/etc/ppp/ip-up.d/0dns-up is in pppconfig 2.3.19ubuntu1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o755.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 | #!/bin/sh
# $Id: 0dns-up,v 1.1.1.1 2004/05/07 03:12:59 john Exp $
# 0dns-up by John Hasler 1999-2006.
# Any possessor of a copy of this program may treat it as if it
# were in the public domain. I waive all rights.
# Rev. Dec 22 1999 to put dynamic nameservers last.
# Rev. Aug 20 2001 to use patch from Sergio Gelato <Sergio.Gelato@astro.su.se>.
# Rev. Dec 12 2002 to delete USEPEERDNS variable and add MS_DNS1 and MS_DNS2.
# Rev. Jan 5 2003 added explanatory text.
# Rev. May 15 2003 to move operations to /var/run/pppconfig.
# Rev. Apr 12 2004 to use resolvconf if installed.
# 0dns-up sets up /etc/resolv.conf for the provider being connected to. In
# conjunction with pppd's usepeerdns option it also handles dynamic dns.
# It expects to be passed the provider name in PPP_IPPARAM.
# Pppconfig creates a file in /etc/ppp/resolv for each provider for which the
# administrator chooses 'Static' or 'Dynamic' in the 'Configure Nameservers'
# screen. The files for providers for which 'Static' was chosen contain the
# nameservers given by the administrator. Those for which 'Dynamic' was chosen
# are empty. 0dns-up fills in the nameservers when pppd gets them from the
# provider when the connection comes up. You can edit these files, adding
# 'search' or 'domain' directives or additional nameservers. Read the
# resolv.conf manual first, though.
PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
# If pppconfig has been removed we are not supposed to do anything.
test -f /usr/sbin/pppconfig || exit 0
# If we don't have a provider we have nothing to do.
test -z "$PPP_IPPARAM" && exit 0
# Strip options.
PROVIDER=`echo "$PPP_IPPARAM" | cut -d' ' -f1`
ETC="/etc"
RUNDIR="/var/cache/pppconfig"
RESOLVCONF="$ETC/resolv.conf"
PPPRESOLV="$ETC/ppp/resolv"
TEMPLATE="$RUNDIR/0dns.tempXXXXXXXX"
RESOLVBAK="$RUNDIR/resolv.conf.bak.$PROVIDER"
# Is PROVIDER something we can use?
test -f "$PPPRESOLV/$PROVIDER" || exit 0
if [ -x /sbin/resolvconf ]; then
test -n "$PPP_IFACE" || exit 1
/sbin/resolvconf -a "${PPP_IFACE}.pppconfig" < "$PPPRESOLV/$PROVIDER"
exit
fi
umask 022
cd "$RUNDIR" || exit 1
# Is resolv.conf a non-symlink on a ro root? If so give up.
[ -e /proc/mounts ] || { echo "$0: Error: Could not read /proc/mounts" ; exit 1 ; }
[ -L "$RESOLVCONF" ] || grep " / " /proc/mounts | grep -q " rw " || exit 0
# Put the resolv.conf for this provider in a temp file. If we are using
# dynamic dns it will be empty or contain any resolver options the user
# added. Otherwise it will be a complete resolv.conf for this provider.
TEMPRESOLV=`mktemp $TEMPLATE` || exit 1
mv "$TEMPRESOLV" "$RUNDIR/0dns.$PROVIDER" || exit 1
TEMPRESOLV="$RUNDIR/0dns.$PROVIDER"
cat "$PPPRESOLV/$PROVIDER" > "$TEMPRESOLV"
# DNS1 and DNS2 are variables exported by pppd when using 'usepeerdns'.
# Do we have them? If so, we are using "dynamic dns". Append a couple of
# nameserver lines to the temp file.
if [ "$DNS1" ] ; then
echo '' >> "$TEMPRESOLV"
echo "nameserver $DNS1" >> "$TEMPRESOLV"
if [ "$DNS2" ] ; then
echo '' >> "$TEMPRESOLV"
echo "nameserver $DNS2" >> "$TEMPRESOLV"
fi
# ipppd uses MS_DNS1 and MS_DNS2 instead of DNS1 and DNS2.
elif [ "$MS_DNS1" ] ; then
echo '' >> "$TEMPRESOLV"
echo "nameserver $MS_DNS1" >> "$TEMPRESOLV"
if [ "$MS_DNS2" ] ; then
echo '' >> "$TEMPRESOLV"
echo "nameserver $MS_DNS2" >> "$TEMPRESOLV"
fi
fi
# We should have something in TEMPRESOLV by now. If not we'd
# better quit.
if [ ! -s "$TEMPRESOLV" ]
then
rm -f "$TEMPRESOLV"
exit 1
fi
# We better not do anything if a RESOLVBAK already exists.
if ls | grep -q "resolv.conf.bak"
then
rm -f "$TEMPRESOLV"
exit 1
fi
# Back up resolv.conf. Follow symlinks. Keep TEMPRESOLV
# around for 0dns-down to look at.
/bin/cp -Lp "$RESOLVCONF" "$RESOLVBAK" || exit 1
/bin/cp -Lp "$TEMPRESOLV" "$RESOLVCONF" || exit 1
chmod 644 "$RESOLVCONF" || exit 1
# Restart nscd because resolv.conf has changed
[ -x /etc/init.d/nscd ] && { invoke-rc.d nscd restart || true ; }
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