Yeah, that's the route I went, just removing it. Here's hoping everything doesn't crash and burn whenever this change occurs ^^

On 05/16/2013 05:35 PM, Ken Pizzini wrote:
On Thu, May 16, 2013 at 02:43:18PM -0500, Ruben Rodriguez <cha0s> wrote:
Thanks guys, but neither of these seems to be where the addresses
currently in /etc/resolv.conf are coming from.
Going back to your original post on this topic:
# Dynamic resolv.conf(5) file for glibc resolver(3) generated by
resolvconf(8)
Consider this advice from
   
http://wiki.debian.org/NetworkConfiguration#The_resolv.conf_configuration_file

    "The resolvconf program is generally only necessary when a system has
    multiple programs that need to dynamically modify the nameserver
    information. In a simple system where the nameservers do not change
    often or are only changed by one program, the resolv.conf
    configuration file is adequate. "

I concur.  In keeping with this, my advice is, unless you have a
situation where the resolvconf program is helpful (e.g., dynamic VPN
connections from your prgmr.com host to various endpoints), uninstall
it and maintain /etc/resolv.conf manually:
    apt-get remove resolvconf


If, on the other hand, you do want (for any reason) to continue using
the resolvconf program, and you want to ensure that you are using the
prgmr.com resolvers, then be sure and set the "dns-nameservers"
in /etc/network/interfaces:
    dns-nameservers 71.19.155.120 71.19.145.215

HTH,
                --Ken Pizzini
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