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    PiHole for Friends and Family

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    • black3dynamiteB
      black3dynamite @NashBrydges
      last edited by black3dynamite

      @nashbrydges said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

      Now that I'll be testing Romo's script, I don't need to use VPN and I'd like to setup the admin page behind Nginx. Found a tutorial that allows admin page access using Nginx as a proxy but I can't get the HTTPS redirect to work right.

      https://github.com/pi-hole/pi-hole/wiki/Nginx-Configuration

      Anyone have a working Nginx config with HTTPS redirect for this?

      Found this that shows how to setup Let's Encrypt with lighttpd but don't know enough to set it up for other proper security headers.

      http://www.itzgeek.com/how-tos/linux/how-to-configure-lets-encrypt-ssl-in-lighttpd-server.html

      I've only got it working with nginx http.

      upstream adblock {
              server 10.0.0.3:80;
      }
      
      server {
              client_max_body_size 40M;
              listen 80;
      
              server_name adblock.domain.com;
      
              location /admin {
                      proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
                      proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
                      proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
                      proxy_set_header X-NginX-Proxy true;
                      proxy_pass http://adblock;
                      proxy_redirect off;
                      proxy_connect_timeout 600;
                      proxy_send_timeout 600;
                      proxy_read_timeout 600;
                      send_timeout 600;
              }
      }
      
      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • RomoR
        Romo @NashBrydges
        last edited by

        @nashbrydges Haven't set the script to run via cron yet. It is still is printing some strings to stdout while I fully complete it, plan to add a log file and redirect the output to it.

        I'll focuse on finishing it properly for Ubuntu so you can properly test it.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • RomoR
          Romo
          last edited by Romo

          But if you want to test is manually, I think is is working properly.

          # Starting from empty firewall
          ~/scripts/python$ sudo ufw status
          Status: active
          
          #Running script for the first time
          ~/scripts/python$ sudo python dns-to-ip-firewall-rules.py 
          
          Adding to firewall
          mangolassi.it - 104.25.46.32
          
          Adding to firewall
          google.com - 172.217.12.78
          
          Adding to firewall
          theverge.com - 151.101.65.52
          
          # Checking to see if rules were created.
          ~/scripts/python$ sudo ufw status
          Status: active
          
          To                         Action      From
          --                         ------      ----
          53                         ALLOW       104.25.46.32              
          53                         ALLOW       172.217.12.78             
          53                         ALLOW       151.101.65.52  
          
          # Running script againg to check for ip changes.
          ~/scripts/python$ sudo python dns-to-ip-firewall-rules.py 
          
          Same ip address nothing to do
          mangolassi.it - 104.25.46.32
          
          Same ip address nothing to do
          google.com - 172.217.12.78
          
          Adding theverge.com ip 151.101.129.52 - removing 151.101.65.52
          theverge.com - 151.101.129.52
          
          # Verifying ip changes are added to the firewall, and old ip are removed.
          ~/scripts/python$ sudo ufw status
          Status: active
          
          To                         Action      From
          --                         ------      ----
          53                         ALLOW       104.25.46.32              
          53                         ALLOW       172.217.12.78             
          53                         ALLOW       151.101.129.52 
          
          

          At least for dns and Ubuntu I think it does want @aaronstuder asked for originally. The idea of custom ports could be done as well, probably just adding a list of ports you wish to open for each domain.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • RomoR
            Romo @Alex Sage
            last edited by

            @aaronstuder said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

            @romo I love your script! Thank you so much! Sorry I didn’t reply before somehow I missed your post 😕

            Can you make this so I can set whatever ports I want? In the example I gave before I just wanted to do DNS but now my mind is spinning with other ideas 🙂

            @aaronstuder Different ports per domain or just add a list of custom ports for all domains?

            A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • A
              Alex Sage @Romo
              last edited by Alex Sage

              @romo said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

              @aaronstuder said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

              @romo I love your script! Thank you so much! Sorry I didn’t reply before somehow I missed your post 😕

              Can you make this so I can set whatever ports I want? In the example I gave before I just wanted to do DNS but now my mind is spinning with other ideas 🙂

              @aaronstuder Different ports per domain or just add a list of custom ports for all domains?

