Skip to content
Ainar Garipov edited this page Apr 4, 2023 · 21 revisions

AdGuard Home - Docker

 

AdGuard Home

Privacy protection center for you and your devices

Free and open source, powerful network-wide ads & trackers blocking DNS server.


AdGuard Home is a network-wide software for blocking ads and tracking. After you set it up, it'll cover all your home devices, and you won't need any client-side software for that. Learn more on our official Github repository.

Pull the Docker image

This command will pull the latest stable version:

docker pull adguard/adguardhome

Create directories for persistent configuration and data

The image exposes two volumes for data and configuration persistence. You should create a data directory on a suitable volume on your host system, e.g. /my/own/workdir, and a configuration directory on a suitable volume on your host system, e.g. /my/own/confdir.

Create and run the container

Use the following command to create a new container and run AdGuard Home:

docker run --name adguardhome\
    --restart unless-stopped\
    -v /my/own/workdir:/opt/adguardhome/work\
    -v /my/own/confdir:/opt/adguardhome/conf\
    -p 53:53/tcp -p 53:53/udp\
    -p 67:67/udp -p 68:68/udp\
    -p 80:80/tcp -p 443:443/tcp -p 443:443/udp -p 3000:3000/tcp\
    -p 853:853/tcp\
    -p 784:784/udp -p 853:853/udp -p 8853:8853/udp\
    -p 5443:5443/tcp -p 5443:5443/udp\
    -d adguard/adguardhome

Now you can open the browser and navigate to http://127.0.0.1:3000/ to control your AdGuard Home service.

Don't forget to use your own data and config directories!

Port mappings you might need:

  • -p 53:53/tcp -p 53:53/udp: plain DNS.

  • -p 67:67/udp -p 68:68/tcp -p 68:68/udp: add if you intend to use AdGuard Home as a DHCP server.

  • -p 80:80/tcp -p 443:443/tcp -p 443:443/udp -p 3000:3000/tcp: add if you are going to use AdGuard Home's admin panel as well as run AdGuard Home as an HTTPS/DNS-over-HTTPS server.

  • -p 853:853/tcp: add if you are going to run AdGuard Home as a DNS-over-TLS server.

  • -p 784:784/udp -p 853:853/udp -p 8853:8853/udp: add if you are going to run AdGuard Home as a DNS-over-QUIC server. You may only leave one or two of these.

  • -p 5443:5443/tcp -p 5443:5443/udp: add if you are going to run AdGuard Home as a DNSCrypt server.

Client IPs

If you want AdGuardHome to see the original client IPs as opposed to something like 172.17.0.1, you should add --network host to the list of options.

Control the container

  • Start: docker start adguardhome

  • Stop: docker stop adguardhome

  • Remove: docker rm adguardhome

  1. Pull the new version from Docker Hub:

    docker pull adguard/adguardhome
  2. Stop and remove currently running container (assuming the container is named adguardhome):

    docker stop adguardhome
    docker rm adguardhome
  3. Create and start the container using the new image using the command from the previous section.

If you want to be on the bleeding edge, you might want to run the image from the edge or beta tags. In order to use it, simply replace adguard/adguardhome with adguard/adguardhome:edge or adguard/adguardhome:beta in every command from the quick start. For example:

docker pull adguard/adguardhome:edge

Upon the first run, a file with the default values named AdGuardHome.yaml is created. You can modify the file while your AdGuard Home container is not running. Otherwise, any changes to the file will be lost because the running program will overwrite them.

The settings are stored in the YAML format. The documentation describing all configurable parameters and their values is available on this page.

NOTE: Since v0.107.27 the container uses Docker-provided healthcheck mechanism. The implementation uses special reserved domain name healthcheck.adguardhome.test., expecting it to resolve into NODATA answer. It imposes restrictions on usage of this particular name, so specifying it within the blocked_hosts array under the dns section of configuration file will certainly break the healthcheck.

If you want to use AdGuardHome's DHCP server, you should pass --network host argument when creating the container:

docker run --name adguardhome --network host ...

This option instructs Docker to use the host's network rather than a docker-bridged network. Note that port mapping with -p is not necessary in this case.

A note from the Docker documentation:

The host networking driver only works on Linux hosts, and is not supported on Docker Desktop for Mac, Docker Desktop for Windows, or Docker EE for Windows Server.

If you try to run AdGuardHome on a system where the resolved daemon is started, docker will fail to bind on port 53, because resolved daemon is listening on 127.0.0.53:53. Here's how you can disable DNSStubListener on your machine:

  1. Deactivate DNSStubListener and update the DNS server address. Create a new file, /etc/systemd/resolved.conf.d/adguardhome.conf (creating the /etc/systemd/resolved.conf.d directory if needed) and add the following content to it:

    [Resolve]
    DNS=127.0.0.1
    DNSStubListener=no
    

    Specifying 127.0.0.1 as the DNS server address is necessary because otherwise the nameserver will be 127.0.0.53 which doesn't work without DNSStubListener.

  2. Activate a new resolv.conf file:

    mv /etc/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf.backup
    ln -s /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf
  3. Stop DNSStubListener:

    systemctl reload-or-restart systemd-resolved