On 2021/02/04 11:53, Anton Aylward wrote:
On 2021-02-04 11:35 a.m., passiongnulinux@gmail.com wrote:
See the link, I launch a translate to answer you.
It says "Translating ...." And still says it 20 minutes later with no further detail.
While I can get to the original URL at: http://www.linux.org.ru/forum/general/15622136 Google translate turns it into an inaccessible URL that it says cannot be found. However, cut+paste of the text works, though I still have no clue what they are talking about: On openSUSE, Tumbleweed launched Wireshark. All is clear. I launch YaST Software, close it. There is no yast, zypper or package * in the processes, but Wireshark shows that someone (possibly NM) continues to send DNS queries to the SUSE mirrors. Moreover, it seems that the intensity of these requests depends on the activity of the network. It seems that everything has already calmed down, you ping 1.1.1.1 from the terminal and after a while DNS queries were sent again on the mirror sus. These are DNS queries, not TCP / UDP. They are not on a freshly booted system until you start YaST. Then there are not so many of them, but they are sent periodically. I thought it wasn't just Yast (Susi's mirrors) that had such an echo. Launched Firefox 74, there are, of course, tons of requests at once, despite tuning about: config and disabling unnecessary things (Firefox has long been a Trojan). But that's okay. I close Firefox (it also knocks when I close it, by the way). I think now DNS queries will go to Mozilla's servers. But no. Silence after closing. Someone sends DNS queries to Susi's mirrors. Who and why? The processes are silent, all update checks are disabled. Clarification: In /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf commented out the line conncheck.opensuse.org, otherwise NM branding openSUSE is constantly hammering there (I wonder how much this DDOS costs?). Also deleted the contents of the / var / lib / zypp / AnonymousUniqueId file so that YaST does not send the ID when upgrading and installing packages. But all this is not particularly relevant, he just clarified, maybe someone did not know. ....