Hello all,
Have had a Z-Net for a few years now and at first I had it configured for DHCP using a static reservation. A couple years ago I changed the network config on the Z-Net to static. To this day, the /etc/resolv.conf file has the DNS server that was handed out by DHCP all those years ago and I have no way to change it. I am unable to change the network config back to DHCP (either by choosing the DHCP button in the Web GUI, or clearing the network config in the Web GUI, or by using the Reset Network script). No matter what I do, I retain the static network config and that old DNS server (which is no longer active). I am running v1.0.22 on my Z-Net.
I'd rather not do any serious hacking, but at this point I'm thinking of editing /etc/resolv.conf and setting the immutable bit on it. This leaves me with an unsupported config I'm sure, but there doesn't seem to be any way around this.
Is there some magic incantation to changing the DNS server or to setting back to DHCP from static? Or should it Just Work(TM)?
Thanks.
Have had a Z-Net for a few years now and at first I had it configured for DHCP using a static reservation. A couple years ago I changed the network config on the Z-Net to static. To this day, the /etc/resolv.conf file has the DNS server that was handed out by DHCP all those years ago and I have no way to change it. I am unable to change the network config back to DHCP (either by choosing the DHCP button in the Web GUI, or clearing the network config in the Web GUI, or by using the Reset Network script). No matter what I do, I retain the static network config and that old DNS server (which is no longer active). I am running v1.0.22 on my Z-Net.
I'd rather not do any serious hacking, but at this point I'm thinking of editing /etc/resolv.conf and setting the immutable bit on it. This leaves me with an unsupported config I'm sure, but there doesn't seem to be any way around this.
Is there some magic incantation to changing the DNS server or to setting back to DHCP from static? Or should it Just Work(TM)?
Thanks.
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