docker-pihole-unbound/one-container
Chris 7b41e2bf42 Updating to pihole container v5.6
Also lockingt he base container version in the Dockerfile,
I'll be doing releases like this from now on
2021-02-08 23:34:03 -08:00
..
pihole-unbound Updating to pihole container v5.6 2021-02-08 23:34:03 -08:00
docker-compose.yaml Single container support (#11) 2020-12-31 12:23:33 -08:00
README.md Update README.md (#19) 2021-02-02 09:02:32 -08:00

Pi-Hole + Unbound - 1 Container

Description

This Docker deployment runs both Pi-Hole and Unbound in a single container.

The base image for the container is the official Pi-Hole container, with an extra build step added to install the Unbound resolver directly into to the container based on instructions provided directly by the Pi-Hole team.

Usage

First create a .env file to substitute variables for your deployment.

Required environment variables

Vars and descriptions replicated from the official pihole container:

Docker Environment Var Description
ServerIP: <Host's IP>
--net=host mode requires Set to your server's LAN IP, used by web block modes and lighttpd bind address
TZ: <Timezone>
Set your timezone to make sure logs rotate at local midnight instead of at UTC midnight.
WEBPASSWORD: <Admin password>
http://pi.hole/admin password. Run docker logs pihole | grep random to find your random pass.
REV_SERVER: <"true"|"false">
Enable DNS conditional forwarding for device name resolution
REV_SERVER_DOMAIN: <Network Domain>
If conditional forwarding is enabled, set the domain of the local network router
REV_SERVER_TARGET: <Router's IP>
If conditional forwarding is enabled, set the IP of the local network router
REV_SERVER_CIDR: <Reverse DNS>
If conditional forwarding is enabled, set the reverse DNS zone (e.g. 192.168.0.0/24)

Example .env file in the same directory as your docker-compose.yaml file:

ServerIP=192.168.1.10
TZ=America/Los_Angeles
WEBPASSWORD=QWERTY123456asdfASDF
REV_SERVER=true
REV_SERVER_DOMAIN=local
REV_SERVER_TARGET=192.168.1.1
REV_SERVER_CIDR=192.168.0.0/16

Running the stack

docker-compose up -d

If using Portainer, just paste the docker-compose.yaml contents into the stack config and add your environment variables directly in the UI.