On Tue, 2018-08-07 at 15:35 +0100, Pete French wrote:
> >
> > Hmm. First, make sure that it isn't running (service local_unbound
> > stop, etc).
> > Then look at your /etc/resolv.conf -- unbound tends to rewrite that
> > on initial
> > startup, taking some of it's settings
Hmm. First, make sure that it isn't running (service local_unbound
stop, etc).
Then look at your /etc/resolv.conf -- unbound tends to rewrite that
on initial
startup, taking some of it's settings and inserting itself into the
middle as a
caching DNS server. At the
On 07/08/2018 05:01, Kevin Oberman wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 6, 2018 at 7:57 AM, John Kennedy wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Aug 06, 2018 at 03:06:00PM +0100, Pete French wrote:
>>> having enabled local_unbound in /etc/rc.d how do I remove that
>>> and go back to using just DHCP delivered nameservers ? I
>>>
On Mon, Aug 6, 2018 at 7:57 AM, John Kennedy wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 06, 2018 at 03:06:00PM +0100, Pete French wrote:
> > having enabled local_unbound in /etc/rc.d how do I remove that
> > and go back to using just DHCP delivered nameservers ? I
> > set it to 'NO' but yet the machine still seems to
On Mon, Aug 06, 2018 at 03:06:00PM +0100, Pete French wrote:
> having enabled local_unbound in /etc/rc.d how do I remove that
> and go back to using just DHCP delivered nameservers ? I
> set it to 'NO' but yet the machine still seems to have traces of
> the config in other places and keeps trying
having enabled local_unbound in /etc/rc.d how do I remove that
and go back to using just DHCP delivered nameservers ? I
set it to 'NO' but yet the machine still seems to have traces of
the config in other places and keeps trying to use them, for reasons I
dont understand.
Is there a quyick guide