Belated reply to Robin Battey's  #116.

My question in #115 was about alternative resolver libraries, not about
DNS resolver libraries. There are libraries that play the same role as
the whole glibc resolver. Generally these alternative resolver libraries
include DNS resolvers and read /etc/resolv.conf for compatibility with
the glibc resolver but I'd like to know whether or not, or to what
extent, they also obey /etc/nsswitch.conf.

I believe I understand your basic idea well enough. Instead of using
resolv.conf to direct name queries to nm-dnsmasq, use a new NSS module.
This new NSS module, foo, would be like the existing dns "module" except
that it would only talk to nm-dnsmasq, or would allow other ports than
53 to be specified so that nm-dnsmasq could be talked to over another
port than 53. The new module would be named on the "hosts:" line in
/etc/nsswitch.conf instead of "dns". (I don't see the point of listing
both foo and dns, since foo *is* DNS.)

But how much less work would this be than adapting the glibc code so
that ports other than 53 can be specified, e.g., via a new config file
with enhanced semantics that (if present) overrides resolv.conf?  And
how much less is the risk of breaking software that uses alternative
resolver libraries?

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/959037

Title:
  NM-controlled dnsmasq prevents other DNS servers from starting

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