Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Pacman not functioning in Arch Post 302569939 by pludi on Wednesday 2nd of November 2011 05:25:31 AM
Old 11-02-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by a sandwhich
Code:
HOSTNAME="myhost"
interface=
address=
netmask=
broadcast=
gateway=
NETWORK_PERSIST="no"
DAEMONS=(hwclock syslog-ng network netfs crond)

This is resolv.conf
Code:
#
#/etc/resolv.conf
#
#search <yourdomain.tld>
#nameserver<ip>
# End of file

Well, there's your problem. Your network isn't defined, so the machine can't connect to anywhere. And even if it could, your resolv.conf is empty, so it wouldn't know about any DNS servers for name resolution.

If a dynamic address is enough, set the entries in rc.conf like this:
Code:
interface="eth0"
address=
netmask=
broadcast=
gateway=

Run /etc/rc.d/network restart, and try a ping to 8.8.8.8. If that works, try a ping to any URL you'd like.

More information here.
This User Gave Thanks to pludi For This Post:
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Ultra 5 Arch (URGENT)

I was trying to migrate a DB into an Ultra 5 and it was easy for me to buy a new 80GB ide disk but OS (Solaris 2.6) does not recognize the disk. OS belives that it is a 8GB disk, my point of view is to try to update the OBP to a newer version. (3.25.3 is the current one ) Does anyone knows if... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: alex blanco
3 Replies

2. Ubuntu

Needs for installing Arch/Linux?

I'm pretty new to *nix systems and been using Ubuntu and Debian for a while but think it's pretty much 'overkill' lauching any of these systems. I've always been in need of a simple system, with a simple X where I can get the necessary programs myself. Yesterday I read about Arch (and it got me).... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: riwa
1 Replies

3. AIX

Advice - X11 not functioning

Hello Folks We have following software installed on our AIX box X11.vfb - Virtual Frame Buffer Software We also see its process running root 528406 1 0 06:27:18 - 0:00 /usr/bin/X11/X -force -vfb -x abx -x dbe -x GLX :1 Following is the o/p of 'lslpp' X11.vfb 5.3.0.50... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ak835
4 Replies

4. Ubuntu

Can't find arch directory

I am using ubuntu server, and while i am trying to configure lan bonding, i could not find the directory /etc/modprobe.d/arch , what i need to install ?! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: XP_2600
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

cp command not functioning regularly

I have written a korn shell script . I copy a file from one mounted directory to other using cp command. This script runs daily at a time. But sporidally it fails to copy the files. So I have missing files at the destination directory for some days. Is my method a good one or is there some... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Golden Egg
5 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Expect not functioning

Hello, I plan on building an expect script and a ksh script to acquire some information and pass to the expect script. I'm very new with expect and figured I would start off slow. However, I use the spawn telnet command, run the script, and it prints out "spawn telnet" rather than doing... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neqtor
3 Replies

7. Red Hat

Functioning of 'cat' command

I need to display file, given on the command line to 'stdout' in Linux( not in red-hat )..Just like how 'cat' command is working! Basically I need to develop that command's coding part! Can somebody suggest some algorithm? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mathew Antony
2 Replies

8. Infrastructure Monitoring

Failed to read from eventlog: 31: A device attached to the system is not functioning.

Hello Team, I am getting below error on nagios to monitor windows Server 2012. Failed to read from eventlog: 31: A device attached to the system is not functioning. basically we are monitoring Eventlog file for server reboot or unexpected shutdown. Could you please help here. What could be... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ghpradeep
0 Replies
SYSTEMD-RESOLVED.SERVICE(8)				     systemd-resolved.service				       SYSTEMD-RESOLVED.SERVICE(8)