              @Romo Same ports all domains, but then then maybe allowing all ports since we are restricting by IP address already.

              Seems like:

              sudo ufw allow from 123.45.67.89
              

              Would work?

              RomoR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • RomoR
                Romo @Alex Sage
                last edited by

                @aaronstuder said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

                @romo said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

                @aaronstuder said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

                @romo I love your script! Thank you so much! Sorry I didn’t reply before somehow I missed your post 😕

                Can you make this so I can set whatever ports I want? In the example I gave before I just wanted to do DNS but now my mind is spinning with other ideas 🙂

                @aaronstuder Different ports per domain or just add a list of custom ports for all domains?

                @Romo Same ports all domains, but then then maybe allowing all ports since we are restricting by IP address already.

                Seems like:

                sudo ufw allow from 123.45.67.89
                

                Would work?

                Well that's gonna be much easier.

                Just finished a custom-ports branch, that gives you the ability to specify ports and protocol (tcp/udp)

                # Starting from empty firewall
                ~/scripts/python$ sudo ufw status
                Status: active
                
                # Running script for the first time
                ~/scripts/python$ sudo python dns-to-ip-firewall-rules.py 
                
                Adding to firewall
                mangolassi.it - 104.25.47.32
                
                Adding to firewall
                google.com - 172.217.1.238
                
                Adding to firewall
                example.com - 93.184.216.34 
                
                # Verifying ips with ports and protocols are added
                ~/scripts/python$ sudo ufw status
                Status: active
                
                To                         Action      From
                --                         ------      ----
                53/udp                     ALLOW       93.184.216.34             
                22                         ALLOW       93.184.216.34             
                80/tcp                     ALLOW       93.184.216.34             
                53/udp                     ALLOW       172.217.1.238             
                22                         ALLOW       172.217.1.238             
                80/tcp                     ALLOW       172.217.1.238             
                53                         ALLOW       104.25.47.32              
                443/tcp                    ALLOW       104.25.47.32
                
                
                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • RomoR
                  Romo
                  last edited by

                  Added the allow all ports for a domain, it is also in the custom-ports branch if you wanna test it and let me know if it works properly for you. I'll merge it to master if it works ok and start removing everything that prints to stdout.

                  # DOMAINS TO ADD
                  # ---
                  # arstechnica - all ports
                  # theverge - all ports
                  # mangolassi.it -  53/(udp-tcp), 443/tcp
                  # example.com - 53/udp, 22/(udp-tcp), 80/tcp
                  # google.com - 53/udp, 22/(udp-tcp), 80/tcp
                  # ---
                  
                  ~/scripts/python/dns_to_ip_firewall_rules$ sudo python dns-to-ip-firewall-rules.py 
                  
                  Adding to firewall
                  theverge.com - 151.101.65.52
                  
                  Adding to firewall
                  arstechnica.com - 50.31.169.131
                  
                  Adding to firewall
                  google.com - 216.58.194.142
                  
                  Adding to firewall
                  example.com - 93.184.216.34
                  
                  Adding to firewall
                  mangolassi.it - 104.25.47.32
                  
                  # Checking firewall rules
                  ~/scripts/python/dns_to_ip_firewall_rules$ sudo ufw status
                  Status: active
                  
                  To                         Action      From
                  --                         ------      ----
                  Anywhere                   ALLOW       151.101.65.52             
                  Anywhere                   ALLOW       50.31.169.131             
                  53/udp                     ALLOW       216.58.194.142            
                  22                         ALLOW       216.58.194.142            
                  80/tcp                     ALLOW       216.58.194.142            
                  53/udp                     ALLOW       93.184.216.34             
                  22                         ALLOW       93.184.216.34             
                  80/tcp                     ALLOW       93.184.216.34             
                  53                         ALLOW       104.25.47.32              
                  443/tcp                    ALLOW       104.25.47.32 
                  
                  # Re running script
                  ~/scripts/python/dns_to_ip_firewall_rules$ sudo python dns-to-ip-firewall-rules.py 
                  
                  Adding theverge.com ip 151.101.129.52 - removing 151.101.65.52
                  theverge.com - 151.101.129.52
                  
