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Hosts Blocklists
- Introduction
- Basic examples
- Adblock-style syntax
/etc/hosts
-style syntax- Domains-only syntax
- Hostlists compiler
There are three different approaches to writing hosts blocklists:
-
Adblock-style syntax: the modern approach to writing filtering rules based on using a subset of the Adblock-style rule syntax. This way blocklists are compatible with browser ad blockers.
-
/etc/hosts
syntax: the old, tried-and-true approach that uses the same syntax that operating systems do for their hosts files. -
Domains-only syntax: a simple list of domain names.
If you are creating a blocklist for AdGuard Home, we recommend using the Adblock-style syntax. It has a couple of important advantages over the old-style syntax:
-
Blocklists size. Using pattern matching allows you to have a single rule instead of hundreds of
/etc/hosts
entries. -
Compatibility. Your blocklist will be compatible with browser ad blockers, and it will be easier to share rules with a browser filter list.
-
Extensibility. For the last decade the Adblock-style syntax has greatly evolved, and we don't see why we can't extend it even more and provide additional features for network-wide blockers.
If you're maintaining an /etc/hosts
-style blocklist or if you maintain
multiple filter lists regardless of their type, we provide a tool that can be
used to compile blocklists for AdGuard Home. We called it Hostlist
compiler and we use it ourselves to create AdGuard DNS filter.
-
||example.org^
: block access to theexample.org
domain and all its subdomains, likewww.example.org
. -
@@||example.org^
: unblock access to theexample.org
domain and all its subdomains. -
1.2.3.4 example.org
: (attention, old/etc/hosts
-style syntax) respond with1.2.3.4
to queries for theexample.org
domain but not its subdomains.www.example.org
remains allowed.Using the unspecified IP address (
0.0.0.0
) or a local address (127.0.0.1
and alike) for a host is basically the same as blocking that host.# Returns the IP address 1.2.3.4 for example.org. 1.2.3.4 example.org # Blocks example.com by responding with 0.0.0.0. 0.0.0.0 example.com
-
example.org
: a simple domain rule. Blocksexample.org
domain but not its subdomains.www.example.org
remains allowed. -
! Here goes a comment
and# Also a comment
: comments. -
/REGEX/
: block access to the domains matching the specified regular expression
This is a subset of the traditional Adblock-style syntax which is used by browser ad blockers.
rule = ["@@"] pattern [ "$" modifiers ]
modifiers = [modifier0, modifier1[, ...[, modifierN]]]
-
pattern
: the hostname mask. Every hostname is matched against this mask. The pattern can also contain special characters, which are described below. -
@@
: the marker that is used in the exception rules. Start your rule with this marker if you want to turn off filtering for the matching hostnames. -
modifiers
: parameters that clarify the rule. They may limit the scope of the rule or even completely change the way it works.
-
*
: the wildcard character. It is used to represent any set of characters. This can also be an empty string or a string of any length. -
||
: matches the beginning of a hostname, including any subdomain. For instance,||example.org
matchesexample.org
andtest.example.org
but nottestexample.org
. -
^
: the separator character. Unlike browser ad blocking, there's nothing to separate in a hostname, so the only purpose of this character is to mark the end of the hostname. -
|
: a pointer to the beginning or the end of the hostname. The value depends on the character placement in the mask. For example, the ruleample.org|
corresponds toexample.org
but not toexample.org.com
.|example
corresponds toexample.org
but not totest.example
.
If you want even more flexibility in making rules, you can use regular expressions instead of the default simplified matching syntax. If you want to use a regular expression, the pattern has to look like this:
pattern = "/" regexp "/"
Examples:
-
/example.*/
will block hosts matching theexample.*
regexp. -
@@/example.*/$important
will unblock hosts matching theexample.*
regexp. Note that this rule also implies theimportant
modifier.
Any line that starts with an exclamation mark or a hash sign is a comment and it will be ignored by the filtering engine. Comments are usually placed above rules and used to describe what a rule does.
Example:
! This is a comment.
# This is also a comment.
You can change the behavior of a rule by adding modifiers. Modifiers must be
located at the end of the rule after the $
character and be separated by
commas.
