On 03/30/2011 01:00 PM, Michal Novotny wrote:
I think you should triage it a bit more, e.g. with strace -ff. Anyway,
there is no hurry of doing this I think.
Well, you mean to use strace on the daemonized process?
Wherever it helps understanding what's happening. :)
Also, I've been testing the --txt-record once again and not grabbed it
with wireshark and I had to query the "txt-record" TXT record for this
and the wireshark was showing the quotes there as well now. Should I
disable it then and use the working syntax for record name which
(according to my testing) is to use *--txt-record=txt-record,"some
value, which is something"* instead, i.e. to not use quotes in the name?
I absolutely cannot parse this sentence.
Well, what I meant was that if I invoked dnsmasq with
--txt-record="txt-record", "some value" then I had to dig for
"txt-record" with quotes, i.e. using the dig TXT \"txt-record\" syntax
in bash. In Wireshark it was showing request for record with the quotes,
i.e. "txt-record" instead of querying just for txt-record, i.e. without
quotes. To be able to query it without quotes I had to invoke dnsmasq
with --txt-record=txt-record, "some value" arguments.
Who was escaping the double-quotes?
Paolo
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