configure the domain name in the client as I described, so that it matches the domain name in the DNS record.

                                            Here's some info on it from my Linux system:

                                            "Search domain is the domain name where hostname searching starts. The primary search domain is usually the same as the domain name of your computer (for example, suse.de). There may be additional search domains (such as suse.com). Separate the domains with commas or white space. "

                                            You can have one or more domains that can be searched without specifying the fully qualified domain name. So, for host1, it would look in mydomain.com and any other domains you specified.

                                            PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
                                            i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
                                            UniFi AC-Lite access point

                                            I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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