-
-
-
-dnsmasq_restart=false
-v cedit /etc/hosts <<EOF || dnsmasq_restart=true
-192.168.1.1 wrt
-192.168.1.2 treetowl $IMPERSONAL_DOMAIN
-192.168.1.3 frodo
-192.168.1.4 htpc
-192.168.1.5 x2
-192.168.1.6 testvm
-192.168.1.8 tp
-72.14.176.105 li
-45.33.1.160 lj
-138.68.10.24 dopub
-# cant ssh to do when on vpn. some routing/firewall rule or something,
-# I don't know. I can get there from wrt but not my machine.
-# but we can get to it from this address, so, good enough.
-10.8.0.1 do
-EOF
-
-
-# avoid using the dns servers that my isp tells me about.
-if [[ $(uci get dhcp.@dnsmasq[0].resolvfile) ]]; then
- # default is '/tmp/resolv.conf.auto', we switch to the dnsmasq default of
- # /etc/resolv.conf
- v uci delete dhcp.@dnsmasq[0].resolvfile
- uci commit dhcp
- dnsmasq_restart=true
-fi
-
-
-# useful: http://wiki.openwrt.org/doc/howto/dhcp.dnsmasq
-
-v cedit /etc/dnsmasq.conf <<'EOF' || dnsmasq_restart=true
-
-############ updating dns servers ###################3
-
-
-# this says the ip of default gateway and dns server,
-# but I think they are unneded and default
-#dhcp-option=3,192.168.1.1
-#dhcp-option=6,192.168.1.1
-
-
-
-# results from googling around dnsmasq optimizations
-# about 50k in memory. router has 62 megs.
-# in a browsing session, I probably won't ever do 5000 lookups
-# before the ttl expiration or whatever does expiration.
-cache-size=10000
-
-# ask all servers, use the one which responds first.
-# http://ma.ttwagner.com/make-dns-fly-with-dnsmasq-all-servers/
-all-servers
-
-# namebench benchmarks dns servers. google's dns was only
-# slightly less fast than some others, and I trust it more
-# to give accurate results, stay relatively fast, and
-# not do anythin too malicious, so just use that.
-# download namebench and run it like this:
-# for x in all regional isp global preferred nearby; do ./namebench.py -s $x -c US -i firefox -m weighted -J 10 -w; echo $x; hr; done
-# google
-server=8.8.4.4
-server=8.8.8.8
-server=2001:4860:4860::8888
-server=2001:4860:4860::8844
-
-
-# to fixup existin ips, on the client you can do
-# sudo dhclient -r; sudo dhclient <interface-name>
-
-# default dhcp range is 100-150
-dhcp-host=f4:6d:04:02:ed:66,set:treetowl,192.168.1.2,treetowl
-dhcp-host=00:26:18:97:bb:16,set:frodo,192.168.1.3,frodo
-dhcp-host=10:78:d2:da:29:22,set:htpc,192.168.1.4,htpc
-dhcp-host=00:1f:16:16:39:24,set:x2,192.168.1.5,x2
-# this is so fai can have an explicit name to use for testing,
-# or else any random machine which did a pxe boot would get
-# reformatted. The mac is from doing a virt-install, cancelling it,
-# and copying the generated mac, so it should be randomish.
-dhcp-host=52:54:00:9c:ef:ad,set:demohost,192.168.1.6,demohost
-dhcp-host=52:54:00:56:09:f9,set:faiserver,192.168.1.7,faiserver
-dhcp-host=80:fa:5b:1c:6e:cf,set:tp,192.168.1.8,tp
-# this is the ip it picks by default if dhcp fails,
-# so might as well use it.
-# hostname is the name it uses according to telnet
-dhcp-host=b4:75:0e:94:29:ca,set:switch9429ca,192.168.1.251,switch9429ca
-
-
-# template
-# dhcp-host=,192.168.1.,
-
-# Just leave the tftp server up even if we aren't doing pxe boot.
-# It has no sensitive info.
-enable-tftp=br-lan
-tftp-root=/mnt/usb/tftpboot