NOTE: Modifiers don't work with /etc/hosts
-style rules. For example,
127.0.0.1 example.org$badfilter
will not disable the original 127.0.0.1 example.org
rule.
Examples:
-
||example.org^$important
||example.org^
is the matching pattern.$
is the delimiter, which signals that the rest of the rule are modifiers.important
is the modifier. -
You may want to use multiple modifiers in a rule. Separate them by commas in this case:
||example.org^$client=127.0.0.1,dnstype=A
||example.org^
is the matching pattern.$
is the delimiter, which signals that the rest of the rule are modifiers.client=127.0.0.1
is theclient
modifier with its value,127.0.0.1
, is the delimiter. And finally,dnstype=A
is thednstype
modifier with its value,A
.
NOTE: If a rule contains a modifier not listed in this document, the whole rule must be ignored. This way we avoid false-positives when people are trying to use unmodified browser ad blockers' filter lists like EasyList or EasyPrivacy.
The client
modifier allows specifying clients this rule is applied to. There
are two main ways to identify a client:
-
By their IP address or CIDR prefix. This way works for all kinds of clients.
-
By their name. This way only works for persistent clients, that is clients which you have manually added on the “Settings → Client settings” page.
NOTE: ClientIDs are not currently supported, only names are. If you have added a client with the name “My Client” and ClientID
my-client
, spell your modifier as$client='My Client'
as opposed to$client=my-client
.
The syntax is:
$client=value1|value2|...
You can also exclude clients by adding a ~
character before the value. In
this case, the rule is not be applied to this client's DNS requests.
$client=~value1
Client names usually contain spaces or other special characters, which is why
you should enclose the name in quotes. Both single and double ASCII quotes are
supported. Use the backslash (\
) to escape quotes ("
and '
), commas
(,
), and pipes (|
).
NOTE: When excluding a client, you must keep ~
out of the quotes.
Examples:
-
@@||*^$client=127.0.0.1
: unblock everything for localhost. -
||example.org^$client='Frank\'s laptop'
: blockexample.org
for the client namedFrank's laptop
only. Note that quote ('
) in the name must be escaped. -
||example.org^$client=~'Mary\'s\, John\'s\, and Boris\'s laptops'
: blockexample.org
for everyone except for the client namedMary's, John's, and Boris's laptops
. Note that comma (,
) must be escaped as well. -
||example.org^$client=~Mom|~Dad|Kids
: blockexample.org
forKids
, but not forMom
andDad
. This example demonstrates how to specify multiple clients in one rule. -
||example.org^$client=192.168.0.0/24
: blockexample.org
for all clients with IP addresses in the range from192.168.0.0
to192.168.0.255
.
Available since v0.106.0.
You can use the denyallow
modifier to exclude domains from the blocking rule.
To add multiple domains to one rule, use the |
character as a separator.
The syntax is:
$denyallow=domain1|domain2|...
This modifier allows avoiding creating unnecessary exception rules when our blocking rule covers too many domains. You may want to block everything save for a couple of TLD domains. You could use the standard approach, i.e. rules like this:
! Block everything.
/.*/
! Unblock a couple of TLDs.
@@||com^
@@||net^
The problem with this approach is that this way you will also unblock tracking
domains that are located on those TLDs (i.e. google-analytics.com
). Here's
how to solve this with denyallow
:
*$denyallow=com|net
Examples:
-
*$denyallow=com|net
: block everything save for*.com
and*.net
. -
@@*$denyallow=com|net
: unblock everything save for*.com
and*.net
. -
||example.org^$denyallow=sub.example.org
. blockexample.org
and*.example.org
but don't blocksub.example.org
.
Available since v0.105.0.
The dnstype
modifier allows specifying DNS request or response type on which
this rule will be triggered.
The syntax is:
$dnstype=value1|value2|...
$dnstype=~value1|~value2|~...
The names of the types are case-insensitive, but are validated against a set of actual DNS resource record (RR) types.
