From what I can tell they developers expect everyone to do the config in exactly one way.

If you do the config differently (ie the old way, and if dns is not configured/defined I assume from dhcp and/or directly in the  Network manager config), then the software rewrites the file with a valid entry in it, to have no entry.

Developers seem to ignore backward compatibility and/or supporting how something has been configured since before they were born.



On Sat, Dec 17, 2022 at 9:24 PM Tim via users <users@lists.fedoraproject.org> wrote:
On Sat, 2022-12-17 at 16:38 -0800, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> If you are tired of all the bugs and Micky Mouse
> surrounding /etc/resolv.conf, here is how to make
> your own that Micky can't alter:

What I don't get is *why* it does this interference when you've either
manually configured your network settings on your PC, or you
specifically configure your DHCP server to configure your client the
way you want.  What good can come of doing unexpected things to a
network configuration?

--

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