Date: Sun, 08 May 2005 13:11:56 -0700 From: Glenn Dawson <glenn@antimatter.net> To: Forrest Aldrich <forrie@forrie.com>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: /etc/resolv.conf and your ISP Message-ID: <6.1.0.6.2.20050508130759.06479e20@cobalt.antimatter.net> In-Reply-To: <427E6D50.2040003@forrie.com> References: <427E6D50.2040003@forrie.com>
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At 12:49 PM 5/8/2005, Forrest Aldrich wrote: >I can think of a few ways to resolve this, but I thought to ask here. > >I have Comcast for my ISP, and of course DHCP changes /etc/resolv.conf >during each update -- lately, they've been screwing things up bigtime, >such that I simply use my own "named" instance. > >My question is: how to reliably keep your own nameserver in >/etc/resolv.conf, and get around the frequent protocol updates that >change/nullify your mods to /etc/resolv.conf. > >Perhaps just a regular script that does a diff and patch of it, or >simply copies over the file you want regularly. Not elegant but it >would work. According to dhclient.conf(5): supersede [ option declaration ] ; If for some option the client should always use a locally-configured value or values rather than whatever is supplied by the server, these values can be defined in the supersede statement. I've never had to use this myself, but I would expect that something like: interface "foo" { ... supersede domain-name-servers 127.0.0.1; ... } would do the trick in your case. -Glenn >I also wonder about creating a dhclient-exit script that would update >certain services automatically when your IP changes. > > >Thx. > >_______________________________________________ >freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list >http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions >To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"
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