                  Same ip address nothing to do
                  arstechnica.com - 50.31.169.131
                  
                  Adding google.com ip 172.217.2.238 - removing 216.58.194.142
                  google.com - 172.217.2.238
                  
                  Same ip address nothing to do
                  example.com - 93.184.216.34
                  
                  Adding mangolassi.it ip 104.25.46.32 - removing 104.25.47.32
                  mangolassi.it - 104.25.46.32
                  
                  # Final Results
                  ~/scripts/python/dns_to_ip_firewall_rules$ sudo ufw status
                  Status: active
                  
                  To                         Action      From
                  --                         ------      ----
                  Anywhere                   ALLOW       151.101.65.52             
                  Anywhere                   ALLOW       50.31.169.131             
                  53/udp                     ALLOW       93.184.216.34             
                  22                         ALLOW       93.184.216.34             
                  80/tcp                     ALLOW       93.184.216.34             
                  Anywhere                   ALLOW       151.101.129.52            
                  53/udp                     ALLOW       172.217.2.238             
                  22                         ALLOW       172.217.2.238             
                  80/tcp                     ALLOW       172.217.2.238             
                  53                         ALLOW       104.25.46.32              
                  443/tcp                    ALLOW       104.25.46.32
                  A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • A
                    Alex Sage @Romo
                    last edited by

                    @romo Thanks so much! Seems to be working to me 🙂

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • RomoR
                      Romo
                      last edited by

                      Merged branch to master, removed stoudout outputs and added ip changes to .log file

                      A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • A
                        Alex Sage @Romo
                        last edited by

                        @romo Can you add centos 7 support? I would help be I don't know anything about python...

                        RomoR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • RomoR
                          Romo @Alex Sage
                          last edited by

                          @aaronstuder I am working on it already, haven't had time to finish it yet due to other work. Will post as soon as it is ready.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • JaredBuschJ
                            JaredBusch
                            last edited by

                            I don't get the point of this. I mean it is a cool concept, but it is to much work.

                            A NashBrydgesN 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • A
                              Alex Sage @JaredBusch
                              last edited by

                              @jaredbusch said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

                              I don't get the point of this. I mean it is a cool concept, but it is to much work.

                              What do you mean?

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • NashBrydgesN
                                NashBrydges @JaredBusch
                                last edited by

                                @jaredbusch said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

                                I don't get the point of this. I mean it is a cool concept, but it is to much work.

                                What's not to get? This is being used to limit who can access the cloud hosted Pi-hole server to only those whose DDNS domain (and ergo IP address) is listed. It makes the server DNS access non-public for those with dynamic IPs who are setup with a DDNS domain.

                                Do you have another recommendation for limiting server access for DNS services to a limited IP that is dynamically assigned by the ISP?

                                I agree it's been a lot of work for Romo who's kindly provided us with the script but in the absence of a better solution, this is extremely useful.

                                A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • A
                                  Alex Sage @NashBrydges
                                  last edited by

                                  @nashbrydges said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

                                  What's not to get? This is being used to limit who can access the cloud hosted Pi-hole server to only those whose DDNS domain (and ergo IP address) is listed. It makes the server DNS access non-public for those with dynamic IPs who are setup with a DDNS domain.

                                  Do you have another recommendation for limiting server access for DNS services to a limited IP that is dynamically assigned by the ISP?

                                  I agree it's been a lot of work for Romo who's kindly provided us with the script but in the absence of a better solution, this is extremely useful.

                                  I am going to be using it to give my friends and family access to a bunch of services I run, DNS, Nextlcloud, etc. That's why I had @Romo have it allow all connections from one IP 😉

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • JaredBuschJ
                                    JaredBusch
                                    last edited by

                                    The point is there is no point to the entire DNS for friends and family thing.

                                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • DashrenderD
                                      Dashrender @JaredBusch
                                      last edited by

                                      @jaredbusch said in PiHole for Friends and Family:

                                      The point is there is no point to the entire DNS for friends and family thing.

