DNSMASQ_WARN Ignoring query from non-local network

Pi-hole stopped working and I'm getting a warning in the dnsmasq core:
Ignoring UDP query from non-local network 192.168.0.1 (logged only once)
I checked the documentation but I have no idea what it means
I think it happened after I updated my RPi 3b. I'm running the latest version of Raspbian (32bit) and the latest Pi-hole

I have tried
pihole checkout ftl new/non_local_details
but it did not help

Debug Token:
https://tricorder.pi-hole.net/Jk2LwUrw/

Well, it has been 8 days and I'm far from an expert: That error is because the default setting is to ignore what pi-hole thinks is an unsecure request.

192.168.0.1 is either your gateway or router. Honestly, It could be both if you did not change the range on the router.

I'm just guessing here; the update messed up the configuration; or, you typoed the wrong LAN settings, setting it up, or forgot you have a router behind your gateway on a different ip range but that is not likely to have gotten upstream to the gateway.

You say you updated the Pi but is is not called Raspbian anymore, It is called Raspberry OS, a, significantly, different platform; did you update to Bullseye or are you still on Buster or are you still on Raspbian?? When I updated to Bullseye, I started from scratch.

Have you tried starting from scratch?

I cannot read your Token because I'm not a member of Github.

Raspberry Pi OS is just the new name for Raspbian. The underlying software is the same.

This may be due to Pi-hole starting before the network interface is fully active.

Well, yeah:
The underlying OS is Linux.
So, let me get this right:
You are telling them to restart, everything, and then, after everything is working, start the Pi?

And I did not go into details because I'm not an expert. I do know it launched with many new features.
That said:

Am I wrong to understand that 64bit Raspberry OS is nothing like Raspbian?

Yes, I see that 32bit ,what the OP are using, is not that much different. But 64bit is, totally, another game? Literally why they changed the name? To put that out there is, unreliable.

8 days...

They waited 8 days for help. At least I got them looked at.

And may I say: It is not very hard to go to Bullseye? They did it before, they can do it again.

But you cannot just update from Buster to Bullseye. You have to start from scratch.
If I got anything else wrong, please school me.

That is not what I am telling them.

The name was changed well prior to the 64 bit version being released. Perhaps as early as a year ago.

You can, and there have been mixed results. The Raspberry Pi organization recommends against doing this. I had success with three of four Pi's doing this, and the fourth was not successful.

You may have noticed our new release today. Getting that out ties up most of the team, leaving few of us to cover the forums. We're all volunteers, and most have full time jobs on the side.

Edit:

You cannot see the debug log because access to uploaded logs is limited to eight members of the Pi-hole team. This is done to protect user privacy.

Brother, I posted this:

You ALL have day jobs.

I am not going to learn how to quote as well as you do, so:
It was changed almost 2 years ago and, according to Raspberry Pi OS: Why It's No Longer Called 'Raspbian' | Tom's Hardware
It was because of 64bit.
I, seriously, doubt, OP, has had the success you have; given their nomenclature.

I do not want to fight, I want to help.

Let us see what works in this situation; given you gave the exact same resolution I gave in the last time I tried.
Yesterday.

Yes I did notice, and I also noticed how quickly you all resolved the issues.
respect.

That link is wrong.

How?

In the date or the quotes?

edit

Anyway, I'm trying to learn, I'm doing research,
Don't hate me for trying.

Read the quote from Eben, it's not because of the 64 bit OS, which didn't even exist as an alpha in May of 2020, but to separate from the Raspbian open source project. They timing was coincidental and Raspberry Pi OS was 32bit only for almost 2 years.

I'm not hating anyone, but you need to back down on the tone of your post contents and how you address the team.

2 Likes

I do need to slow my roll.
I wear my heart on my sleeve.

I do not see how he controls 'open source' and replied that his work owns the name Rasb...

Okay, I derailed the thread, sorry. I'll sit out for a few days.

Eben Upton? The creator of the Raspberry Pi SBC?

Sorry for my inaccuracy I was talking about Raspberry OS, I managed to get Pi-hole working again by changing to Respond only on interface eth0 in the DNS settings

I just switched back to Allow only local requests after the latest Pi-hole update and it seems to be working fine for now

1 Like

I do not want to fight...

I just do not understand how, anyone, can own open source; even if they started it.
It was a naïve question that was not supposed to be anything more than that.

I think you guys are great, I appreciate all you do.
Americans come off as confrontational even when we are not trying to be.

I'm not welcome; I'm okay with that.

I don't need to muddy your waters. I'll limit my posts to questions.

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