
Is anyone else seeing this or am I going to spend the rest of my day chasing bugs? I am having trouble seeing available packages, updating pkg, or getting a response from. Https:// (netgate hardware is used in businesses).
Need some help on setting up home network. I need to keep it that way.Īny help would be appreciated as I don’t know what to do and have already spent quite some time trying to trace this problem.Īs a third approach, I specified the local DNS address of my pfSense firewall in the DHCP-specific network settings, with the result that I reach my VPN server and local DNS while being bugged by DNS leaks (again). How can I fix this (having local DNS and routing without DNS leaks over my VPN at the same time)? I really liked Tom’s setup (from the OpenVPN Privacy VPN Video) because I can define multiple VPN connections with one kill switch floating rule for individual networks. If I do the opposite (set the DNS servers on the general settings page), I can resolve my local DNS, but I get DNS leaks (even though I have the correct WireGuard IP address from my provider).īoth make sense to me, but I’m too much of a noob to find the setting that provides the best of both worlds. If I set up the DNS server addresses of my specific VPN provider in the DHCP service (on the specific network/VLAN) and therefore override the DNS servers on the general settings page, I don’t have any DNS leaks, but I can’t resolve my local DNS. However, I am not sure which DNS servers to specify, and the location of the settings is also questionable for me. My setup: I’m using WireGuard instead of OpenVPN, which works as expected. Namely, I can’t reach the pfSense admin panel by domain name, but the IP works. Unfortunately I still have some problems with my local DNS. Recently I setup WireGuard as a privacy VPN on my pfSense router.