On 2020-09-29 23:29, stan via users wrote:
> For me, the implication of that is that I am no longer in control of
> DNS, etc.  If some program has hard coded DNS servers, they bypass
> everything and just ignore system settings.  Am I understanding
> correctly?

You're not understanding it correctly.

There are FallbackDNS servers defined.  But, these are only used in the event 
that a user fails
to configure DNS servers or a broken DHCP server fails to supply DNS servers to 
the system.

>
> If I'm not, great, I'm happy.  If I am, though, how do I take back
> control?

FWIW, systemd-resolved.service is enabled by default starting in F33.  I 
believe an upgrade to F33
will also enable this.

However, you can always easily restore the previous behavior with Network 
Manager:
 
sudo rm -f /etc/resolv.conf
sudo ln -sf /run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf
sudo systemctl disable --now systemd-resolved.service
sudo systemctl mask systemd-resolved.service
sudo systemctl reboot

-- 
The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
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