On Thu, 24 Nov 2016 09:25, Nicolas Kovacs <info@...> wrote:

Hi,

I just setup CentOS 7 on three boxes to fiddle with it.

1. amandine.sandbox.lan is a headless LAN server

2. bernadette.sandbox.lan is a client desktop

3. raymonde.sandbox.lan is another client desktop

I've setup Dnsmasq on amandine.sandbox.lan. Here's the very basic
configuration:

 # /etc/dnsmasq.conf
 domain-needed
 bogus-priv
 interface=enp3s1
 dhcp-range=192.168.3.100,192.168.3.200,24h
 local=/sandbox.lan/
 domain=sandbox.lan
 expand-hosts
 no-resolv
 # DNS
 server=192.168.2.1
 # Postes fixes
 dhcp-host=00:1E:C9:43:A7:BF,bernadette,192.168.3.2
 dhcp-host=00:1D:09:15:4A:D8,raymonde,192.168.3.3

With this setup as such, I can resolve bernadette from raymonde, and I
can also resolve raymonde from bernadette. But when I try to resolve
either bernadette or raymonde from the server, I get an unknown
hostname. The only way to solve this is to add two corresponding lines
to /etc/hosts:

 # /etc/hosts
 127.0.0.1   localhost.localdomain localhost
 192.168.3.1 amandine.sandbox.lan amandine
 192.168.3.2 bernadette.sandbox.lan bernadette
 192.168.3.3 raymonde.sandbox.lan raymonde

This strikes me as a benign redundancy, which makes me wonder if I'm
doing something unorthodox here.

Any suggestions?

Hmmm, looks like the "lookup question" from amandine(server) is not
resolved in the same way it is resoved from bernadette or raymonde
(clients).

How about adding a reverse lookup for your lan ip group, pointing to
your server?

server=/168.192.3.in-addr.arpa/192.168.3.1

Otherwise, little to no idea.

 - Yamaban.
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