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Via ChatGPT 4 (accuracy unverified):
Yes, you can configure systemd-resolved
to use the DNS servers in the order provided without dynamically switching based on speed. Here’s how you can do it:
Edit the resolved configuration file:
Open the resolved.conf
file in a text editor:
sudo nano /etc/systemd/resolved.conf
Modify or add the following line:
DNS=`IP_of_pihole` `IP_of_mikrotik`
DNSStubListener=no
FallbackDNS=
Replace IP_of_pihole
and IP_of_mikrotik
with your actual DNS IP addresses. This tells systemd-resolved
to only use the DNS servers in the order you’ve specified.
Prevent automatic DNS changes by network manager:
If you’re using NetworkManager, create a drop-in configuration to prevent it from overriding DNS settings:
sudo mkdir -p /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/
sudo nano /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/dns.conf
Add the following content:
[main]
dns=none
Restart services:
After making these changes, restart systemd-resolved
and NetworkManager
:
sudo systemctl restart systemd-resolved
sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager
This should ensure that your system uses the DNS servers in the order provided without any automatic switching.
Oh, that’s interesting. I wonder if the maintainer would be willing to accept a PR to fix.
That sounds like something I would enjoy doing for software that I personally enjoy using free of charge, and I love writing Python code.
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This article is too short and shallow to be useful or interesting.
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