Jesse Keating wrote: > On 06/20/2012 09:57 AM, Adam Williamson wrote: >> On Wed, 2012-06-20 at 12:21 -0400, Bill Nottingham wrote: >>> Simo Sorce (simo@xxxxxxxxxx) said: >>>> Of course for this to work properly we need some level of integration >>>> between Network Manager and the DNS caching server so that the dynamic >>>> configurations can be pushed in/out when the related networks come >>>> up/down. >>>> >>>> Discuss. >>> >>> man NetworkManager.conf: >>> >>> ... >>> dns=plugin1,plugin2, ... >>> List DNS plugin names separated by ','. DNS plugins are used >>> to >>> provide local caching nameserver functionality (which speeds >>> up DNS queries) and to push DNS data to applications that use >>> it. >>> >>> Available plugins: >>> >>> dnsmasq >>> this plugin uses dnsmasq to provide local caching >>> name‐ server functionality. >>> ... >>> >>> (Note: haven't tried this.) >> >> See also: >> >> http://blogs.gnome.org/dcbw/2010/09/23/dont-try-to-run-honey/ >> >> Been there since 2010. >> > > So I just gave this a try. Already had dnsmasq installed so I just > edited the config file and restarted the NetworkManager service. Then > connected to my VPN. > > It. Just. Works. Amazing! Not only does it just work for resolution, > but it also works for multiple search domains. I can ping <name> and > it'll try <name>.localdomain and I can also do <name>.<subname> and > it'll find it at <name>.<subname>.workdomain. A+ > > Setup? Do I need to setup dnsmasq to start @boot, or will NM start it? -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel