![]() Your router then takes an address that is free and assigns / passes it to the device. That means any device that uses IPv4 and DHCP will ask your Router for a IP address. Your Router is the DHCP Server of your local network. He just does not explain what you are actually doing and why. But here you already see the problem of technodad. If your Router is the DHCP Server that is correct. Your Adguard IP is most likely the IP of OMV (depends on configuration but if technodad says the Router DNS setting should point to OMV than thats how he configured it) 127.0.0.1 is just a pseudo IP for any network device to call itself. ![]() Please anyone help with that.įirst of all. Maybe there is a possibility to connect my AdGuard subscription (it is a lifetime subscription for one device) with OMV AdGuard version? Or just use it on my router directly to block all ads on my entire network?Īnyway, blocking ads on my Android devices and LG B8 with webOS (on YouTube) are not working. On my Windows 10 machine (connected to my router via ethernet cable) ads are blocked very well except ads on YouTube videos and on some webpages, which I am not using anyway - previously I was using AdGuard windows version with paid subscription and it works better than OMV version. Everything else was set as TechnoDadLife said on his video. On my Asus router - RT-AC85P I set my OMV address IP under LAN/DHCP Server/DNS and WINS settings section in field IP of DNS server (there is one additional field for WINS Server but nothing more (as primary and secondary DNS server IP). We have provided more information on this in our privacy policy. Through the activation of external content, you agree that personal data may be transferred to third party platforms. ![]()
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