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Hello,
Was this working previously ?
If you are trying to have DHCP generate the /etc/resolv.conf file when starting/stopping the server, make sure to check your network configuration scripts to ensure that PEERDNS=yes.
It's likely your default DNS server is pointing to an IP address that is not capable of resolving DNS queries. You should check the DNS settings in the file that /etc/resolv.conf is pointing to. When you go to that file (/var/run/systemd/resolve/resolve.conf), look at the IP that is right next to the keyword namespace. You should set it to your router's IP address (which can be found with the command route -n. Look for the gateway column and take the one that's not 0.0.0.0) or you can also set it to a public DNS server such as 1.1.1.1, 8.8.8.8 etc.
Hope this helps !!
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