Autor: info at smallinnovations dot nl Datum: To: dng Betreff: Re: [DNG] Is NetworkManager supposed to work?
On 08-01-19 23:35, Simon Hobson wrote: > Simon Walter <simon@???> wrote:
>
>> Yes, wireless LAN works from all my other computers. The Internet is
>> accessible from them. I have a router that does the PPPOE and DHCP and
>> DNS and NTP and a bunch of other things (dd-wrt).
>>
>> I can connect to the wireless LAN via NetworkManager. I am asked for a
>> password. The connection is made. I can ping any ip address including
>> 8.8.8.8.
> So that sounds very much like NetworkManager is working - you have a working network connection !
>
>> The /etc/resolv.conf contains "# Generated by Connection
>> Manager\nnameserver 127.0.0.1\nnameserver ::1" which does have
>> dnsmasq-base listening on port 53. I checked it (nmap 127.0.0.1 -p 53)
>> and it was open.
>>
>> That seems to make sense, but I have never seen a working NetworkManager
>> setup. So I don't know what to expect.
> Yes, you mentioned earlier that you were running dnsmasq - that means you are running a local DNS service. Have you configured that with the address(es) of at least one external DNS resolver. As I read the description on Wikipedia, dnsmasq is a forwarder not a resolver - that means that it can't do the recursive lookups a resolver does, just forward queries to an outside resolver and cache the responses.
> If you haven't told dnsmasq where to get it's answers from, then it won't be working for you.
>
>
>
> <info@???> wrote:
>
>> I recognize the problem from a Ubuntu system i still have. Look for
>> /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf and comment out the line:
>> dns=dnsmasq
>>
>> After that logout or reboot and your DNS should work again.
> I'm guessing that this disables using the local DNS service - if so then that's not fixing the problem (local DNS service not working), only fixing the symptom (by not trying to use the local service).
> As local DNS service in this situation means dnsmasq i do see not much
added value. Besides i am running my own dns server in my network.