I install your service yesterday. This work good on my raspberry os that i implement with virtual box . Unfortunalty , nothing work on my router. So when i try banned adress by Pi-Hole on main os or on other devices in my network , i can access.
You MUST either change DNS ip addresses per-device, or use Pi-Hole's DHCP. This sends out the available IP addresses, but also set the DNS for all devices that connect to the DHCP server, in this case, the pi-hole vm.
Please follow our help template. In particular, you have not provided a debug token, which helps us diagnose your problem.
Please upload a debug log and post just the token URL that is generated after the log is uploaded by running the following command from the Pi-hole host terminal:
The loopback IP you have listed in the router settings is incorrect. Your debug log will show me the correct IP to use, and also show if there are any other problems with your Pi-hole install.
Your question isn't related to Pi-hole, but to your Virtualbox VM's network configuration:
It would seem that 10.0.2.15 is the internal IP address of your Virtualbox VM, which is only known within Virtualbox, while your home network is operating on the 192.168.1.0/24 range.
For Pi-hole within your VirtualBox VM to be reachable by your home network clients, you'd need to configure a route to your VM, or you'd need to configure your VM's network adapter connectivity to accept or forward traffic for the IP of the host running Virtualbox to your Pi-hole VM.
First, inside virtualbox, set the network interface to "bridged adapter".
Make absolutely sure that you also select the network interface (NOT RDIS ETC) either your wired interface, or the wireless card in use.
This will allow you to (inside the virtual machine) change the virtual machine ip address to whatever you want. To do this with NAT default setting, a command-line too called VBoxManage.exe is required--figured you wouldm't want that much complexity.
Inside the VM, virtual machine, even if your actually using a wireless connection, you can still set the linux system to a wired connection, avoiding the need for wireless drivers on both your main system and the virtual.
Hey, I'm just going to bring it up: You clearly care about privacy.
Well, using a web-browser that is developed basically to spy on you, and make the Internet an ad-infested, tracking-infested place of information-sharing, is the opposite of supporting a privacy-respecting web.
Mozilla Firefox is definitely the way to go! You can uncheck (turn-off) the telemetry in the settings and turn off the "recommended articles" from Pocket on the home page.
Firefox is open-source (thankfully) just like pi-hole, and Linux, which runs an overwhelming majority of all web servers.
O.K. that's not difficult, give me a day or so. And so you're on Google's side?
After reading your own wiki on trackimg, you want me to prove how invasive Google is--with all the blocking to stop their services.... O.K. Get ready for some EFF articles...