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Ainar Garipov edited this page Dec 10, 2021 · 32 revisions

AdGuard Home - FAQ

Suppose that AdGuard Home must block somebadsite.com but for some reason it doesn't. Let's try to resolve this issue.

Most likely you didn't configure your device to use AdGuard Home as its default DNS server. To check if you're using AdGuard Home as the default DNS server:

  1. On Windows, open a Terminal window (Start → Run → cmd.exe). On other systems, open your Terminal application.

  2. Execute nslookup example.org. It will print something like this:

    Server:         192.168.0.1
    Address:        192.168.0.1#53
    
    Non-authoritative answer:
    Name:   example.org
    Address: <IPv4>
    Name:   example.org
    Address: <IPv6>
    
  3. Check if the Server IP address is the one on which AdGuard Home is running. If no, then you need to configure your device, see below.

  4. Ensure that your request to example.org appears in the AdGuard Home UI on the Query Log page. If not, then you need to configure AdGuard Home to listen on the specified network interface. The most straightforward way to do so is to reinstall AdGuard Home with default settings.

Now that you are sure that your device uses AdGuard Home as its default DNS server, the problem might be in AdGuard Home misconfiguration. Please check and ensure that:

  1. You have the “Block domains using filters and hosts files” setting enabled on the “Settings → General settings” page.

  2. You have the appropriate safety mechanisms, such as parental control, enabled on the “Settings → General settings”.

  3. You have the appropriate filters enabled on the “Filters → DNS blocklists” page.

  4. You don't have any filters that may interfere enabled on the “Filters → DNS allowlists” page.

  5. You don't have any DNS rewrites that may interfere on the “Filters → DNS rewrites” page.

  6. You don't have any custom filtering rules that may interfere on the “Filters → Custom filtering rules” page.

To troubleshoot a complicated issue, the verbose-level logging is sometimes required. Here's how to enable it:

  1. Stop AdGuard Home:

    ./AdGuardHome -s stop
  2. Configure AdGuard Home to write verbose-level logs:

    1. Open AdGuardHome.yaml in your editor.

    2. Set log_file to the desired path of the log file, for example /tmp/aghlog.txt. Note that the directory must exist.

    3. Set verbose to true.

  3. Restart AdGuard Home and reproduce the issue:

    ./AdGuardHome -s start
  1. Stop AdGuard Home:

    ./AdGuardHome -s stop
  2. Open AdGuardHome.yaml in your editor.

  3. Set the bind_host setting to a new network interface. For example:

    • 0.0.0.0 to listen on all network interfaces.

    • 127.0.0.1 to listen on the local loopback interface only.

  4. Optionally, set the bind_port setting to set a new port.

  5. Restart AdGuard Home:

    ./AdGuardHome -s start

Router

This setup will automatically cover all devices connected to your home router, and you won't need to configure each of them manually.

  1. Open the preferences for your router. Usually, you can access it from your browser via a URL, such as http://192.168.0.1/ or http://192.168.1.1/. You may be prompted to enter a password. If you don't remember it, you can often reset the password by pressing a button on the router itself, but be aware that if this procedure is chosen, you will probably lose the entire router configuration. If your router requires an app to set it up, please install the app on your phone or PC and use it to access the router’s settings.

  2. Find the DHCP/DNS settings. Look for the DNS letters next to a field which allows two or three sets of numbers, each broken into four groups of one to three digits.

  3. Enter your AdGuard Home server addresses there.

  4. On some router types, a custom DNS server cannot be set up. In that case, setting up AdGuard Home as a DHCP server may help. Otherwise, you should check the router manual on how to customize DNS servers on your specific router model.

Windows

  1. Open Control Panel through Start menu or Windows search.

  2. Go to Network and Internet category and then to Network and Sharing Center.

  3. On the left side of the screen find “Change adapter settings” and click on it.

  4. Select your active connection, right-click on it and choose Properties.

  5. Find “Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4)” (or, for IPv6, “Internet Protocol Version 6 (TCP/IPv6)”) in the list, select it and then click on Properties again.

  6. Choose “Use the following DNS server addresses” and enter your AdGuard Home server addresses.

macOS

  1. Click on Apple icon and go to System Preferences.

  2. Click on Network.

  3. Select the first connection in your list and click Advanced.

  4. Select the DNS tab and enter your AdGuard Home server addresses.

Android

  1. From the Android Menu home screen, tap Settings.

  2. Tap Wi-Fi on the menu. The screen listing all of the available networks will be shown (it is impossible to set custom DNS for mobile connection).

  3. Long press the network you're connected to and tap Modify Network.

  4. On some devices, you may need to check the box for Advanced to see further settings. To adjust your Android DNS settings, you will need to switch the IP settings from DHCP to Static.

