On Tue, 2017-04-11 at 01:40 -0700, Alice Wonder wrote: > Hello list - > > http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/90035/how-to-set-dns-resolver > -in-fedora-using-network-manager > > That says it works for CentOS 5 and I *suspect* the methods there (3 > listed) would work, but what is the best way with NetworkManager to > set > it up to use the localhost for DNS ? > > I'm paranoid about DNS spoofing and really prefer to have a local > instance of DNSSEC enforcing unbound running on my CentOS 7 virtual > machines (e.g. linode) > > Currently I just use a cron job that runs once a minute to over- > write > was it is /etc/resolv.conf so they don't use the DHCP assigned > nameservers, but that does leave a short window every time the > network > is restarted. > > I'd like to know the proper way to set up Network Manager to just > create > > nameserver 127.0.0.1 > nameserver ::1 > > in /etc/resolv.conf > > Via google, it seems every distro approaches it differently and most > instructions I have seen involve a GUI. > > I did not see how to do it in the CentOS documentation but it might > be > there and I just did not figure out how to search it for what I > wanted. > > Those stackexchange methods look like they might work but they > reference > CentOS 5 and I know some NetworkManager stuff changed even just > between > 7.2 and 7.3 as I experienced incorrect IPv6 address after update as > a > result of those changes. > > Is there an "official" way to tell NetworkManager what I want in > /etc/resolv.conf ? Or better yet, a way to just tell it to leave > that > file alone? Use nmtui to manually configure the the interface AND nameservers. That puts the correct info in the ifcfg files. Nmtui is a curses UI. Just don't foret to specify the interface ip-address with the right netmask (e.g. 1.2.3.4/24, default seems to e a /32, I have been bitten by that a numer of times) /Louis > _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos