Thanks for the quick reply.
This is a good idea. However, some of the devices use unqualified names as
their host names and I have no control over them, and it seems I wouldn't be
able to differentiate them in this way.
Regards,
Glen
> On Sep 29, 2021, at 10:56 AM, Andrew Miskell wrote:
>
>
> On Sep 28, 2021, at 9:16 PM, Glen Huang wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I have a router and a dump AP that are connected with a wire. The router has
> two interfaces, one is for LAN (192.168.1.1/24) and the other for WAN. The AP
> also has two interfaces, one is for LAN (192.168.1.2/24), the other for
Hi,
I have a router and a dump AP that are connected with a wire. The router has
two interfaces, one is for LAN (192.168.1.1/24) and the other for WAN. The AP
also has two interfaces, one is for LAN (192.168.1.2/24), the other for guest
WiFi (192.168.2.1/24). (It actually also has a LAN WiFi,
Hi Simon,
On Tue, 28 Sep 2021, at 22:45, Simon Kelley wrote:
> This is a dnsmasq bug. I just pushed the fix to the git repo.
Thank you for the fast fix.
> Question. Is there a simple way to install libubus on Ubuntu or Debian?
> I have a script which tests a large m=number of plausible
On 28/09/2021 20:28, Chris Green wrote:
> I run xubuntu version 21.04 on several systems. Thus the default DNS
> cache and configuring of /etc/resolv.conf is done by systemd and its
> minions.
>
> Does anyone here know what happens if/when I install dnsmasq? Is the
> installation process clever
On 28/09/2021 10:36, John Thomson wrote:
> On Mon, 27 Sep 2021, at 20:21, Patrick Vorlicek wrote:
>> make[5]: Entering directory
>> '/root/openwrt/ea8500/build_dir/target-arm_cortex-a15+neon-vfpv4_musl_eabi/dnsmasq-full/dnsmasq-2.86/src'
>> arm-openwrt-linux-muslgnueabi-gcc -Os -pipe
I run xubuntu version 21.04 on several systems. Thus the default DNS
cache and configuring of /etc/resolv.conf is done by systemd and its
minions.
Does anyone here know what happens if/when I install dnsmasq? Is the
installation process clever enough to reconfigure and/or turn off the
right
On Mon, Sep 27, 2021 at 10:45:25PM +0100, Simon Kelley wrote:
>
> I think that this is a 2.86 problem. There are two cases when dnsmasq
> will try another server with the same query:
>
> 1) When a client retries the query.
> 2) When the first server returns REFUSED.
>
> In the second case, it's
Hey Petr and Simon,
On Mon, 2021-09-27 at 23:03 +0100, Simon Kelley wrote:
> Petr, this code seems to have last been touched by you, in
>
> ad59f278c6234a416f36dfdd39143bb46f5d707a
>
> can you remember what that was supposed to achieve? None of it is
> making
> much sense to me.
Looks like we
On Mon, 27 Sep 2021, at 20:21, Patrick Vorlicek wrote:
> make[5]: Entering directory
> '/root/openwrt/ea8500/build_dir/target-arm_cortex-a15+neon-vfpv4_musl_eabi/dnsmasq-full/dnsmasq-2.86/src'
> arm-openwrt-linux-muslgnueabi-gcc -Os -pipe -fno-caller-saves -fno-plt
> -fhonour-copts
Hi Petr,
As per your guidance, we have enabled logging (LOG_ALL in
config/consolle.h) and recompiled the ipxe binaries. Below are the latest
observations.
Taking down the scenarios from the previous post for ease of reference -
1. Default dnsmasq config with default ltsp's pxe-service entries -
Which dnsmasq version are you using?
Simon.
On 28/09/2021 00:41, E wrote:
>> https://lists.thekelleys.org.uk/pipermail/dnsmasq-discuss/2021q3/015348.html
>> It can block any name by using --address=/blockedname/::1.
>
> What I want to do:
> 1. Block requests. (at first I want to block
Ok understood and very valid answer.
Let's remember one thing the (excellent) dnsmasq is extremely common in
small routers and embedded devices where permanent storage is often not
available.
I am ok sticking to address= syntax so working on A records only but I
was wondering if dnsmasq
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