![]() ![]() The big advantage is that if you connect to a VPN, instead of having all your DNS traffic be routed through the VPN like in the past, you’ll instead only send DNS queries related to the subnet and domains announced by that VPN. This dnsmasq server isn’t a caching server for security reason to avoid risks related to local cache poisoning and users eavesdropping on other’s DNS queries on a multi-user system. ![]() This was done to better support split DNS for VPN users and to better handle DNS failures and fallbacks. On a desktop install, your DNS server is going to be “127.0.0.1” which points to a NetworkManager-managed dnsmasq server. That’s the second big change of this release. Using dnsmasq as local resolver by default on desktop installations This change affects all Ubuntu installs except for Ubuntu core. #No ip duc 2.2.1 softwareThough please note that you may then be getting inconsistent /etc/nf when multiple software are fighting to change it. I certainly wouldn’t recommend disabling resolvconf but you can do it by making /etc/nf a regular file instead of a symlink.
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