Network-wide ad blocking via your own Linux hardware
The Pi-hole® is a DNS sinkhole that protects your devices from unwanted content, without installing any client-side software.
- Easy-to-install: our versatile installer walks you through the process, and takes less than ten minutes
- Resolute: content is blocked in non-browser locations, such as ad-laden mobile apps and smart TVs
- Responsive: seamlessly speeds up the feel of everyday browsing by caching DNS queries
- Lightweight: runs smoothly with minimal hardware and software requirements
- Robust: a command line interface that is quality assured for interoperability
- Insightful: a beautiful responsive Web Interface dashboard to view and control your Pi-hole
- Versatile: can optionally function as a DHCP server, ensuring all your devices are protected automatically
- Scalable: capable of handling hundreds of millions of queries when installed on server-grade hardware
- Modern: blocks ads over both IPv4 and IPv6
- Free: open source software which helps ensure you are the sole person in control of your privacy
Those who want to get started quickly and conveniently may install Pi-hole using the following command:
Piping to bash
is controversial, as it prevents you from reading code that is about to run on your system. Therefore, we provide these alternative installation methods which allow code review before installation:
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/pi-hole/pi-hole.git Pi-hole
cd "Pi-hole/automated install/"
sudo bash basic-install.sh
wget -O basic-install.sh https://install.pi-hole.net
sudo bash basic-install.sh
Once the installer has been run, you will need to configure your router to have DHCP clients use Pi-hole as their DNS server which ensures that all devices connecting to your network will have content blocked without any further intervention.
If your router does not support setting the DNS server, you can use Pi-hole's built-in DHCP server; just be sure to disable DHCP on your router first (if it has that feature available).
As a last resort, you can always manually set each device to use Pi-hole as their DNS server.
There are many reoccurring costs involved with maintaining free, open source, and privacy-respecting software; expenses which our volunteer developers pitch in to cover out-of-pocket. This is just one example of how strongly we feel about our software, as well as the importance of keeping it maintained.
Make no mistake: your support is absolutely vital to help keep us innovating!
Sending a donation using our links below is extremely helpful in offsetting a portion of our monthly expenses:
- Donate via PayPal
- Bitcoin:
3MDPzjXu2hjw5sGLJvKUi1uXbvQPzVrbpF
- Bitcoin Cash:
qzqsz4aju2eecc6uhs7tus4vlwhhela24sdruf4qp5
- Ethereum:
0x79d4e90A4a0C732819526c93e21A3F1356A2FAe1
If you'd rather not donate (which is okay!), there are other ways you can help support us:
- Patreon Become a patron for rewards
- Digital Ocean affiliate link
- Stickermule earn a $10 credit after your first purchase
- Pi-hole Swag Store affiliate link
- Amazon affiliate link
- DNS Made Easy affiliate link
- Vultr affiliate link
- Spreading the word about our software, and how you have benefited from it
We welcome everyone to contribute to issue reports, suggest new features, and create pull requests.
If you have something to add - anything from a typo through to a whole new feature, we're happy to check it out! Just make sure to fill out our template when submitting your request; the questions that it asks will help the volunteers quickly understand what you're aiming to achieve.
You'll find that the install script and the debug script have an abundance of comments, which will help you better understand how Pi-hole works. They're also a valuable resource to those who want to learn how to write scripts or code a program! We encourage anyone who likes to tinker to read through it and submit a pull request for us to review.
Word-of-mouth continues to help our project grow immensely, and so we are helping make this easier for people.
If you are going to be presenting Pi-hole at a conference, meetup or even a school project, get in touch with us so we can hook you up with free swag to hand out to your audience!
While we are primarily reachable on our Discourse User Forum, we can also be found on a variety of social media outlets. Please be sure to check the FAQ's before starting a new discussion, as we do not have the spare time to reply to every request for assistance.
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Pi-hole Wiki
- Feature Requests
- Discourse User Forum
- Gitter (Real-time chat)
- YouTube
The pihole
command has all the functionality necessary to be able to fully administer the Pi-hole, without the need of the Web Interface. It's fast, user-friendly, and auditable by anyone with an understanding of bash
.
Some notable features include:
- Whitelisting, Blacklisting and Wildcards
- Debugging utility
- Viewing the live log file
- Real-time Statistics via
ssh
or your TFT LCD screen - Updating Ad Lists
- Querying Ad Lists for blocked domains
- Enabling and Disabling Pi-hole
- ... and many more!
