Hi guys!
So, it seems I’m getting again stuck with my pihole, seems it might not resolve domains I know that are new to it… So, if I try to visit the website from my browser (firefox or ungoogle chromium), it gets a DNS failure. Same with a nslookup. But if I connect to the pihole and do a: dig saigoneer.com @127.0.0.1 -p 5335 I get the full response and resolution. But even in the pihole, attempting nslookup saigoneer.com will fail. Any idea what can I try next?
Thanks!
Have you checked if you’re rate limited? I was getting rate limited while downloading games from steam which took me several hours to debug.
Not sure if this is your problem but it might be a thing to check out.
Rate limited…by whom? I’m using unbound, so I’m not forwarding my DNS requests to my ISP.
By pihole. Iirc the default limit is 1000 requests per minute
@[email protected] @[email protected] which server is configured in your machine (
/etc/resolv.conf
in linux, or in system preference in Mac). My first guess would be to check what is your computer using as a DNS ipI use linux, yeah. nameserver is 127.0.0.53 (?). search is pointing to the pihole server.
@[email protected] Ubuntu? What happens if you manually change resolv to the up of your pinhole? I remember Ubuntu has this silly resolvconfd that makes everything more confusing
Sorry…what do you mean changing the resolv to the up of the pihole? I’m a bit lost here 😅
@[email protected] So what I suspect happens is that you have your pihole server running, but your computer is not using it and instead is querying 1.1.1.1 or other default DNS server.
So what I was thinking is that if that is the case, you can force your computer to use your pihole by editing
/etc/resolv.conf
to have your pihole’s IP as a nameserver.
@[email protected] Ubuntu? What happens if you manually change resolv to the up of your pinhole? I remember Ubuntu has this silly resolvconfd that makes everything more confusing
is your router’s dns definitely pointed to the pihole and was the router rebooted after that was set?
If you mean by the DNS provided by the router on DHCP, yes, they are.
Try with dig to check what DNS you are using. And check if you have support for both IPv4 and IPv6.
I have purposely disabled IPv6 everywhere. Router, Pihole etc. What do you mean which DNS am I using? The computer failing to resolve, or the Pihole that successfully resolves with dig, but somehow fails to actually resolve it to the pihole request/requesting computer?
Welp…Not sure what was wrong, but seems to now be resolving again. I…restored a few previous backups to no avail, rebooted to no avail…and after just giving up and upgrading, and rebooting…now it seems to work again. And I still have no idea how to troubleshoot this if it ever happens again :(
This is the reason I stopped unbound. My unbound worked great for years. Suddenly I got this weird issue that was no one could understand why. And after a week of trying to trouble it just decided to work and kept going happily.