F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Issue with the Pi hole functionality.

Issue with the Pi hole functionality.

Issue with the Pi hole functionality.

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N
NGWessel
Member
160
03-26-2016, 05:27 AM
#1
You configured the pi hole successfully, but your ISP router doesn’t support a new work wide DNS. Since you’ve used a static IP and followed the forum instructions, the pi hole should be reachable. When setting up your phone (S9) to connect, it shows “no internet.” You adjusted the DNS in advanced settings to point to the pi hole’s IP, but the issue persists. Did you configure anything else or check the router’s status?
N
NGWessel
03-26-2016, 05:27 AM #1

You configured the pi hole successfully, but your ISP router doesn’t support a new work wide DNS. Since you’ve used a static IP and followed the forum instructions, the pi hole should be reachable. When setting up your phone (S9) to connect, it shows “no internet.” You adjusted the DNS in advanced settings to point to the pi hole’s IP, but the issue persists. Did you configure anything else or check the router’s status?

S
slayer__is
Senior Member
521
03-26-2016, 10:58 AM
#2
Yes, you can reach the Pi-hole interface through a web browser.
S
slayer__is
03-26-2016, 10:58 AM #2

Yes, you can reach the Pi-hole interface through a web browser.

F
Fishy_Kokoloco
Junior Member
24
04-17-2016, 03:41 AM
#3
You configured your DNS settings in Pi Hole, but using your ISP servers caused issues. Switching to Google's DNS resolved the problem. On your tablet, you need to toggle WiFi on and off for Pi Hole to function properly. Changing the DNS sometimes triggers temporary connectivity glitches.
F
Fishy_Kokoloco
04-17-2016, 03:41 AM #3

You configured your DNS settings in Pi Hole, but using your ISP servers caused issues. Switching to Google's DNS resolved the problem. On your tablet, you need to toggle WiFi on and off for Pi Hole to function properly. Changing the DNS sometimes triggers temporary connectivity glitches.

S
SuperTurtle998
Junior Member
28
04-21-2016, 04:44 PM
#4
I can reach the Pihole UI via the browser. The entire network becomes an issue because the ISP's router doesn't offer all features.
S
SuperTurtle998
04-21-2016, 04:44 PM #4

I can reach the Pihole UI via the browser. The entire network becomes an issue because the ISP's router doesn't offer all features.

K
Kaspolman
Senior Member
434
04-21-2016, 07:21 PM
#5
Remember the risk of losing your whole network if your Pi becomes unavailable.
K
Kaspolman
04-21-2016, 07:21 PM #5

Remember the risk of losing your whole network if your Pi becomes unavailable.

C
CreativeWorker
Junior Member
5
04-22-2016, 12:14 AM
#6
In the settings, DNS is active with both Google and Cloudflare included.
C
CreativeWorker
04-22-2016, 12:14 AM #6

In the settings, DNS is active with both Google and Cloudflare included.

T
TheKroksBG
Member
209
04-22-2016, 01:17 AM
#7
On your device configure the DNS server with your Pi's IP address, then confirm. After it confirms connection, turn off your Wi-Fi for a short time, wait a moment, then turn it back on. It should restore properly.
T
TheKroksBG
04-22-2016, 01:17 AM #7

On your device configure the DNS server with your Pi's IP address, then confirm. After it confirms connection, turn off your Wi-Fi for a short time, wait a moment, then turn it back on. It should restore properly.

C
ChibiWolf39
Senior Member
491
04-22-2016, 05:52 AM
#8
You'd still rely on your router as the main gateway, and clients would recognize it as such. The problem arises when a device loses connection; it wouldn't be able to obtain a valid IP address unless you enable the Pi-hole or configure it statically. Even if the Pi-hole fails, your network remains reachable as long as you assign a secondary DNS (your ISP's DNS) to all clients. I've implemented this at the router level—using the primary DNS as the Pi-hole and a backup DNS in case the Pi-hole goes down, allowing the network to switch seamlessly.
C
ChibiWolf39
04-22-2016, 05:52 AM #8

You'd still rely on your router as the main gateway, and clients would recognize it as such. The problem arises when a device loses connection; it wouldn't be able to obtain a valid IP address unless you enable the Pi-hole or configure it statically. Even if the Pi-hole fails, your network remains reachable as long as you assign a secondary DNS (your ISP's DNS) to all clients. I've implemented this at the router level—using the primary DNS as the Pi-hole and a backup DNS in case the Pi-hole goes down, allowing the network to switch seamlessly.

E
EVLiNFLUX
Member
53
04-22-2016, 06:23 AM
#9
I attempted it, but there was no impact. The device doesn’t detect any internet, and Chrome displays the message “dns probe finished no internet.”
E
EVLiNFLUX
04-22-2016, 06:23 AM #9

I attempted it, but there was no impact. The device doesn’t detect any internet, and Chrome displays the message “dns probe finished no internet.”

W
117
04-24-2016, 03:59 AM
#10
You'll find the standard DNS resolution for google.com using pi-hole. Run the command on the Pi-hole Linux setup to observe the results directly.
W
whitecastle200
04-24-2016, 03:59 AM #10

You'll find the standard DNS resolution for google.com using pi-hole. Run the command on the Pi-hole Linux setup to observe the results directly.

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