Manjaro Difference between revisions of "Networking"

Difference between revisions of "Networking"

From Manjaro
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Generally, if you are using a different Domain Name Server (DNS) than that provided by your ISP, or you are using the likes of Google's nameservers from your Google account you will find that your DNS or other non-standard nameserver addresses will, after you have set them up, get lost on reboot as '''/etc/resolv.conf''' is overwritten during the boot process.
Generally, if you are using a different Domain Name Server (DNS) than that provided by your ISP, or you are using the likes of Google's nameservers from your Google account you will find that your DNS or other non-standard nameserver addresses will, after you have set them up, get lost on reboot as '''/etc/resolv.conf''' is overwritten during the boot process.


= How do we solve this problem? =
== How do we solve this problem? ==


We can input our settings to the '''/etc/resolv.conf.head''' file. If this file does not exist then create it. The contents of '''/etc/resolv.conf.head''' get sent to the top of '''/etc/resolv.conf''' during the boot process.
We can input our settings to the '''/etc/resolv.conf.head''' file. If this file does not exist then create it. The contents of '''/etc/resolv.conf.head''' get sent to the top of '''/etc/resolv.conf''' during the boot process.

Revision as of 23:03, 11 February 2014

What's this all about?

Generally, if you are using a different Domain Name Server (DNS) than that provided by your ISP, or you are using the likes of Google's nameservers from your Google account you will find that your DNS or other non-standard nameserver addresses will, after you have set them up, get lost on reboot as /etc/resolv.conf is overwritten during the boot process.

How do we solve this problem?

We can input our settings to the /etc/resolv.conf.head file. If this file does not exist then create it. The contents of /etc/resolv.conf.head get sent to the top of /etc/resolv.conf during the boot process.

Examples please?

To use the Google nameservers associated with your Google account, you would add the following to /etc/resolvconf.conf

# Google nameservers
nameserver 8.8.8.8
nameserver 8.8.4.4

You would add any DNS entries that you had the need to. So those that want to use OpenDNS for example you would add the following:

# OpenDNS servers
nameserver 208.67.222.222
nameserver 208.67.220.220

If Pacman times out on you sometimes

You can create the /etc/resolv.conf.tail file & add the following to it, (I'm using the OpenDNS address, you could use any other DNS or nameserver that you have access to):

options timeout:1

# OpenDNS servers, used as alternative when default DNS is too slow:
nameserver 208.67.222.222
nameserver 208.67.220.220

After you have saved the edited file you will need to restart your network service. The one reliable way that works for everyone is to warm boot your machine.

Support

Use this thread in the forum if you have any need for further information on this topic: [1]

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