Do not combine exclusion rules with inclusion ones. This:
$dnstype=~value1|value2
is equivalent to this:
$dnstype=value2
Examples:
-
||example.org^$dnstype=AAAA
: block DNS queries for the IPv6 addresses ofexample.org
. -
||example.org^$dnstype=~A|~CNAME
: only allowA
andCNAME
DNS queries forexample.org
, block out the rest.
NOTE: Before version v0.108.0, AdGuard Home would use the type of the
request to filter the response records, as opposed to the type of the response
record itself. That caused issues, since that meant that you could not write
rules that would allow certain CNAME
records in responses in A
and AAAA
requests. In v0.108.0 that behaviour was changed, so now this:
||canon.example.com^$dnstype=~CNAME
allows you to avoid filtering of the following response:
ANSWERS:
-> example.com
canonical name = canon.example.com.
ttl = 60
-> canon.example.com
internet address = 1.2.3.4
ttl = 60
Available since v0.105.0.
The dnsrewrite
response modifier allows replacing the content of the response
to the DNS request for the matching hosts. Rules with the dnsrewrite
response modifier have higher priority than other rules in AdGuard Home.
The shorthand syntax is:
$dnsrewrite=1.2.3.4
$dnsrewrite=abcd::1234
$dnsrewrite=example.net
$dnsrewrite=REFUSED
The keywords MUST be in all caps (e.g. NOERROR
). Keyword rewrites take
precedence over the other and will result in an empty response with an
appropriate response code.
Before v0.107.3 the only possible keyword is REFUSED
.
Since v0.107.3 response codes NOERROR
, NXDOMAIN
, and SERVFAIL
are also
supported.
The full syntax is of the form RCODE;RRTYPE;VALUE
:
$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;A;1.2.3.4
$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;AAAA;abcd::1234
$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;CNAME;example.net
$dnsrewrite=REFUSED;;
Since v0.107.3 a $dnsrewrite
modifier with the NOERROR
response code may
also has empty RRTYPE
and VALUE
fields.
The CNAME
one is special because AdGuard Home will resolve the host and add
its info to the response. That is, if example.net
has IP 1.2.3.4
, and the
user has this in their filter rules:
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=example.net
! Or:
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;CNAME;example.net
then the response will be something like:
$ nslookup example.com my.adguard.local
Server: my.adguard.local
Address: 127.0.0.1#53
Non-authoritative answer:
example.com canonical name = example.net.
Name: example.net
Address: 1.2.3.4
Next, the CNAME
rewrite. After that, all other records' values are summed as
one response, so this:
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;A;1.2.3.4
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;A;1.2.3.5
will result in a response with two A
records.
Currently supported RR types with examples:
-
||4.3.2.1.in-addr.arpa^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;PTR;example.net.
adds aPTR
record for reverse DNS. Reverse DNS requests for1.2.3.4
to the AdGuard Home DNS server will result inexample.net
.NOTE: the IP MUST be in reverse order. Before v0.106.0, the value had to contain a final dot, but since v0.106.0 both forms are accepted. See RFC 1035.
-
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;A;1.2.3.4
adds anA
record with the value1.2.3.4
. -
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;AAAA;abcd::1234
adds anAAAA
record with the valueabcd::1234
. -
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;CNAME;example.org
adds aCNAME
record. See explanation above. -
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;HTTPS;32 example.com alpn=h3
adds anHTTPS
record. Only a subset of parameter values is supported: values must becontiguous
and, where avalue-list
is expected`, only one value is currently supported:ipv4hint=127.0.0.1 // Supported. ipv4hint="127.0.0.1" // Unsupported. ipv4hint=127.0.0.1,127.0.0.2 // Unsupported. ipv4hint="127.0.0.1,127.0.0.2" // Unsupported.
This will change in the future.
-
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;MX;32 example.mail
adds anMX
record with precedence value32
and exchange valueexample.mail
. -
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;SVCB;32 example.com alpn=h3
adds anSVCB
value. See theHTTPS
example above. -
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;TXT;hello_world
adds aTXT
record with the valuehello_world
. -
||_svctype._tcp.example.com^$dnsrewrite=NOERROR;SRV;10 60 8080 example.com
adds anSRV
record with priority value10
, weight value60
, port8080
, and target valueexample.com
. -
||example.com^$dnsrewrite=NXDOMAIN;;
responds with anNXDOMAIN
code. -
$dnstype=AAAA,denyallow=example.org,dnsrewrite=NOERROR;;
responds with an emptyNOERROR
answers for allAAAA
requests except the ones forexample.org
.NOTE: this is available since v0.107.3.
