Package: inadyn
Version: 1.99.4-1+b1
Severity: important
I noticed that inadyn call block my script execution because it stuck in loop
of retries.
There is no commandline parameter to configure this behavior.
Invocation:
inadyn \
--forced-update 1 \
--system [email protected] \
-u XXXXXXXXX \
-p YYYYYYYYY \
-a ZZZZZZ.ddns.net \
--iterations 1
Wed Jun 13 17:51:24 2018: Inadyn version 1.99.4 -- Dynamic DNS update client.
Wed Jun 13 17:51:24 2018: Cached IP# xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx from previous invocation.
Wed Jun 13 17:51:24 2018: Failed resolving hostname ip1.dynupdate.no-ip.com:
Temporary failure in name resolution
Wed Jun 13 17:51:24 2018: Will retry again in 120 sec...
Wed Jun 13 17:53:24 2018: .
Wed Jun 13 17:53:24 2018: Failed resolving hostname ip1.dynupdate.no-ip.com:
Temporary failure in name resolution
Wed Jun 13 17:53:24 2018: Will retry again in 120 sec...
Wed Jun 13 17:55:24 2018: .
Wed Jun 13 17:55:24 2018: Failed resolving hostname ip1.dynupdate.no-ip.com:
Temporary failure in name resolution
Wed Jun 13 17:55:24 2018: Will retry again in 120 sec...
Wed Jun 13 17:57:24 2018: .
Wed Jun 13 17:57:24 2018: Failed resolving hostname ip1.dynupdate.no-ip.com:
Temporary failure in name resolution
Wed Jun 13 17:57:24 2018: Will retry again in 120 sec...
my current workaround is to run inadyn with --background flag, but this is not
a solution because after few hours it can produce multiple processess of
inadyn.
-- System Information:
Debian Release: 9.4
Architecture: amd64 (x86_64)
Foreign Architectures: i386
Kernel: Linux 4.14.0-0.bpo.3-amd64 (SMP w/4 CPU cores)
Locale: LANG=en_GB.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_GB.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8),
LANGUAGE=en_US:en (charmap=UTF-8)
Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/dash
Init: systemd (via /run/systemd/system)
Versions of packages inadyn depends on:
ii adduser 3.115
ii libc6 2.24-11+deb9u3
inadyn recommends no packages.
inadyn suggests no packages.
-- Configuration Files:
/etc/default/inadyn changed [not included]
/etc/inadyn.conf [Errno 13] Permission denied: '/etc/inadyn.conf'
-- no debconf information