

The issue fixes after the restart command but when I reboot it cimes back.
‘ls -lh /etc/resolv*’ spits out:
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 37 Mar 11 16:48 /etc/resolv.conf -> /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf
The issue fixes after the restart command but when I reboot it cimes back.
‘ls -lh /etc/resolv*’ spits out:
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 37 Mar 11 16:48 /etc/resolv.conf -> /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf
– Boot b3a9a949f8d1499fb0404672a02d2e34 – Mar 11 21:04:21 arch systemd[1]: Starting Network Name Resolution… Mar 11 21:04:21 arch systemd-resolved[1296]: Positive Trust Anchors: Mar 11 21:04:21 arch systemd-resolved[1296]: . IN DS 20326 8 2 e06d44b80b8f1d39a95c0b0d7c65d08458e880409bbc683457104237c7f8ec8d Mar 11 21:04:21 arch systemd-resolved[1296]: . IN DS 38696 8 2 683d2d0acb8c9b712a1948b27f741219298d0a450d612c483af444a4c0fb2b16 Mar 11 21:04:21 arch systemd-resolved[1296]: Negative trust anchors: home.arpa 10.in-addr.arpa 16.172.in-addr.arpa 17.172.in-addr.arpa 18.172.in-addr.arpa 19.172.in-addr.arpa 20.172.in-addr.arpa 21.172.in-addr.arpa 22.172.in-addr.arpa 23.172.in-addr.arpa 24.172.in-addr.arpa 25.172.in-addr.arpa 26.172.in-addr.a rpa 27.172.in-addr.arpa 28.172.in-addr.arpa 29.172.in-addr.arpa 30.172.in-addr.arpa 31.172.in-addr.arpa 170.0.0.192.in-addr.arpa 171.0.0.192.in-addr.arpa 168.192.in-addr.arpa d.f.ip6.arpa ipv4only.arpa resolver.arpa corp home internal intranet lan local private test Mar 11 21:04:21 arch systemd-resolved[1296]: Using system hostname ‘arch’. Mar 11 21:04:21 arch systemd-resolved[1296]: mDNS-IPv4: There appears to be another mDNS responder running, or previously systemd-resolved crashed with some outstanding transfers. Mar 11 21:04:21 masonarch systemd-resolved[1296]: mDNS-IPv6: There appears to be another mDNS responder running, or previously systemd-resolved crashed with some outstanding transfers.
Yeah I am positive I am running systemd
I can ping 1.1.1.1 and localhost but pinging google.com comes up with “temporary failure in name resolution”
I was able to get internet working by running the cimmand suggested by badlotus (I had already deleted the file they told me to the first time and then run the cimmand. So i didn’t delete it again because it was gone.) When I run that command my internet cimes back. However if I restart the issue comes back.
None of those config files exist in that folder location.
So I was able to get it working again by doing this solution that badlotus suggested. I did not delete the file because it was already gone after the first timw I attempted this. If I reboot my device however the issue comes back. If I run the command again my internet is back.
Badlotus’ solution:
“Have you tried deleting /etc/systemd/resolved.conf
and restarting the service with systemctl restart systemd-resolved
?”
Ok wtf. I retried this solution and it worked for some reason. I have no idea what happened differently. I didn’t delete the file because it was already gone.
However if I restart it breaks again.
I did and thay did not change anything.
As of right now I have tailscale uninstalled so I will reinstall it and try the values again.
EDIT: lol I forgot I do not have internet I cannot reinstall tailscale
EDIT 2: Pinging 1.1.1.1 works
That did not work, I deleted the file and then I restarted the service. I then restarted the pc just to make sure. Still no internet access and still same limited connectivity error.
No I did not edit this at all. Bkth were set to the value ‘2’
I changed them both to 0 and 1 and it did not fix my issue 🫤
○ systemd-resolved.service - Network Name Resolution Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/systemd-resolved.service; disabled; preset: enabled) Active: inactive (dead) Docs: man:systemd-resolved.service(8) man:org.freedesktop.resolve1(5) https://systemd.io/WRITING_NETWORK_CONFIGURATION_MANAGERS https://systemd.io/WRITING_RESOLVER_CLIENTS
Yes it does
I try to nano into my resolv.conf but it appears to only be a symbolic link file. I apologize for my ignorance but is there any other way to revert my dns back?
EDIT: the symbolic link leads to a directory that does not exist:
/run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf
This is the guide I followed:
https://tailscale.com/kb/1036/install-arch
I then restarted because I was getting several errors when trying to use the tailscale up command.
After thay restart I was able to get tailscale up to work but that is when the issue with limited connectivity arose.
No it was this concept that never came to be. It’s not possible/practical.
Just had my brother in law show me a concept phone where you just put in block modules for the things you want and need in a phone. Want more battery? Take off your camera block module and plug in more battery block modules.
Obviously the concept as presented is near impossible to achieve. I told him that and said we can get close. I showed him framework laptops that are trying to achieve the very thing he wanted (to a certain extent). He said that if they could make that a phone he would switch from his apple ecosystem in a heart beat. The ability to swap for a bigger speaker on the fly for get togethers and parties was tantalizing (big music guy).
Just interesting because even non tech people want this when you sell it to them properly. They don’t actually want a walled garden ecosystem that is “simple”.
It warms my heart seeimg all these 👶 emojis! Welcome all new lemmyheads!
This seems to have fixed it!! Thank you so much!