In general, we can use resolv. conf in Ubuntu to set the DNS address. After restart, the address in resolv. conf will still return the original content. This is because the resolv. conf file is actually a Link file, and there is a resolvconf service in Ubuntu, which is used to control/etc/resolv. conf content. So once we restart the system or the service,/etc/resolv.
In general, we can use resolv. conf in Ubuntu to set the DNS address. After restart, the address in resolv. conf will still return the original content.
This is because the resolv. conf file is actually a Link file,
There is a resolvconf service in Ubuntu, which is used to control/etc/resolv. conf content. So once we restart the system or the service, the content in the/etc/resolv. conf file will be restored to the original content. Therefore, directly modifying/etc/resolv. conf does not solve this problem.
Solution:
1. Define the DNS address in the NIC configuration file:
Iface eth0 inet static
Address 192.168.0.10
Netmask 255.255.255.0
Gateway 192.168.0.1
Dns-nameserver 8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4
2. modify the configuration file of the resolvconf service:
Vim/etc/resolvconf/resolv. conf. d/base
Add or modify:
Nameserver 8.8.8.88.8.4.4
For more information about Ubuntu, see Ubuntu special page http://www.linuxidc.com/topicnews.aspx? Tid = 2
This article permanently updates the link address: Http://www.linuxidc.com/Linux/2015-06/119021.htm