On Sat, Aug 26, 2023 at 3:36 PM Steve Litt <slitt@???> wrote:
>
> o1bigtenor via Dng said on Sat, 26 Aug 2023 08:36:26 -0500
>
> >Greetings
> >
> >I am now quite desperate!!
> >Have had about 3 (maybe its 4 already) times in the last 6 weeks where
> >I have DNS issues.
> >Have a terrible ISP on fixed wireless that is very clear that they
> >have NO assistance for *nix users - - - - and mz googly is always
> >their friend.
>
> What's mz googly?
A euphemism for google.
>
> >(Running devuan daedalus on my main system (haven't yet moved to
> >excalibur but that's going to happen RSN.)
> >Issue this time:
> >
> >after wakeup go to computer - - - not able to access the web
> >check router - - - WAN is accessible
> >ping 8.8.8.8 destination unreachable
>
> if ping 8.8.8.8 fails, that particular symptom has nothing to do with
> DNS.
>
> >ping router - - (WTF) destination unreachable
>
> OK, if you can't get to the router you can't get to 8.8.8.8, so that's
> consistant.
>
> >power cycle the router
>
>
>
> >can now ping 8.8.8.8 but not mz googly.ca
>
> Serious business, if you want help, you need to define your terms. I
> pinged googly.ca and got back:
>
> [slitt@mydesk ~]$ ping googly.ca
> ping: googly.ca: No address associated with hostname
> [slitt@mydesk ~]$
>
> I have no idea what mz googly is, and I shouldn't have to rtfm the
> phrase just to help you. I doubt I'm the only one.
>
> I did, however, take the time to ping and browse and traceroute to
> googly.com, and found out it's my local nginx server on 127.0.0.1.
>
> >have wireless access to the web (this is the weird part imo)
> >I call tech support - - - they tell me to just clear the DNS cache on
> >my puter sadly - - - this is something I do not know how to do (!!!)
> >looking on the web - - - I can't find anything for sysV init systems
> > (can for systemd but that's it!! - - - argh!)
> >
> >Is there someone out there that can help me with either the command(s)
> >or the process so I don't have to reboot my system to clear my DNS
> >issues - - - please?
> >
> >TIA
>
The following is an excellent answer to a question I didn't ask.
> There's no substitute for a local DNS resolver. What you can do is to
> install the Unbound recursive resolver daemon on your computer, then
> edit /etc/resolv.conf to always point to that daemon's IP address (I
> use 192.168.0.102, which is an alias for my desktop's main IP of
> 192.168.0.2). Immediately after, chattr +i /etc/resolv.conf to prevent
> "helpful" DNS programs like networkmanager, etc, from "helpfully"
> changing that file. I do it like this:
>
> chattr -i /etc/resolv.conf;vim /etc/resolv.conf;chattr +i
> /etc/resolv.conf
>
> By the way, it might be a good idea to list one or two public name
> servers after the one pointing to Unbound's address. For one using
> Linux, I see no reason in the 21st century to depend on the DNS server
> provided by your ISP.
>
> The following document is an introduction to Unbound:
>
> http://troubleshooters.com/linux/unbound_nsd/unbound.htm
>
> After reading that document, you'll be able to RTFM your way to
> success, and from the perspective of DNS, your ISP will forever be out
> of the loop.
>
A good answer but an answer to the question - - - - how do I install a
dns server
on my system.
My question was and still is - - if I'm getting dns resolution on my router
how and/or what do I change so that I can now access the internet from
my computer.
What I've been able to find " $ service connman restart " dunno if that
will fix things.
Regards