Exception rules remove one or all rules:
-
@@||example.com^$dnsrewrite
removes all DNS rewrite rules. -
@@||example.com^$dnsrewrite=1.2.3.4
removes the DNS rewrite rule that adds anA
record with the value1.2.3.4
.
The important
modifier applied to a rule increases its priority over any
other rule without the modifier. Even over basic exception rules.
Examples:
-
In this example:
||example.org^$important @@||example.org^
||example.org^$important
will block all requests to*.example.org
. despite the exception rule. -
In this example:
||example.org^$important @@||example.org^$important
the exception rule also has the
important
modifier, so it will work.
The rules with the badfilter
modifier disable other basic rules to which they
refer. It means that the text of the disabled rule should match the text of the
badfilter
rule (without the badfilter
modifier).
Examples:
-
||example.com$badfilter
disables||example.com
. -
@@||example.org^$badfilter
disables@@||example.org^
.
The ctag
modifier allows to block domains only for specific types of DNS
client tags. You can assign tags to clients in the AdGuard Home UI. In the
future, we plan to assign tags automatically by analyzing the behavior of each
client.
The syntax is:
$ctag=value1|value2|...
If one of client's tags matches the ctag
values, this rule applies to the
client. The syntax for exclusion is:
$ctag=~value1|~value2|...
If one of client's tags matches the exclusion ctag
values, this rule doesn't
apply to the client.
Examples:
-
||example.org^$ctag=device_pc|device_phone
: blockexample.org
for clients tagged asdevice_pc
ordevice_phone
. -
||example.org^$ctag=~device_phone
: blockexample.org
for all clients except those tagged asdevice_phone
.
The list of allowed tags:
-
By device type:
-
device_audio
: audio devices. -
device_camera
: cameras. -
device_gameconsole
: game consoles. -
device_laptop
: laptops, -
device_nas
: NAS (Network-attached Storages). -
device_pc
: PCs. -
device_phone
: phones. -
device_printer
: printers. -
device_securityalarm
: security alarms. -
device_tablet
: tablets. -
device_tv
: TVs. -
device_other
: other devices.
-
-
By operating system:
-
os_android
: Android. -
os_ios
: iOS. -
os_linux
: Linux. -
os_macos
: macOS. -
os_windows
: Windows. -
os_other
: other OSes.
-
-
By user group:
-
user_admin
: administrators. -
user_regular
: regular users. -
user_child
: children.
-
For each host a single line should be present with the following information:
IP_address canonical_hostname [aliases...]
Fields of the entries are separated by any number of space or tab characters.
Text from the #
character until the end of the line is a comment and is
ignored. Modifiers, such as client
or badfilter
, don't work with these
rules.
Hostnames may contain only alphanumeric characters, hyphen-minus signs (-
),
and periods (.
). They must begin with an alphabetic character and end with an
alphanumeric character. Optional aliases provide for name changes, alternate
spellings, shorter hostnames, or generic hostnames (for example, localhost
).
Example:
# This is a comment
127.0.0.1 example.org example.info
127.0.0.1 example.com
127.0.0.1 example.net # this is also a comment
The IP addresses are used to respond to the DNS queries for these domains.
A simple list of domain names, one name per line.
Example:
# This is a comment
example.com
example.org
example.net # this is also a comment
If a string is not a valid domain (e.g. *.example.org
), AdGuard Home will
consider it to be an Adblock-style rule.
If you are maintaining a blocklist and use different sources in it, Hostlists compiler may be useful to you. It is a simple tool that makes it easier to compile a hosts blocklist compatible with AdGuard Home or any other AdGuard product with DNS filtering.
What it's capable of:
-
Compile a single blocklist from multiple sources.
-
Exclude the rules you don't need.
-
Cleanup the resulting list: deduplicate, remove invalid rules, and compress the list.