You can read our Core Feature Breakdown, as well as read up on example usage for more information.
This optional dashboard allows you to view stats, change settings, and configure your Pi-hole. It's the power of the Command Line Interface, with none of the learning curve!
Some notable features include:
- Mobile friendly interface
- Password protection
- Detailed graphs and doughnut charts
- Top lists of domains and clients
- A filterable and sortable query log
- Long Term Statistics to view data over user-defined time ranges
- The ability to easily manage and configure Pi-hole features
- ... and all the main features of the Command Line Interface!
There are several ways to access the dashboard:
http://<IP_ADDPRESS_OF_YOUR_PI_HOLE>/admin/
http://pi.hole/admin/
(when using Pi-hole as your DNS server)http://pi.hole/
(when using Pi-hole as your DNS server)
FTLDNS is a lightweight, purpose-built daemon used to provide statistics needed for the Web Interface, and its API can be easily integrated into your own projects. As the name implies, FTLDNS does this all very quickly!
Some of the statistics you can integrate include:
- Total number of domains being blocked
- Total number of DNS queries today
- Total number of ads blocked today
- Percentage of ads blocked
- Unique domains
- Queries forwarded (to your chosen upstream DNS server)
- Queries cached
- Unique clients
The API can be accessed via telnet
, the Web (admin/api.php
) and Command Line (pihole -c -j
). You can out find more details over here.
Pi-hole being an advertising-aware DNS/Web server, makes use of the following technologies:
dnsmasq
- a lightweight DNS and DHCP servercurl
- A command line tool for transferring data with URL syntaxlighttpd
- web server designed and optimized for high performancephp
- a popular general-purpose web scripting language- AdminLTE Dashboard - premium admin control panel based on Bootstrap 3.x
While quite outdated at this point, this original blog post about Pi-hole goes into great detail about how Pi-hole was originally set up and how it works. Syntactically, it's no longer accurate, but the same basic principles and logic still apply to Pi-hole's current state.
- Lifehacker: Turn A Raspberry Pi Into An Ad Blocker With A Single Command (Feburary, 2015)
- MakeUseOf: Adblock Everywhere: The Raspberry Pi-Hole Way (March, 2015)
- Catchpoint: Ad-Blocking on Apple iOS9: Valuing the End User Experience (September, 2015)
- Security Now Netcast: Pi-hole (October, 2015)
- TekThing: Raspberry Pi-Hole Makes Ads Disappear! (December, 2015)
- Foolish Tech Show (December, 2015)
- Block Ads on All Home Devices for $53.18 (December, 2015)
- Pi-Hole for Ubuntu 14.04 (December, 2015)
- MacObserver Podcast 585 (December, 2015)
- The Defrag Show: Endoscope USB Camera, The Final [HoloLens] Vote, Adblock Pi and more (January, 2016)
- Adafruit: Pi-hole is a black hole for internet ads (March, 2016)
- Digital Trends: 5 Fun, Easy Projects You Can Try With a $35 Raspberry Pi (March, 2016)
- Adafruit: Raspberry Pi Quick Look at Pi Hole ad blocking server with Tony D (June, 2016)
- Devacron: OrangePi Zero as an Ad-Block server with Pi-Hole (December, 2016)
- Linux Pro: The Hole Truth (July, 2017)
- Adafruit: installing Pi-hole on a Pi Zero W (August, 2017)
- CryptoAUSTRALIA: How We Tried 5 Privacy Focused Raspberry Pi Projects (October, 2017)
- CryptoAUSTRALIA: Pi-hole Workshop (November, 2017)
- Know How 355: Killing ads with a Raspberry Pi-Hole! (November, 2017)
- Hobohouse: Block Advertising on your Network with Pi-hole and Raspberry Pi (March, 2018)
- Scott Helme: Securing DNS across all of my devices with Pi-Hole + DNS-over-HTTPS + 1.1.1.1 (April, 2018)
- Scott Helme: Catching and dealing with naughty devices on my home network (April, 2018)
- Bloomberg Business Week: Brotherhood of the Ad blockers (May, 2018)
- Software Engineering Daily: Interview with the creator of Pi-hole (May, 2018)
- Raspberry Pi: Block ads at home using Pi-hole and a Raspberry Pi (July, 2018)
- Troy Hunt: Mmm... Pi-hole... (September, 2018)
- PEBKAK Podcast: Interview With Jacob Salmela (October, 2018)