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RESOLVCONF.CONF(5) File Formats Manual RESOLVCONF.CONF(5)

resolvconf.confresolvconf configuration file

resolvconf.conf is the configuration file for resolvconf(8). The resolvconf.conf file is a shell script that is sourced by resolvconf(8), meaning that resolvconf.conf must contain valid shell commands. Listed below are the standard resolvconf.conf variables that may be set. If the values contain whitespace, wildcards or other special shell characters, ensure they are quoted and escaped correctly. See the replace variable for an example on quoting.

After updating this file, you may wish to run resolvconf -u to apply the new configuration.

When a dynamically generated list is appended or prepended to, the whole is made unique where left-most wins.

Set to NO to disable resolvconf from running any subscribers. Defaults to YES.
These interfaces will always be processed first. If unset, defaults to the following:-
lo lo[0-9]*
These interfaces will be processed next, unless they have a metric. If unset, defaults to the following:-
tap[0-9]* tun[0-9]* vpn vpn[0-9]* ppp[0-9]* ippp[0-9]*
Ignore any exlcusive marking for these interfaces. This is handy when 3rd party integrations force the resolvconf -x option and you want to disable it easily.
If unset, defaults to the following:-
127.* 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 ::1
Prepend search domains to the dynamically generated list.
Append search domains to the dynamically generated list.
A list of domains to be removed from consideration. To remove a domain, you can use foo.* To remove a sub domain, you can use *.bar
Prepend name servers to the dynamically generated list. You should set this to 127.0.0.1 if you use a local name server other than libc.
Append name servers to the dynamically generated list.
A list of name servers to be removed from consideration. The default is 0.0.0.0 as some faulty routers send it via DHCP. To remove a block, you can use 192.168.*
These interfaces name servers will only be queried for the domains listed in their resolv.conf. Useful for VPN domains. Setting private_interfaces="*" will stop the forwarding of the root zone and allows the local resolver to recursively query the root servers directly. Requires a local nameserver other than libc. This is equivalent to the resolvconf -p option.
Force these interface to be public, overriding the private marking. This is handy when 3rd party integrations force the resolvconf -p option and you want to disable it easily.
Is a space separated list of replacement keywords. The syntax is this: $keyword/$match/$replacement

Example, given this resolv.conf:

domain foo.org
search foo.org dead.beef
nameserver 1.2.3.4
nameserver 2.3.4.5
and this configuaration:
replace="search/foo*/bar.com nameserver/1.2.3.4/5.6.7.8 nameserver/2.3.4.5/"
you would get this resolv.conf instead:
domain foo.org
search bar.com
nameserver 5.6.7.8
Works the same way as replace except it works on each space separated value rather than the whole line, so it's useful for the replacing a single domain within the search directive. Using the same example resolv.conf and changing replace to replace_sub, you would get this resolv.conf instead:
domain foo.org
search bar.com dead.beef
nameserver 5.6.7.8
Override the default state directory of /var/run/resolvconf. This should not be changed once resolvconf is in use unless the old directory is copied to the new one.

The following variables affect resolv.conf(5) directly:-

Defaults to /etc/resolv.conf if not set.
A list of libc resolver options, as specified in resolv.conf(5).
When set to YES the latest resolv.conf is written to resolv_conf without any alteration. When set to /dev/null or NULL, resolv_conf_local_only is defaulted to NO, local_nameservers is unset unless overridden and only the information set in resolvconf.conf is written to resolv_conf.
A libc resolver sortlist, as specified in resolv.conf(5).
If a local name server is configured then the default is just to specify that and ignore all other entries as they will be configured for the local name server. Set this to NO to also list non-local nameservers. This will give you working DNS even if the local nameserver stops functioning at the expense of duplicated server queries.
Append name servers to the dynamically generated list.
Prepend name servers to the dynamically generated list.
Append search domains to the dynamically generated list.
Prepend search domains to the dynamically generated list.

openresolv ships with subscribers for the name servers dnsmasq(8), named(8), pdnsd(8) and unbound(8). Each subscriber can create configuration files which should be included in in the subscribers main configuration file.

To disable a subscriber, simply set it's name to NO. For example, to disable the libc subscriber you would set:

libc=NO
This file tells dnsmasq which name servers to use for specific domains.
This file tells dnsmasq which name servers to use for global lookups.

Example resolvconf.conf for dnsmasq:

name_servers=127.0.0.1
dnsmasq_conf=/etc/dnsmasq-conf.conf
dnsmasq_resolv=/etc/dnsmasq-resolv.conf

Example dnsmasq.conf:

listen-address=127.0.0.1
# If dnsmasq is compiled for DBus then we can take
# advantage of not having to restart dnsmasq.
enable-dbus
conf-file=/etc/dnsmasq-conf.conf
resolv-file=/etc/dnsmasq-resolv.conf
Include this file in the named options block. This file tells named which name servers to use for global lookups.
Include this file in the named global scope, after the options block. This file tells named which name servers to use for specific domains.

Example resolvconf.conf for named:

name_servers=127.0.0.1
named_options=/etc/named-options.conf
named_zones=/etc/named-zones.conf

Example named.conf:

options {
listen-on { 127.0.0.1; };
include /etc/named-options.conf
;
};
include /etc/named-zones.conf
;
This is the main pdnsd configuration file which we modify to add our forward domains to. If this variable is not set then we rely on the pdnsd configuration file setup to read pdnsd_resolv as documented below.
This file tells pdnsd about global name servers. If this variable is not set then it's written to pdnsd_conf.

Example resolvconf.conf for pdnsd:

name_servers=127.0.0.1
pdnsd_conf=/etc/pdnsd.conf
# pdnsd_resolv=/etc/pdnsd-resolv.conf

Example pdnsd.conf:

global {
server_ip = 127.0.0.1;
status_ctl = on;
}
server {
# A server definition is required, even if emtpy.
label="empty";
proxy_only=on;
# file="/etc/pdnsd-resolv.conf";
}
This file tells unbound about specific and global name servers.
When set to YES, unbound marks the domains as insecure, thus ignoring DNSSEC.

Example resolvconf.conf for unbound:

name_servers=127.0.0.1
unbound_conf=/etc/unbound-resolvconf.conf

Example unbound.conf:

include: /etc/unbound-resolvconf.conf

Not all distributions store the files the subscribers need in the same locations. For example, named service scripts have been called named, bind and rc.bind and they could be located in a directory called /etc/rc.d, /etc/init.d or similar. Each subscriber attempts to automatically configure itself, but not every distribution has been catered for. Also, users could equally want to use a different version from the one installed by default, such as bind8 and bind9. To accommodate this, the subscribers have these files in configurable variables, documented below.

Name of the dnsmasq service.
Command to restart the dnsmasq service.
Location of the dnsmasq pidfile.
Name of the libc service.
Command to restart the libc service.
Name of the named service.
Command to restart the named service.
Command to restart the pdnsd service.
Name of the unbound service.
Command to restart the unbound service.
Location of the unbound pidfile.

sh(1), resolv.conf(5), resolvconf(8)

Roy Marples <roy@marples.name>

Each distribution is a special snowflake and likes to name the same thing differently, namely the named service script.

Please report them to http://roy.marples.name/projects/openresolv

December 29, 2016 DragonFly-5.6.1