Apologies in advance if this was already mentioned or does not
apply, I haven't been following the list as closely as I would
like recently...
On Mon, 16 Jun 2003 13:07:20 MST Ray Olszewski wrote:
> At 12:37 PM 6/16/2003 -0700, M Lu wrote:
> >By default, Bering is using dnscache and so /etc/resolv.conf has
> >192.168.1.254. Seems to me that ISP's DNSes are not used at all if you do
> >not change settings in dnscache. dnscache still works because it uses root
> >DNSes. Correct me if I am wrong.
>
> This all sounds right. So is it the case that you want to find out what the
> ISP's DNS servers are, even though the router is not actually using them?
> (I had assumed before that you were setting up your router to use the ISP's
> DNS servers.) In that case, you will need to consult the lease file itself
> ... assuming the lease itself provies this info (it usually does) ... or,
> just conveivably, separate documentation from your ISP or on its Web site.
Or, if you're using pump to get leases, run:
pump -s
Example:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ssh [EMAIL PROTECTED] pump -s
Device eth0
IP: 68.58.13x.xx
Netmask: 255.255.252.0
Broadcast: 68.58.135.255
Network: 68.58.132.0
Boot server 172.30.58.34
Next server 172.30.58.35
Gateway: 68.58.132.1
Boot file: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Domain: cstltn01.in.comcast.net
Nameservers: 68.57.xxx.x 68.57.xxx.x
Renewal time: Tue Jun 17 05:22:18 2003
Expiration time: Tue Jun 17 06:52:18 2003
HTH,
Brad
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