On 05/16/2012 02:54 PM, JD wrote:
> I understand the libs are what make calls to the resolver. But even
> the resolver must look
> at /etc/resolv.conf. 

Well, you did say:  "Am I to believe that the browser is NOT using 
/etc/resolv.conf" 
which to me reads that you were thinking that somehow the browser itself should 
be
using resolv.conf.  I'm sorry if I misread what you wrote.

> If it is empty, NOTHING gets resolved.

Not "entirely" true. 

With named not running.....

[egreshko@f16-1 ~]$ cat /etc/resolv.conf
# Generated by NetworkManager
#search greshko.com
#nameserver 192.168.0.55

[egreshko@f16-1 ~]$ ping misty
PING misty (192.168.0.55) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from misty (192.168.0.55): icmp_req=1 ttl=64 time=1.99 ms

since /etc/nsswitch.conf contains

hosts:      files dns

and /etc/hosts contains

192.168.0.55 misty

if you take the "files" out of the hosts line....then NOTHING gets resolved.

> I was using nscd thinking it is a lightweight caching resolver. But as
> it turns out it is useless.
> Time for fedora to bury it :)
> Re: My router: it does very little if any caching - and has no
> configuration for it at all.
>
> I will try bind.

I've not used it....but have heard good things about dnsmasq which, according 
to yum
info, is A lightweight DHCP/caching DNS server.


-- 
Never be afraid to laugh at yourself, after all, you could be missing out on 
the joke
of the century. -- Dame Edna Everage
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