On 22/08/16 13:07, Tony Finch wrote:
Alternatively, maybe you could add something to the ExecStartPre in the
unit file to poll `ip addr show` until all the expected interface
addresses are present, so that named doesn't start until the rest of the
system has untangled its legs.
I've run into s
Wolfgang Riedel wrote:
>
> not sure if this is a bug or a feature but had been scratching my head
> for months now running BIND on Fedora22-24 and all the time I did a
> reboot BIND didn’t came up and I needed to restart the process to get it
> running. After some googling around I realized that I
On 19/8/16 12:38, Mukund Sivaraman wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 19, 2016 at 11:32:43AM +0200, Wolfgang Riedel wrote:
>> ### bootup with: empty-zones-enable no;
>>
>> [root@ns1 ~]# systemctl status named-chroot.service
>> ● named-chroot.service - Berkeley Internet Name Domain (DNS)
>>Loaded: loaded (/us
On Fri, Aug 19, 2016 at 11:46:36AM +0200, Wolfgang Riedel wrote:
> Hi Mukund,
>
> yes this had been my fist assumption also but WHY should/would the
> statement "empty-zones-enable” within named.conf change the bring
> process of the network interface process?
>
> It’s courios, right?
I suspect
Hi Mukund,
yes this had been my fist assumption also but WHY should/would the statement
"empty-zones-enable” within named.conf change the bring process of the network
interface process?
It’s courios, right?
Wolfgang
> On 19 Aug 2016, at 11:38AM, Mukund Sivaraman wrote:
>
> On Fri, Aug 19, 2
On Fri, Aug 19, 2016 at 11:32:43AM +0200, Wolfgang Riedel wrote:
> ### bootup with: empty-zones-enable no;
>
> [root@ns1 ~]# systemctl status named-chroot.service
> ● named-chroot.service - Berkeley Internet Name Domain (DNS)
>Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/named-chroot.service; enabl
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