[ale] Fedora 13 DNS weirdness

Joe Knapka jknapka at kneuro.net
Mon Aug 9 00:20:53 EDT 2010


Thanks, Jim.  Since Slackware is pissing me off by not even recognizing 
my wifi card, I'm going back to F13 for a bit.

Was there some obvious place I could have found out about the need to 
restart nscd when moving between networks? (And for the love of all 
that's holy, why doesn't the all-singing, all-dancing Network Manager 
just do that automatically?)  I googled my ass off without achieving any 
enlightenment.


On 08/09/2010 09:39 AM, Jim Kinney wrote:
> 'service nscd restart' is required when manually changing or resetting 
> the name services supply. Once nscd is restarted on the new network, 
> it should float happily between the two known networks seamlessly.
>
> if not: summit a bug as it should auto-update from a change in 
> networkmanager _especially_ from the wireless portion.
>
> On Sun, Aug 8, 2010 at 11:05 PM, Joe Knapka <jknapka at kneuro.net 
> <mailto:jknapka at kneuro.net>> wrote:
>
>     I've already ditched F13 and am installing Slackware on my old
>     Dell D600
>     laptop, but I wanted to find out if anyone can explain the following
>     totally psychotic behavior I experienced under F13:
>
>     I set up the laptop's wifi connection on my home network using Network
>     Manager (gag,spit) and everything worked fine (?!?).
>
>     I went to my SO's house, configured the wifi connection for her
>     network,
>     and it connected with no problem.  I could ping the router and the
>     upstream gateway by IP or by name.  I could ping things out in the
>     world
>     by name:
>
>       jk at jaklaptop:> ping google.com <http://google.com>
>     <successful ping responses from an actual Google IP>
>
>     However, other applications that I tried (FireFox, telnet, ssh)
>     did this
>     (or in FF's case gave me the equivalent "I can't do that" page):
>
>       jk at jaklaptop:> telnet google.com <http://google.com> 80
>       Host google.com <http://google.com> not found - Name or service
>     unknown.
>
>     Weirdly, dig and nslookup had no problem resolving google.com
>     <http://google.com> (or any
>     other name). But any app that I actually wanted to USE for any
>     practical
>     purpose complained about name lookup errors, as in the telnet
>     example above.
>
>     I checked everything in Network Manager and the two networks were
>     configured identically. I looked at /etc/resolv.conf, /etc/host.conf,
>     /etc/nsswitch.conf and everything looked totally OK -- the machine was
>     using the correct router and DNS server for my SO's network. I ran
>     tcpdump on UDP port 53 while doing a ping and a telnet, and I saw
>     successful DNS requests for google.com <http://google.com> in both
>     cases.... but telnet
>     still complained about "Name or service unknown". I thought maybe
>     it was
>     something to do with SELinux, so I disabled that, but no joy.
>
>     Then when I got home the laptop connected to my home network and
>     everything worked fine again.
>
>     I am still at the "WTF?" stage and am not really progressing... hence
>     the switch to Slackware.  Any ideas what might have been happening
>     here?
>
>     Thanks,
>
>     -- JK
>
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>
>
> -- 
> -- 
> James P. Kinney III
> I would rather stumble along in freedom than walk effortlessly in chains.
>
>
>
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