pihole uses arm architecture

p1r473 2018-02-24 11:14:53 -05:00
parent 03c7f902f9
commit d5f534392e

@ -7,10 +7,10 @@ This can probably replace the DNSCrypt page, but leaving it for archive purposes
## Step 1: Install DNSCrypt-Proxy
* `mkdir -p /dnsproxy`: (this is just a folder to store everything. Pihole instructions have this on the root of the partition, but should work from anywhere), suggest opt or etc.
* Download [latest](https://github.com/jedisct1/dnscrypt-proxy/releases/latest) pre-built binary. I'm using Debian, so I used `linux_x86_64`. There is a binary for arm.
* `tar -xf <filename_linux_x86_64.tar.gz>`: extract prebuilt binary
* `cp linux-x86_64 dnscrypt-proxy`: rename the extracted folder
* `rm -r linux-x86_64`: rename the extracted folder
* Download [latest](https://github.com/jedisct1/dnscrypt-proxy/releases/latest) pre-built binary. I'm using Pi-Hole, so I used `linux_arm`. There is a binary for arm.
* `tar -xf <dnscrypt-proxy-linux_arm-XXX.tar.gz>`: extract prebuilt binary
* `cp dnscrypt-proxy-linux_arm-XXX.tar.gz dnscrypt-proxy`: rename the extracted folder
* `rm -r dnscrypt-proxy-linux_arm-XXX.tar.gz`: rename the extracted folder
* `cd dnscrypt-proxy`: cd into extracted dir
* `cp example-dnscrypt-proxy.toml dnscrypt-proxy.toml`
* `sudo nano dnscrypt-proxy.toml`: Edit the toml file. This is where all the fancy configuration happens.