当サイトはユーザー体験を改善するためのメンテナンスを実施中に機能が制限される予定です。記事を読んでもあなたの問題が解決せず質問をしたい場合は、Twitter の @FirefoxSupport、Reddit の /r/firefox で、サポートコミュニティが皆さんを助けようと待機しています。

Mozilla サポートの検索

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

詳しく学ぶ

このスレッドはアーカイブに保管されました。 必要であれば新たに質問してください。

Will not connect to server unless I disable dns-over-https in settings, then re-enable it on new launch of Firefox browser.

more options

Will not connect to server unless I disable dns-over-https in settings, then re-enable it on new launch of Firefox browser.

Will not connect to server unless I disable dns-over-https in settings, then re-enable it on new launch of Firefox browser.

すべての返信 (4)

more options

Hi RubberDucky, what's the specific error message you get when Firefox can't connect to anything?

Are you enabling DNS over HTTPS through the Preferences page, or are you manually modifying settings in about:config? If you are manually modifying one or more settings, what values are you using?


The reason I ask that is Firefox has multiple modes for DNS over HTTPS, and some will "fall back" to the standard method of looking up addresses when they can't reach the "trusted resolver" and some will not (and therefore must fail). By default, enabling DNS over HTTPS through the Preferences page sets network.trr.mode = 2, which allows fallback. If you manually set network.trr.mode = 3, then you likely will need to also set network.trr.bootstrapAddress in order to allow Firefox to look up the address of the trusted resolver.

more options

jscher2000 said

Hi RubberDucky, what's the specific error message you get when Firefox can't connect to anything? Are you enabling DNS over HTTPS through the Preferences page, or are you manually modifying settings in about:config? If you are manually modifying one or more settings, what values are you using?

The reason I ask that is Firefox has multiple modes for DNS over HTTPS, and some will "fall back" to the standard method of looking up addresses when they can't reach the "trusted resolver" and some will not (and therefore must fail). By default, enabling DNS over HTTPS through the Preferences page sets network.trr.mode = 2, which allows fallback. If you manually set network.trr.mode = 3, then you likely will need to also set network.trr.bootstrapAddress in order to allow Firefox to look up the address of the trusted resolver.


Would I put cloudflares dns address in the network.trr.bootstrapAddress ?

I enabled dns over https in the options page.

And this is the error I get:

この投稿は RubberDucky により に変更されました

more options

RubberDucky said

Would I put cloudflares dns address in the network.trr.bootstrapAddress ? I enabled dns over https in the options page.

If you enable DNS over HTTPS using the Options page, then you should find the value set to 2 here:

(1) In a new tab, type or paste about:config in the address bar and press Enter/Return. Click the button accepting the risk.

(2) In the search box above the list, type or paste trr and pause while the list is filtered

(3) If the network.trr.mode preference is not set to 2 you can double-click it to edit the value to 2 and then click OK

If network.trr.mode is set to 3 then the bootstrap address will depend on which resolver you use. For Cloudflare, I think the bootstrap address is 1.1.1.1 so you could try that.

more options

By the way, some network administrators might block DNS over HTTPS because it interferes with their filtering. On one of those networks, you'll need to use normal address resolution.