To simon, in #14.

> Question: does networkmanager's GUI expose the option to divert particular 
> domains to a special nameserver? That's an
> alternative correct way to achieve layering local names over the global DNS.

IMHO, this cannot be use to solve all the current problems. The issue
came out because many, many network access authorization portals are
intranet hosts which can be resolved only by the intranet nameserver.
There are tons of these around the world and everybody who goes around
with a laptop encounters them all the time.  When you get to an
authorization portal, you may not know what the domain is.  You only
know what dhcp tells you.

So, either you implement some smart heuristics (e.g., if the first
nameserver is on an intranet ip address, try that sequentially), or you
stop trusting an authoritative "I do not know that host" and require a
confirmation, or you use the sequential access that is typical of the
resolv library and of MS windows, because in the context of
authorization portals, non-equivalent servers exist and we have little
power to change this as long as they work with MS windows and the MAC,
so IMHO we need to workaround.

It is unfortunate, but having a "sane" or "insane" behavior in some
linux distro will anyway have negligible effect on the spread of non-
equivalent servers. It will not discourage or encourage the use of non-
equivalent servers, as most people will anyway take what OSes that have
majority market share as the de facto standard and only test against
that.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1003842

Title:
  Precise NM with "dns=dnsmasq" breaks systems with non-equivalent
  upstream nameservers

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