aba3b1c6a3
Dnsmasq used SIGHUP to do too many things: 1) set dnssec time validation enabled, 2) bump SOA zone serial, 3) clear dns cache, 4) reload hosts files, 5) reload resolvers/servers files. Many subsystems within LEDE can send SIGHUP to dnsmasq: 1) ntpd hotplug (to indicate time is valid for dnssec) 2) odhcpd (to indicate a new/removed host - typically DHCPv6 leases) 3) procd on interface state changes 4) procd on system config state changes, 5) service reload. If dnssec time validation is enabled before the system clock has been set to a sensible time, name resolution will fail. Because name resolution fails, ntpd is unable to resolve time server names to addresses, so is unable to set time. Classic chicken/egg. Since commits |
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