


Remove resolvconf and lock /etc/nf from modyfing (by anything that is trying to alter it) by setting a file atrribute There are many ways for this solution, and personally I’m not completly satisfied from any options below. For now, we disabled systemd-resolved, and NetworkManager so they are out of the game. systemd-resolved - four modes of handling /etc/nf.The trouble is that many system apps/daemons are trying to modify /etc/nf Because we want to make sure that no matter which connection we are going to use, WLAN (different networks) or LAN we always want to have dnscrypt-proxy working. These VPNs including two of our favorites, ExpressVPN and NordVPN prevent your computer from routing DNS requests outside of the VPN. You should be using a VPN anyway, and all you need to do is make sure that the one you’re using has DNS leak protection. This is why you will often see services advising to check for DNS leaks. A VPN encrypts all other traffic from your computer to the VPN endpoint. # Need to comment this line because of use dnscrypt-proxy This is the simplest alternative to DNSCrypt. Answer: DNSCrypt encrypts only the DNS requests from your computer to the DNS server. AdGuard and NetGuard requiring you to change some additional settings (see screenshots). In order to actually use DNSCrypt, enter 127.0.0.1 as the primary DNS resolver. Choose one of them and download it from Google Play Store.

#How to use dnscrypt with vpn pro#
# Stops overwriting /etc/nf by NetworkManager There currently four (paid) apps which can change this behaviour, AdGuard (VPN tunnel) NetGuard (VPN tunnel), DNS Manager Pro (VPN tunnel) and Override DNS (a DNS changer).
