>From: Matthew Saltzman <mjs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >Date: 2007/01/18 Thu AM 06:53:05 CST >To: For users of Fedora <fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx> >Subject: Re: FC 5 named service seems to "go away" >On Wed, 17 Jan 2007, Richard England wrote: > >> Thanks Bill. >> >> >> I wondered about resolv.conf and here is what it says. Note that I have >> NetworkManager running: >> >> >> $ cat /etc/resolv.conf >> # generated by NetworkManager, do not edit! >> >> ; Use a local caching nameserver controlled by NetworkManager >> >> search myhome.westell.com >> >> nameserver 127.0.0.1 >> >> >> myhome.westell.com is the DSL modem/router . I was expecting to see >> nameserver 192.168.1.1 >> >> instead of 127.0.0.1, since that is how my FC6 machine is running, but I've >> not been able to determine where I should change the configuration so this >> occurs. Since NetworkManager is running changing resolve.conf directly fixes >> nothing since it changes it on the fly. > >127.0.0.1 is the "loopback" address. For any machine, it connects to that >machine itself. > >Caching nameserver uses 127.0.0.1 so that DNS requests from your machine >will use your own nameserver no matter what your LAN/WAN IP address is. >Nice for laptops, which change IP addresses depending on where they are. >Maybe slightly faster than the alternative (your LAN's nameserver or a >remote one) in other contexts. > >-- > Matthew Saltzman > >Clemson University Math Sciences >mjs AT clemson DOT edu >http://www.math.clemson.edu/~mjs > >-- >fedora-list mailing list >fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx >To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Well, that makes sense, though I don't understand why the FC6 machines are both looking at the DSL address (192.168.1.1). But then I don't know much about NetworkManager, yet, at all. At least that seems to eliminate the ip address issue from being part of the named unresponsiveness. Thanks, ~~R