You may be using NetworkManager with dnsmasq
as the DNS plugin. If so, it's being used as a local caching nameserver.
When its data is outdated, you can force it to reload its DNS cache with:
Use:
nmcli general reload dns-full
/interface wireless channels | |
add band=2ghz-b/g/n width=20 list=2GHz/20MHz frequency=2412 name=ch1 | |
add band=2ghz-b/g/n width=20 list=2GHz/20MHz frequency=2437 name=ch6 | |
add band=2ghz-b/g/n width=20 list=2GHz/20MHz frequency=2462 name=ch11 | |
add band=5ghz-onlyac width=20 list=5GHz/80MHz extension-channel=Ceee frequency=5180 name=ch36/38/42 | |
add band=5ghz-onlyac width=20 list=5GHz/80MHz extension-channel=eCee frequency=5200 name=ch40/38/42 | |
add band=5ghz-onlyac width=20 list=5GHz/80MHz extension-channel=eeCe frequency=5220 name=ch44/46/42 | |
add band=5ghz-onlyac width=20 list=5GHz/80MHz extension-channel=eeeC frequency=5240 name=ch48/46/42 |
# Set inotify watch limit high enough for IntelliJ IDEA (PhpStorm, PyCharm, RubyMine, WebStorm). | |
# Create this file as /etc/sysctl.d/60-jetbrains.conf (Debian, Ubuntu), and | |
# run `sudo service procps start` or reboot. | |
# Source: https://confluence.jetbrains.com/display/IDEADEV/Inotify+Watches+Limit | |
# | |
# More information resources: | |
# -$ man inotify # manpage | |
# -$ man sysctl.conf # manpage | |
# -$ cat /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches # print current value in use |