okay, so this is my understanding of how things should work:

1. on a local network without DHCP, resolv.conf is configured manually by the 
user
2. on a local network with DHCP, resolv.conf is set once at connection time, 
but then may be updated each time the DHCP lease is renewed
3. on a remote network (via PPP or VPN), resolv.conf contains the merge of 
local and remote settings, and is set once at connection time, but then may be 
upated each time either of the leases are renewed -- both local and remote
-- 3b. if the remote network does not provide DNS information then resolv.conf 
should be left unchanged
4. when the remote network connection is brought down, resolv.conf must be 
restored to either its state before the conntection was established, or -- if 
the local lease was renewed during this period -- to its latest lease value

one way for this to happen would be for NM to take a copy of resolv.conf
at the point it establishes the connection, and then have it listen to
resolv.conf for update notifications. if resolv.conf is changed by some
other party (e.g. dhcpclient or dhcpd) then it can update the copy of
the file that it will use to restore when the connection ends, and can
also recompute the local/remote merge.


@alan ezust: perhaps other people can tell you how it is done for the 
time-being, but I happen to know that what you want is coming in a nice gui 
form in the yet to be released, NetworkManager 0.7.

-- 
resolv.conf overwritten using VPN/PPP etc...
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/90681
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is the bug contact for Ubuntu.

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to