![]() ![]() ![]() I decided to give it a try on the Raspberry Pi since Pi-hole is a perfect light weight application to install on a low power single board computer. , but it is currently supported on a variety of hardware platforms. Pi-hole was originally designed to run on a Raspberry Pi (affiliate link) Even if your router has the logs available, it normally does not aggregate and display the data in a user-friendly format. Normally this information is either not visible or in logs buried on your router’s web interface (possibly under the advanced DNS settings). The high level statistics compiled by Pi-hole provides a much greater insight to what is going on in your home network. Pi-hole even has the ability to block network requests to malicious domains if the domain name is contained in one of the block lists. It does this by blocking known ad serving domains. User name and password are hqp but this can be changed by tweaking this line: RUN hqplayerd -u hqp hqp.Pi-hole is open source software which provides ad blocking (and more) for your entire home network. I use killdozer for non published containers can be anything you want it to be unless you want to push to Dockerhub when you’ll need a unique/sensible name. The web config screen works on localhost:8088 but no attempt to play anything yet. This was an hour or so’s work but I haven’t tried using it in anger. To build it from the file this command in the same dir as Dockerfileĭocker run -p 8088:8088 -i -name=hqplayer /hqplayer:latest RUN echo 'hqplayerd hqplayerd/groups note true' | debconf-set-selections RUN echo 'hqplayerd hqplayerd/license note true' | debconf-set-selections RUN echo 'debconf debconf/frontend select Noninteractive' | debconf-set-selections If you’re interested this Dockerfile gets an embedded version running and gets over the unattended install of HQP and the need for a missing render group: FROM debian:bullseye Still playing here ATM and am short enough on time that it’ll be 8 days until I play again.Įdit: This suggests it might work nicely: Using Apple Silicon (M1) as a cloud engineer, two months in - Earthly Blog Given Roon also runs containerised that might work well. I’ve had some joy with a containerised version under Docker. ![]()
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