                                      This is not entirely true. If you're not an ass like JB, and you take care of your family's and friend's computers, this could save you a lot of headaches by preventing those family and friends from getting some infections/ads, etc. Of course, I am an like like JB I don't want to support more than I have to.. so I wouldn't bother outside my own home 😉

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • RomoR
                                        Romo
                                        last edited by

                                        Finally had some time to finish working on the Fedora based rules, I used firewall-cmds rich-rules in order to work with the default zone, I think it is the best way to handle it but I am open to suggestions.

                                        Tested the script in Fedora Server 26, but I believe it should work properly on CentOS 7 and its default python version.

                                        # Starting default fw config
                                        [root@localhost dns_to_ip_firewall_rules]$ firewall-cmd --list-all
                                        FedoraServer (active)
                                          target: default
                                          icmp-block-inversion: no
                                          interfaces: ens3
                                          sources: 
                                          services: ssh dhcpv6-client cockpit
                                          ports: 
                                          protocols: 
                                          masquerade: no
                                          forward-ports: 
                                          source-ports: 
                                          icmp-blocks: 
                                          rich rules: 
                                        
                                        #Fedora 26 uses by default Python 3 so using it to run the script
                                        [root@localhost dns_to_ip_firewall_rules]$ python3 dns-to-ip-firewall-rules.py 
                                        
                                        # Script is set to reload the firewall to make the rules permanent, checking the new rules
                                        [root@localhost dns_to_ip_firewall_rules]# firewall-cmd --list-all
                                        FedoraServer (active)
                                          target: default
                                          icmp-block-inversion: no
                                          interfaces: ens3
                                          sources: 
                                          services: ssh dhcpv6-client cockpit
                                          ports: 
                                          protocols: 
                                          masquerade: no
                                          forward-ports: 
                                          source-ports: 
                                          icmp-blocks: 
                                          rich rules: 
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="151.101.1.52/32" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="50.31.169.131/32" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="216.58.193.206/32" port port="22" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="216.58.193.206/32" port port="53" protocol="udp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="104.25.47.32/32" port port="443" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="93.184.216.34/32" port port="53" protocol="udp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="93.184.216.34/32" port port="80" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="93.184.216.34/32" port port="22" protocol="udp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="216.58.193.206/32" port port="22" protocol="udp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="104.25.47.32/32" port port="53" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="216.58.193.206/32" port port="80" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="93.184.216.34/32" port port="22" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="104.25.47.32/32" port port="53" protocol="udp" accept
                                        
                                        # Rerunning script to check for new ips
                                        [root@localhost dns_to_ip_firewall_rules]$ python3 dns-to-ip-firewall-rules.py 
                                        
                                        # Checking to see the new ip correctly set in the firewall 
                                        [root@localhost dns_to_ip_firewall_rules]$ firewall-cmd --list-all
                                        FedoraServer (active)
                                          target: default
                                          icmp-block-inversion: no
                                          interfaces: ens3
                                          sources: 
                                          services: ssh dhcpv6-client cockpit
                                          ports: 
                                          protocols: 
                                          masquerade: no
                                          forward-ports: 
                                          source-ports: 
                                          icmp-blocks: 
                                          rich rules: 
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="151.101.1.52/32" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="50.31.169.131/32" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="216.58.193.206/32" port port="22" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="216.58.193.206/32" port port="53" protocol="udp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="104.25.47.32/32" port port="443" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="93.184.216.34/32" port port="53" protocol="udp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="93.184.216.34/32" port port="80" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="93.184.216.34/32" port port="22" protocol="udp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="216.58.193.206/32" port port="22" protocol="udp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="104.25.47.32/32" port port="53" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="216.58.193.206/32" port port="80" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="93.184.216.34/32" port port="22" protocol="tcp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="104.25.47.32/32" port port="53" protocol="udp" accept
                                        	rule family="ipv4" source address="151.101.65.52/32" accept
                                        

                                        It appears to be working, haven't tested it too much but the configs seem to show what they must.

                                        Current version tested in on branch firewalld-rules if any one else wants to test it.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • RomoR
                                          Romo
                                          last edited by

                                          By the way is there a way in firewall-cmd to clear the rules in one pass, basically the equivalent of ubuntus ufw reset?

                                          A black3dynamiteB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • A
                                            Alex Sage @Romo
                                            last edited by

                                            @romo not sure. Maybe @scottalanmiller knows?

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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