Vexira
Part of the Furniture
There are a few in Australia that requires tagging of sorts a vlan tag.Know other ISPs still using this?
There are a few in Australia that requires tagging of sorts a vlan tag.Know other ISPs still using this?
We're talking about VPNs not VLANs.There are a few in Australia that requires tagging of sorts a vlan tag.
Sorry half asleepWe're talking about VPNs not VLANs.
beeline has more 2 million of customers in ru, I think it's more than enough, not counting multiple smaller isps.Know other ISPs still using this?
beeline has more 2 million of customers in ru, I think it's more than enough, not counting multiple smaller isps.
as for other countries, heard about some in CIS, Israel, France
two users from this thread are indeed a drop.2 Millions is a drop in the ocean, therefore I stand by my "not many ISPs" claim.
let me rephrase, fw has bug with any isp l3 vpn services that needs fqdn server address, official fw has it fixed.
also, with dns probing enabled it checks local dnsmasq for the response, not any real isp /whatever dns.
this could potentially bring issues with some unusual dnsmasq configurations, i.e huge fixed cache ttl or even absence of dns probe target
I need to setup a test VM to act as a DHCP + PPTP server to confirm whether or not it's broken. I should have more time soon to look into this as I'll be on vacation next week.
Not a problem, dns.msftncsi.com has a TTL of 25 seconds (which is why a Windows PC is still able to determine if it's connected or not even if the PC's DNS is set to point at the router rather than the ISP server.)
I'm not saying that if there is an issue I don't want to fix it. Just that I need first to confirm whether or not there truly is an issue, and determine which would be the best way to fix it. I'm not willing to blindly go for the easiest route, and fix one issue by creating another one. I consider the fact that stock firmware cannot resolve LAN hostnames to be a bug as as well.
Heya,
I am considering reverting back resolv.conf to match what Asus uses in stock firmware, which is to always use the DNS servers rather than 127.0.0.1 (which means always use dnsmasq). Primary reason would be this might be more robust for weird ISPs who use a DHCP + VPN type of architecture (as after the DHCP lease is obtained, it typically uses a special "temporary" DNS server that can resolve the ISP's PPTP/L2TP hostname).
The primary side effect of this is the router itself will no longer be able to resolve LAN hostnames. The most visible effect for end user is netstat-nat (on the webui) would no longer resolve LAN IPs into LAN hostnames (but it would still work for public hostnames).
Any impact on the existing scripts out there that are run on the router itself? Does any of these require to be able to resolve LAN IPs and hostnames?
This change would not affect LAN clients resolving hostnames (internal or external). Just when the router itself wants to resolve a hostname (e.g. for firmware update check).
Your question is off-topic, but to answer it anyway... It's probably OK and not "bad". But the exact behaviour is down to the client not the router. For example this is Windows' behaviour. Also consider that if your router's DNS server has stopped responding then there's likely to be a more general problem with the router or your internet connection. In such a case 8.8.8.8 is probably unreachable as well.I normally point local machines's dns to the router and secondary dns to 8.8.8.8.. is that bad?
Could it be made switchable ?
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