similar to: Unable to edit resolv.conf

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 20000 matches similar to: "Unable to edit resolv.conf"

2017 Jan 13
4
Unable to edit resolv.conf
On 01/13/2017 05:50 AM, Albert McCann wrote: >> -----Original Message----- >> From: CentOS [mailto:centos-bounces at centos.org] On Behalf Of TE Dukes >> Sent: Friday, January 13, 2017 7:50 AM >> To: 'CentOS mailing list' <centos at centos.org> >> Subject: [CentOS] Unable to edit resolv.conf >> >> I changed ISPs and need to update name
2017 Jan 13
1
Unable to edit resolv.conf
-----Original Message----- From: CentOS [mailto:centos-bounces at centos.org] On Behalf Of Albert McCann Sent: Friday, January 13, 2017 8:51 AM To: 'CentOS mailing list' Subject: Re: [CentOS] Unable to edit resolv.conf > -----Original Message----- > From: CentOS [mailto:centos-bounces at centos.org] On Behalf Of TE Dukes > Sent: Friday, January 13, 2017 7:50 AM > To:
2017 Jan 13
0
Unable to edit resolv.conf
> -----Original Message----- > From: CentOS [mailto:centos-bounces at centos.org] On Behalf Of TE Dukes > Sent: Friday, January 13, 2017 7:50 AM > To: 'CentOS mailing list' <centos at centos.org> > Subject: [CentOS] Unable to edit resolv.conf > > I changed ISPs and need to update name servers in resolv.conf. > > I have tried nano, gedit, Webmin,
2009 Oct 08
12
resolv.conf rewritten every reboot. How to figure out who and why?
My machine has a static IP, with dhcp and IPv6 disabled. Every time I reboot, some process rewrites /etc/resolv.conf, including a comment about dhcpclient. The only package I have installed that shows up in "rpm -qa|grep -i dhcp" is dhcpv6-client-1.0.10-16.el5, and nothing in there is named dhcpclient. I'd like to figure out what software is rewriting this file and why. man 5
2018 Nov 19
3
NetworkManager and /etc/resolv.conf
> On 11/17/18 8:31 AM, Alice Wonder wrote: >> On 11/17/2018 07:01 AM, Alice Wonder wrote: >>> On 11/17/2018 06:43 AM, Alice Wonder wrote: >>>> CentOS 7.5 image running on linode. >>>> >>>> unbound running on localhost. >>>> >>>> Have to use a cron job once a minute to keep /etc/resolv.conf using >>>> the
2017 Jan 13
0
Unable to edit resolv.conf
On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 07:49:48AM -0500, TE Dukes wrote: > Hello, > > I changed ISPs and need to update name servers in resolv.conf. > > I have tried nano, gedit, Webmin, system-config-network and it won't allow > me to make the changes. > > I have Network Manager turned off and when I enable it , eth0 and eth1 have > no entries. > > I enabled it, added
2010 May 20
5
Resolv.conf being overwritten
I am trying to add 127.0.0.1 to my resolv.conf. I added it through the system-config-network but if I reboot, its gone. I do not have the caching nameserver package installed. My ISP's nameservers are there. It must have something to do with DHCP. Also, in the network config GUI, should I select the IPv6 option for either or both network cards? TIA
2016 Oct 04
5
Virtualization Networking
On 10/03/2016 07:00 PM, TE Dukes wrote: > /etc/sysconfig/ifcfg-eth1 > GATEWAY=192.168.1.1 ... > /etc/sysconfig/ifcfg-lo > GATEWAY=192.168.1.1 Don't specify GATEWAY in interface files where it isn't used. This should be set on eth0 only. > # brctl show > > bridge name bridge id STP enabled interfaces OK, so you don't have a bridge interface. If you want to
2015 Aug 31
4
Libvirt resume guest startup issues centos 7
Here is the relevant log snippet: journal: libvirt version: 1.2.8, package: 16.el7_1.3 (CentOS BuildSystem <http://bugs.centos.org>, 2015-05-12-20:12:58, worker1.bsys.centos.org) journal: failed to connect to monitor socket: No such process journal: internal error: process exited while connecting to monitor: ((null):1937): Spice-Warning **: reds.c:3036:reds_init_socket:
2015 Aug 27
2
centos 6 - changing resolv.conf by hand gets overwritten by rebooting
given machine with C6 x86_64 (seen on C 6.6 but also before and probably still present on C6.7) only 1 interface, there is dhcp on this network (for kickstarting) but the machines have static ip's, and NO networkmanager installed contents of resolv.conf search some.domain.here nameserver x.x.x.x #dns1 nameserver y.y.y.y #dns2 change resolv.conf to: search some.newdomain.here nameserver
2020 Feb 18
6
From network-scripts to NetworkManager on a router : questions
Le 18/02/2020 ? 12:28, Anand Buddhdev a ?crit?: > Neither. The DNS configuration should not normally be bound to a > specific interface, so don't configure it with any interface. If you do, > and that interface goes down, your DNS config also disappears. I would like to do that very much, only NetworkManager makes you jump through burning loops to do so. With network-scripts, it
2009 Nov 29
4
NetworkManager constantly overwriting /etc/resolve.conf - how to disable?