  5. Change set DNS 1 and DNS 2 values to your AdGuard Home server addresses.

iOS

  1. From the home screen, tap Settings.

  2. Choose Wi-Fi in the left menu (it is impossible to configure DNS for mobile networks).

  3. Tap on the name of the currently active network.

  4. In the DNS field enter your AdGuard Home server addresses.

  1. Open the web UI.

  2. Go to “Settings → DNS settings”.

  3. Scroll to the “DNS server configuration” section.

  4. For the “Blocking mode” setting select the “Custom IP” radio button and enter the IP address of the pixelsrv-tls instance.

  5. Click “Save”.

Here are some examples of what cannot be blocked by a DNS-level blocker:

  • YouTube, Twitch ads.
  • Facebook, Twitter, Instagram sponsored posts.

Essentially, any advertising that shares a domain with content cannot be blocked by a DNS-level blocker.

Is there a chance to handle this in the future?

DNS will never be enough to do this. Your only option is to use a content blocking proxy like what we do in the standalone AdGuard applications. We're going to bring this feature support to AdGuard Home in the future. Unfortunately, even in this case, there still will be cases when this won't be enough or would require quite complicated configuration.

Because 127.0.0.1:53, which is used for DNS, is already occupied by another program.

The easiest solution would be simply to choose a different network interface and bind it to your external IP (for instance, your Wi-Fi IP).

If for some reason you really want to bind to 127.0.0.1, read the explanation below.

Ubuntu comes with a local DNS server by default called systemd-resolved, which uses port 53 and thus prevents AdGuard Home from binding to it. To fix this, disable the systemd-resolved daemon. Luckily, AdGuard Home can detect such configurations and disable systemd-resolved for you if you press "Fix" button which is shown near the address already in use message.

Note that if you're using AdGuard Home with docker or snap, you'll have to do it yourself by following these steps:

  1. Deactivate DNSStubListener and update DNS server address. Create a new file: /etc/systemd/resolved.conf.d/adguardhome.conf (create a /etc/systemd/resolved.conf.d directory if necessary) with the following content:

    [Resolve]
    DNS=127.0.0.1
    DNSStubListener=no
    
  2. Specifying 127.0.0.1 as DNS server address is necessary because otherwise the nameserver will be 127.0.0.53 which doesn't work without DNSStubListener.

  3. Activate another resolv.conf file:

    sudo mv /etc/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf.backup
    ln -s /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf
  4. Restart DNSStubListener:

    systemctl reload-or-restart systemd-resolved

If you're running a web server already and you want to access AdGuard Home dashboard UI from an URL like http://YOUR_SERVER/aghome/ you can use this configuration for your web server:

nginx

location /aghome/ {
    proxy_pass http://AGH_IP:AGH_PORT/;
    proxy_redirect / /aghome/;
    proxy_cookie_path / /aghome/;
}

caddy

:80/aghome/* {
    route {
        uri strip_prefix /aghome
        reverse_proxy AGH_IP:AGH_PORT
    }
}

Or, if you just want to serve AdGuard Home with automatic TLS, something similar to:

DOMAIN {
    encode gzip zstd
    tls YOUR_EMAIL@DOMAIN
    reverse_proxy AGH_IP:AGH_PORT
}

Disable DoH encryption on AdGuard Home

When you use TLS on your reverse proxy server, there's no need to use TLS on AdGuard Home. Set allow_unencrypted_doh: false in AdGuardHome.yaml to allow AdGuard Home respond to DoH requests without TLS encryption.

  1. Move the AdGuardHome binary to /usr/local/bin.

  2. As root, execute the following command to change the security context of the file:

    chcon -t bin_t /usr/local/bin/AdGuardHome
  3. Add the required firewall rules in order to make it reachable through the network. For example:

    firewall-cmd --new-zone=adguard --permanent
    firewall-cmd --zone=adguard --add-source=192.168.0.14/24 --permanent
    firewall-cmd --zone=adguard --add-port=3000/tcp --permanent
    firewall-cmd --zone=adguard --add-port=53/udp --permanent
    firewall-cmd --zone=adguard --add-port=80/tcp --permanent
    firewall-cmd --reload

See issue 765.

The way to uninstall AdGuard Home depends on how you installed it.

IMPORTANT: After uninstalling AdGuard Home, don't forget to change your devices configuration and point them to a different DNS server.

Regular installation

In this case you need to do the following:

  • Unregister AdGuard Home service: ./AdGuardHome -s uninstall.

  • Remove the AdGuard Home directory.

Docker

Simply stop and remove the image.

Snap Store

snap remove adguard-home