NAME
systemd-resolved.service, systemd-resolved - Network Name Resolution manager SYNOPSIS
systemd-resolved.service /lib/systemd/systemd-resolved DESCRIPTION
systemd-resolved is a system service that provides network name resolution to local applications. It implements a caching and validating DNS/DNSSEC stub resolver, as well as an LLMNR resolver and responder. Local applications may submit network name resolution requests via three interfaces: o The native, fully-featured API systemd-resolved exposes on the bus. See the API Documentation[1] for details. Usage of this API is generally recommended to clients as it is asynchronous and fully featured (for example, properly returns DNSSEC validation status and interface scope for addresses as necessary for supporting link-local networking). o The glibc getaddrinfo(3) API as defined by RFC3493[2] and its related resolver functions, including gethostbyname(3). This API is widely supported, including beyond the Linux platform. In its current form it does not expose DNSSEC validation status information however, and is synchronous only. This API is backed by the glibc Name Service Switch (nss(5)). Usage of the glibc NSS module nss- resolve(8) is required in order to allow glibc's NSS resolver functions to resolve host names via systemd-resolved. o Additionally, systemd-resolved provides a local DNS stub listener on IP address 127.0.0.53 on the local loopback interface. Programs issuing DNS requests directly, bypassing any local API may be directed to this stub, in order to connect them to systemd-resolved. Note however that it is strongly recommended that local programs use the glibc NSS or bus APIs instead (as described above), as various network resolution concepts (such as link-local addressing, or LLMNR Unicode domains) cannot be mapped to the unicast DNS protocol. The DNS servers contacted are determined from the global settings in /etc/systemd/resolved.conf, the per-link static settings in /etc/systemd/network/*.network files, the per-link dynamic settings received over DHCP and any DNS server information made available by other system services. See resolved.conf(5) and systemd.network(5) for details about systemd's own configuration files for DNS servers. To improve compatibility, /etc/resolv.conf is read in order to discover configured system DNS servers, but only if it is not a symlink to /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf or /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf (see below). systemd-resolved synthesizes DNS resource records (RRs) for the following cases: o The local, configured hostname is resolved to all locally configured IP addresses ordered by their scope, or -- if none are configured -- the IPv4 address 127.0.0.2 (which is on the local loopback) and the IPv6 address ::1 (which is the local host). o The hostnames "localhost" and "localhost.localdomain" (as well as any hostname ending in ".localhost" or ".localhost.localdomain") are resolved to the IP addresses 127.0.0.1 and ::1. o The hostname "_gateway" is resolved to all current default routing gateway addresses, ordered by their metric. This assigns a stable hostname to the current gateway, useful for referencing it independently of the current network configuration state. o The mappings defined in /etc/hosts are resolved to their configured addresses and back, but they will not affect lookups for non-address types (like MX). Lookup requests are routed to the available DNS servers and LLMNR interfaces according to the following rules: o Lookups for the special hostname "localhost" are never routed to the network. (A few other, special domains are handled the same way.) o Single-label names are routed to all local interfaces capable of IP multicasting, using the LLMNR protocol. Lookups for IPv4 addresses are only sent via LLMNR on IPv4, and lookups for IPv6 addresses are only sent via LLMNR on IPv6. Lookups for the locally configured host name and the "_gateway" host name are never routed to LLMNR. o Multi-label names are routed to all local interfaces that have a DNS server configured, plus the globally configured DNS server if there is one. Address lookups from the link-local address range are never routed to DNS. If lookups are routed to multiple interfaces, the first successful response is returned (thus effectively merging the lookup zones on all matching interfaces). If the lookup failed on all interfaces, the last failing response is returned. Routing of lookups may be influenced by configuring per-interface domain names. See systemd.network(5) for details. Lookups for a hostname ending in one of the per-interface domains are exclusively routed to the matching interfaces. See the resolved D-Bus API Documentation[1] for information about the APIs systemd-resolved provides. /ETC/RESOLV.CONF Four modes of handling /etc/resolv.conf (see resolv.conf(5)) are supported: o systemd-resolved maintains the /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf file for compatibility with traditional Linux programs. This file may be symlinked from /etc/resolv.conf. This file lists the 127.0.0.53 DNS stub (see above) as the only DNS server. It also contains a list of search domains that are in use by systemd-resolved. The list of search domains is always kept up-to-date. Note that /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf should not be used directly by applications, but only through a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf. This file may be symlinked from /etc/resolv.conf in order to connect all local clients that bypass local DNS APIs to systemd-resolved with correct search domains settings. This mode of operation is recommended. o A static file /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf is provided that lists the 127.0.0.53 DNS stub (see above) as only DNS server. This file may be symlinked from /etc/resolv.conf in order to connect all local clients that bypass local DNS APIs to systemd-resolved. This file does not contain any search domains. o systemd-resolved maintains the /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf file for compatibility with traditional Linux programs. This file may be symlinked from /etc/resolv.conf and is always kept up-to-date, containing information about all known DNS servers. Note the file format's limitations: it does not know a concept of per-interface DNS servers and hence only contains system-wide DNS server definitions. Note that /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf should not be used directly by applications, but only through a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf. If this mode of operation is used local clients that bypass any local DNS API will also bypass systemd-resolved and will talk directly to the known DNS servers. o Alternatively, /etc/resolv.conf may be managed by other packages, in which case systemd-resolved will read it for DNS configuration data. In this mode of operation systemd-resolved is consumer rather than provider of this configuration file. Note that the selected mode of operation for this file is detected fully automatically, depending on whether /etc/resolv.conf is a symlink to /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf or lists 127.0.0.53 as DNS server. SIGNALS
SIGUSR1 Upon reception of the SIGUSR1 process signal systemd-resolved will dump the contents of all DNS resource record caches it maintains, as well as all feature level information it learnt about configured DNS servers into the system logs. SIGUSR2 Upon reception of the SIGUSR2 process signal systemd-resolved will flush all caches it maintains. Note that it should normally not be necessary to request this explicitly - except for debugging purposes - as systemd-resolved flushes the caches automatically anyway any time the host's network configuration changes. Sending this signal to systemd-resolved is equivalent to the systemd-resolve --flush-caches command, however the latter is recommended since it operates in a synchronous way. SIGRTMIN+1 Upon reception of the SIGRTMIN+1 process signal systemd-resolved will forget everything it learnt about the configured DNS servers. Specifically any information about server feature support is flushed out, and the server feature probing logic is restarted on the next request, starting with the most fully featured level. Note that it should normally not be necessary to request this explicitly - except for debugging purposes - as systemd-resolved automatically forgets learnt information any time the DNS server configuration changes. Sending this signal to systemd-resolved is equivalent to the systemd-resolve --reset-server-features command, however the latter is recommended since it operates in a synchronous way. SEE ALSO
systemd(1), resolved.conf(5), dnssec-trust-anchors.d(5), nss-resolve(8), systemd-resolve(1), resolv.conf(5), hosts(5), systemd.network(5), systemd-networkd.service(8) NOTES
1. API Documentation https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/resolved 2. RFC3493 https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3493 systemd 237 SYSTEMD-RESOLVED.SERVICE(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:28 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy