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Update to reflect #20
You can add your own config file to permanently set variables used in the gravity script. If the file exists, gravity.sh will detect it and apply your custom variables. This is useful so when there is an update to the gravity script, you do not need to adjust the variables every time.
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README.md
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README.md
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@ -17,6 +17,16 @@ On a clean installation of Raspbian, you can run this command to **auto-install
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## Gravity
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## Gravity
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The [gravity.sh](https://github.com/jacobsalmela/pi-hole/blob/master/gravity.sh) does most of the magic. The script pulls in ad domains from many sources and compiles them into a single list of [over 900,000 entries](http://jacobsalmela.com/block-millions-ads-network-wide-with-a-raspberry-pi-hole-2-0).
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The [gravity.sh](https://github.com/jacobsalmela/pi-hole/blob/master/gravity.sh) does most of the magic. The script pulls in ad domains from many sources and compiles them into a single list of [over 900,000 entries](http://jacobsalmela.com/block-millions-ads-network-wide-with-a-raspberry-pi-hole-2-0).
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## Custom Config File
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If you want to use your own variables for the gravity script (i.e. storing the files in a different location) and don't want to have to change them every time there is an update to the script, create a file called `/etc/pihole/pihole.conf`. In it, you should add your own variables in a similar fashion as shown below:
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```
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origin=/var/run/pihole
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adList=/etc/dnsmasq.d/adList
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```
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See [this PR](https://github.com/jacobsalmela/pi-hole/pull/20) for more details.
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## Whitelist and blacklist
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## Whitelist and blacklist
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You can add a `whitelist.txt` or `blacklist.txt` in `/etc/pihole/` and the script will apply those files automatically.
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You can add a `whitelist.txt` or `blacklist.txt` in `/etc/pihole/` and the script will apply those files automatically.
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