There's not really enough information here to be sure, but I think this
may be fixed by
http://thekelleys.org.uk/gitweb/?p=dnsmasq.git;a=commit;h=162e5e0062ce923c494cc64282f293f0ed64fc10
Cheers,
Simon.
On 05/02/2019 08:18, Debananda Pal wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have updated dnsmasq from 2.79
What a strange configuration!
I can sort-of explain what's happening here.
DHCP is a two-phase process: The server first suggests an address, then
the client accepts it and tells the server that it will be using the
address.
In dnsmasq, the first phase does not reserve an address. It's
On 15/02/2019 12:09, Petr Mensik wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I was playing a bit with auth-vm and auth-server together with virtual
> machine manager. I think it might be useful to omit interface in
> auth-server at all, just change name reported by auth-vm zones on normal
> dns port.
>
> Libvirt uses
On 08/02/2019 09:49, John Robson wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm trying to understand the mechanism by which dnsmasq uses the
> resolvers specified (in this case they are all specified in
> /etc/resolv.conf).
> Specifically I am trying to work out why dnsmasq is (erratically)
> sending the same query to
On 15/02/2019 12:54, Petr Mensik wrote:
> Hi everyone.
>
> I think it is handy to be able to delegate some suffix from internal
> domain, lets say example.com provided by BIND or any bigger server. But
> recursive servers do not set recursive queries on normal delegation.
> Delegation is when I
In the case I was seeing ... one of the three servers was returning
nxdomain for internal queries (user had defined google as a ‘backup’
resolver). So the subsequent replies had massive value (they contained
information, rather than no information).
I’ve removed the ‘backup resolver’ from their