Craig White wrote: > On Sun, 2010-02-28 at 10:34 -0700, Eric Shubert wrote: >> Running your own caching resolver is pretty trivial on RHEL/Fedora. Just >> need to install the caching-nameserver package (which pulls in deps when >> you use yum to install it). You then need to have: >> nameserver 127.0.0.1 >> first in your /etc/resolv.conf file so it gets used. If your computer is >> directly attached to the cox modem, that'll be a pain as dhcp resets >> your resolv.conf file. If you're using cox, you really should have a >> router with nat between your computer and the cox modem though, so your >> computer isn't sitting on a public address. >> >> I don't know off hand how to set up a local resolver on Ubuntu. I don't >> really need one myself because my IPCop is my resolver. ;) > ---- > in the configuration of your network adaptor, you can turn off DHCP > client changes to /etc/resolv.conf > > PEERDNS = no > > various ways to accomplish this depending upon whether you are using > NetworkManager or not, which distro, etc. Sweet. > I thought ipcop provided dns forwarding to the DNS servers set up within > ipcop and didn't actually provide any DNS resolution by itself so if you > use DHCP on ipcop on a Cox connection, you are back on Cox's name > servers. > > Craig > That occurred to me after I posted the message. You're right. IPCop alone wouldn't typically fix the problem. I guess I'm not seeing the problem because I'm on DSL. ;) For those on cox, might I suggest using opendns resolvers? 208.67.222.220 208.67.222.222 You'll need to do the "PEERDNS = no" thing to keep your settings from getting wiped out. Thanks Craig. :) -- -Eric 'shubes' --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss