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fendrax

fendrax@jlai.lu
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Sorry, I was unclear: I use dnsmasq as single source of truth. In its DHCP config, I set machine names, routes and all. And this is because this dnsmasq is the DHCP that it knows how to translate the names of the devices it configured. Pi-hole forwards all DNS requests to dnsmasq. Now if I use two instances of dnsmasq, only one can be a DHCP and the other won’t know how to resolve local names, unless it uses the first dnsmasq as upstream. But in scenarios where this first dnsmasq instance is down, we are back to square one.

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My goodness, that’s some impressive responsiveness ^^

I guess see your point. But then the problem shifts to the upstream dnsmasq instance which acts as DHCP + DNS for the local devices. This is the server ultimately able to translate local names.

I don’t think it’s doable to have two instances of dnsmasq that are able to translate local names interchangeably. That would require two DHCPs to have authority on the network. But I’m no expert so I may be missing something obvious.

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For some reason, I am only seeing this comment thread now, so sorry for the late response.

Thanks for those valuable details. But I am still a bit confused. I understand why you are saying that pi hole should be the only DNS server handling requests sent by LAN devices (including the machine hosting the DNS). That’s because it is the only one which can resolve local names (well, that’s actually its upstream dnsmasq running as a sibling container that does that but that’s a minor detail).

But then you say there should be another DNS server to solve my problem. If I put two server entries in /etc/resolv.conf, one being pi hole and the other my ISP’s DNS, the two of them will be randomly picked by DNS clients. When the ISP’s is used, it will fail to translate local names. I guess there is a way to let the client try the other server after a failure but it will add some undesirable latency.

Sorry if I misunderstood your point but after reading the first comments I was quite convinced by the idea of adding a second nameserver entry in /etc/resolv.conf. Your explanations convinced me otherwise and now I have the impression that I can’t really solve my initial problem in a reliable way.

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Well, I have not really thought about why. I guess that’s partly due to old habits of running services on the host with systemd (my migration to docker is recent and still a work in progress). But I guess I’d like to continue to be able to resolve names of local devices on my network when connected through ssh on the host. Is that inherently wrong, still? I will implement the secondary DNS as a fallback. I am hoping to get rid of the issue that way.

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Yes, others have suggested something similar. I’ll do that first because it is easy. Monitoring-wise, I should already be covered but since prometheus is running on the same server, it was down during the outage. There is room for improvement, for sure! I have a couple of RPis on my network that I can leverage for better monitoring.

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Your suggestion looks similar to this other comment and makes sense. I’ll try that!

I have never managed to wrap my head around DoH and DoT but this is on my todo list ^^

I didn’t know dnsmasq has an adblock plugin, I’ll have a look. Originally, I was using dnsmasq alone (running on bare metal). Then I migrated to docker and added pi-hole for ad blocking. I tried to get rid of dnsmasq but pi-hole’s embedded DHCP is not as configurable as dnsmasq’s and I could not address my use case.

Thanks a lot for your time!

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I see. I kind of thought about it earlier today while mulling over the problem. I can definitely do that first because it’s easy and makes total sense.

I already have prometheus monitoring the DNS resolution, I think. I’ll check!

Thanks for taking the time to answer!

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Yeah, that was my plan B. To be honest, I was not super confident that it would work when I put this setup together, because of the “host uses a container as DNS and docker uses the host as DNS” kind of circular dependency.

But people do use docker for DNS servers so it has to work, right? That’s where I’d like to understand where I’m wrong. I’m fine with running pi hole and dnsmasq on the host as long as I get why this is not doable in docker.

Thanks for your input, though. That’s helpful.

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In both the pi-hole (exposed on the host) and dnsmasq (used as upstream by pi-hole) containers:

# Generated by Docker Engine.
# This file can be edited; Docker Engine will not make
 further changes once it
# has been modified.

nameserver 127.0.0.11
options ndots:0

# Based on host file: '/etc/resolv.conf' (internal res
olver)
# ExtServers: [host(127.0.0.1)]
# Overrides: []
# Option ndots from: internal

So they are pointing to docker’s embedded DNS, itself forwarding to the host.

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Contre la fédé avec des géants du domaine. Cet article de la quadrature du net sur le sujet est intéressant. Il évoque le précédent de XMPP et GTalk avant que Google transforme GTalk en Hangout et le sorte de XMPP. Le risque que Méta bouffe le fedivers après avoir capté son public est réel.

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