Trying to clear these entries with sudo dscacheutil -flushcache sudo killall -HUP mDNSResponder, you'll find that scutil -dns | egrep -i '(domain|nameserver)' yields the same resolver entries that your VPN client inserted (e.g. When you disconnect your VPN client, and issue a scutil -dns | egrep -i '(domain|nameserver)', entries that were pushed by the VPN client are left behind, which is definitely new and broken behavior. The issue that I see, which isn't being reported here is that effectively macOS is holding onto resolver information and not allowing to be cleared out via certain mechanisms that would normally work. I've been experiencing this issue on Big Sur 11.3.1 - using OpenVPN and a variety of other commercial VPN clients. Search the these two might be related, but who knows. nopeįlushed the DNS cache: sudo dscacheutil -flushcache. Killed the macOS services mDNSResponderHelper, mDNSResponder. I scrolled over the logs in the Console.app. What I tried so far to investigate the issue: If the browser has cached a domain name, the website opens just fine
executing dig no longer works, opening any website in any browser just times out, etc. The copy process does not finish and any samba share is no longer accessibleįurthermore DNS resolution no longer works: e.g.
Mount a samba share and copy a file to it, in my case it was PDF file with size of approx. Since the upgrade to Big Sur, I noticed network issues, regardless which network device is used Wi-Fi, LAN, it does not matter.Īfter some testing the issue is now reproducible as follows: