One thing that will gelp even more (esp on dlow internet connections) is to run pi-hole to filter out ads, not shore uf it caches the query results tho, and reslusts ofc vary according to how add ridden the websites/ apps you use are.
This is an incredible video. I've thought about doing something like this, but I was a little intimidated at not knowing everything. But you laid it out and made it simple. BIG THANKS.
Thanks for sharing . Even not really a big advantage - since the OS's already do caching if TTL still ok - This project is rather a good way to concentrate all the DNS queries of your local network on a single place and where you can monitor and apply appropriate policies . Good to see another Pi family application ;-)
Measure it. All modern OSes already have local caches. The only time a centralized local cache speeds anything up is at first query for the same site across two different machines. After that the local machine cache is used per the TTL of the DNS object. Most sites that are load balanced have such low TTLs the caches are constantly dumped and requested again in minutes. There's no significant speed gains for this.
1:49 seconds into your video you lost me. what ever you pasted below log.queries i could not make out all the characters namely the character after log.facility(?)/var/log/dnsmasq
Anyone have any stats on just how much network traffic is to a DNS? I have a hard time believing you'd save all that much. But I am hardly an ip guru...
the only way to get faster internet connection is by upgrading your internet plan. if you have low internet speeds this isn't going to magically make things faster. all these videos only give false hope
One thing that will gelp even more (esp on dlow internet connections) is to run pi-hole to filter out ads, not shore uf it caches the query results tho, and reslusts ofc vary according to how add ridden the websites/ apps you use are.
This is an incredible video. I've thought about doing something like this, but I was a little intimidated at not knowing everything. But you laid it out and made it simple. BIG THANKS.
Good video, but you should include all the modifications to the config file mentioned in some websites
Thanks for sharing . Even not really a big advantage - since the OS's already do caching if TTL still ok - This project is rather a good way to concentrate all the DNS queries of your local network on a single place and where you can monitor and apply appropriate policies . Good to see another Pi family application ;-)
Isn't it the same as pfsense with proxy cache and content filtering?
Faster in resolving domain to up, but does is faster downloading the content to ours with the same speed?
nope.
Better use pihole and configure the dns server from there.
Could you make this work with PiHole ? or would it be a conflict of dns matching ?
I think PiHole also uses dnsmasq, so there would be a conflict.
Take a look at ua-cam.com/video/FnFtWsZ8IP0/v-deo.html. This is the video I followed.
@@daramullally thanks, exactly what I needed
@@aaronag7876 No problem. Another great pihole guide for high availability. ua-cam.com/video/IFVYe3riDRA/v-deo.html
@@daramullally I need pi hole to stop all those EE as Duracell adverts that you can't skip lol
Measure it. All modern OSes already have local caches. The only time a centralized local cache speeds anything up is at first query for the same site across two different machines. After that the local machine cache is used per the TTL of the DNS object. Most sites that are load balanced have such low TTLs the caches are constantly dumped and requested again in minutes. There's no significant speed gains for this.
Do dnsmasq cache HTTPS content
Hi, very interesting. Question I have is can I install this on a RPI 4 where I already have running OpenMediaVault ? Thanks.
Yes, absolutely
@@Krisseck Hi, when I try to run
Can you help me with this ?
Many thanks, Marc
1:49 seconds into your video you lost me. what ever you pasted below log.queries i could not make out all the characters namely the character after log.facility(?)/var/log/dnsmasq
=
Anyone have any stats on just how much network traffic is to a DNS? I have a hard time believing you'd save all that much. But I am hardly an ip guru...
yeah ngl faste home network is rly clickbait the only thing thats gonne be faster is loading webpages and thats about it
If DNS is a bottleneck to your network you have bigger problems.
The easier way is to install hblock. Done. lols.
the only way to get faster internet connection is by upgrading your internet plan. if you have low internet speeds this isn't going to magically make things faster. all these videos only give false hope
true