Hi all, I have a CentOS 5.4 server-only installation, i.e. no X installed, and for some odd reason /etc/resolve.conf gets overwritten by NetworkManager on a constant basis. I haven't been able to track down how often, but I think it's on the hour, or something. This is the conents of the file right now: # Generated by NetworkManager # No nameservers found; try putting DNS servers into
2019 Dec 03
2
midco stealling searches, was browsers slowing Centos 7 installation to a crawl
On Mon, Dec 02, 2019 at 06:51:44PM -0600, Michael Hennebry wrote: > I've chacked on that. > I've made what seemed like promissing changes to > /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup-post and > /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/network-functions . > No go. > I still get the search line in resolv.conf . > I've tried putting in search google.com , > but on reboot, it
2008 Feb 09
2
resolv.conf question
Hello, I have a centos 4.6 system acting as a router for my local network. I obtain my eth0 IP address automatically via DHCP from my ISP, sc.rr.com. If I add 127.0.0.1 to resolv.conf, it won't save it. I tried adding this to my dhclient.conf lease { option domain-name-servers 127.0.0.1; } The above is the only entry in the file. Don't know it caused it but my system locked up 3
2017 Jan 13
0
Unable to edit resolv.conf
>>> I changed ISPs and need to update name servers in resolv.conf. >>> >>> I have tried nano, gedit, Webmin, system-config-network and it won't allow >>> me to make the changes. Have you tried adding PEERDNS=no to your ifcfg-device file? If that doesn't work, you might be able to use NM_CONTROLLED=no as well. Barry
2018 Dec 11
6
KVM Client NetworkManager Problem
Hello, On my systems I have after update to last centos 1810 a big Problem with the network?? Om my system I have three NIC two are connected from hardware (hostdev) the last is connected from the bridge on the host. (NetworkManager was disabled) Now after the update the client can't start the NIC's correctly :-( My Problem is the bridged NIC ethX I must Install and activate the
2020 Feb 18
1
From network-scripts to NetworkManager on a router : questions
Le 18/02/2020 ? 17:43, Jonathan Billings a ?crit?: > According to 'man nm-settings-ifcfg-rh', PEERDNS=no is the old > network-services services mechanism for not changing /etc/resolv.conf, > while in NM it just means never add automatic nameservers to > resolv.conf from DHCP, PPP, VPN, etc. Turning off all DNS > updates means adding: > > [main] > dns=none >
2017 Jan 13
0
Unable to edit resolv.conf
On 01/13/2017 04:49 AM, TE Dukes wrote: > I changed ISPs and need to update name servers in resolv.conf. ... > I have Network Manager turned off and when I enable it , eth0 and eth1 have > no entries. I enabled it, added the connections, but still no changes. If you want to use NetworkManager, edit /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf and add "dns=none" in the main
2018 May 15
5
CentOS 7.5 (1804) and NetworkManager
Hi, I'm running CentOS on all kinds of setups: servers, workstations, desktops and laptops. Up until now, I'm only using NetworkManager on laptops, since it makes sense to use it there. On servers and desktop clients, I usually remove it and configure the network "traditionally" by simply editing /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-whatever, /etc/resolv.conf, /etc/hosts,
2014 Apr 27
7
Disappearing Network Manager config scripts
Is anyone frustrated by Network Manager? I wish CentOS just used the basic configuration files like the ones on BSD-style OSes. Those are so simple in comparison. Each time I reboot, it seems like the configuration file I create for Network Manager gets destroyed and replaced with a default file. Nothing in the default file would actually make sense on my network, so I'm not even really sure