1/6/2024 0 Comments Ddwrt dns unrepliedI did try Quad9 which seems to work faster but adguard has a better privacy policy although it does not matter since we both on VPN. Edit GUI windows in vi/emacs/etc in linux: įollowed your advice and used Adguard.Multiple DNSCrypt providers from latest list.The dd-wrt menu was taken from that master list some months ago and should still match it pretty well.Ģx Netgear XR500 and 3x Linksys WRT1900ACSv2 on 53544: VLANs, VAPs, NAS, station mode, OpenVPN client (AirVPN), wireguard server (AirVPN port forward) and clients (AzireVPN, AirVPN, private), 3 DNSCrypt providers via VPN. To wade through the choices on your own, see and look for the master provider list. The AdGuard system is worth a look as well, but in my testing they were slower, I believe because they send queries (anonymously) to google DNS and maybe cloudflare DNS and others and then filter out malware and adware domains before forwarding the responses to you. They log the metro area you are in, but not your IP, but you and I both access DNS via a VPN, so who cares what location they record? And note that in output, you can recognize their servers as those with ISP listed as WoodyNet. Just as the last time I went through that exercise, I ended up settling on Quad9. Those were my personal criteria when I reviewed my choices last week. If you are using the dd-wrt DNSCrypt encryption, however, there are only a few providers in the menu that satisfy (1) are in the US or Europe, (2) are substantial organizations with many DNS servers, (3) support DNSSEC, (4) have no (or minimal) logging, (5) filter out known malware domains, (6) do NOT use the EDNS (are those the right initials?) system to send part of your IP upstream, and (7) are quite fast. There are a million opinions on what DNS system to use. You need to be able to look at its display and known from what you see whether you are seeing the DNS servers you want to see or the ones your ISP provides. It won't announce "protected!" or not, because it's not aimed at beginners. The de facto standard DNS test in this community is at. Those lesser-known sites that purport to check for protection generally are put up by VPN firms that tell you that you have no protection unless you are using their VPN. We just do it since we do not like any restrictions enforced by stupid cocaine snorting managers I am aware Cisco log but I was not worried because I connect using a VPN and seems to be the only provider who when I do a DNS Leak test here shows my DNS as protected, the rest do not.Ĭan anyone help and what provider should I choose so when I do a DNS test it shows my DNS queries are protected? I was looking at the logs and noticed this warning which I am aware of because I was using Cisco as my DNSCrypt Resolver -ĭD-WRT 2 user.warn : - logs your activity - a different provider might be better a choice if privacy is a concern I also use a VPN and all my connection goes through a VPN. I use DNSCrypt Resolver and have been using Cisco. It seams that I can not have a log over an entire day because it is flushed.Posted: Wed 13:09 Post subject: DDWRT DNSCrypt Resolver I can se that on the graph because it was cleared and the new graph start from 10.00 AM. Apparently then it was flushed automaticly. The log was recorded from 00.00 AM until 10.00 AM. If someone can confirm this, than it I will leave the setup as it is.īack to actually what was my first question, flushing the log. I guess thats it, I have to let router as custom1 upstream dns so local names are resolved. What I have read on this forum is to let pihole manage dhcp and local names but I do not want that. Local names and dhcp are managed from my router. Why are then mostly all request from 192.168.1.222 (pihole) to router (192.168.1.1) and back from 192.168.1.1 to 192.168.1.222, unreplied?Īlready tried that, you ar right I know that, but if i remove 192.168.1.1 from upstream dns custom1 then pihole does not resolve my local names any more.
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