On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 04:56:17PM +0200, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Interstingly, libc6 switched back from eglibc to glibc sources just
> before 2.19-4.
The uptime on most of my systems is pretty high and it's possible that
through various dist-upgrades I've gone between eglibc and glibc without
re
Mark Kamichoff a écrit :
>>
>> If the change is in libc, it appears to be between 2.19-4 and 2.19-7.
>>
>> http://metadata.ftp-master.debian.org/changelogs//main/g/glibc/glibc_2.19-11_changelog
>>
>> .. doesn't seem to indicate any resolver / DNS changes between those
>> versions, though. I'll con
On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 11:30:43AM -0400, Mark Kamichoff wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 08:55:51AM +0100, Karl E. Jorgensen wrote:
> > Perhaps one of the recent libc upgrades have changed the default for
> > 'ndots' ?
> >
> > If so, according to a quick scan of the resolv.conf(5) manual page you
On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 08:55:51AM +0100, Karl E. Jorgensen wrote:
> Perhaps one of the recent libc upgrades have changed the default for
> 'ndots' ?
>
> If so, according to a quick scan of the resolv.conf(5) manual page you
> should be able add this to /etc/resolv.conf to get your old behaviour
>
Hi
On Tue, Sep 23, 2014 at 05:46:29PM -0400, Mark Kamichoff wrote:
> Hi -
>
> I've been running into somewhat inconsistent behavior with DNS short
> name resolution in Debian across a few systems.
>
> Here's the behavior that I've occasionally relied on over the years:
>
> % cat /etc/resolv.con
5 matches
Mail list logo