Can I use two different DNS servers in the one command in the form of primary and secondary.
Take this for example:
dig @<primaryAddress> @<secondaryAddress> MX domain.tld
So if primary address is down, it will use the secondary address as a backup. It seems to work when testing, but thought... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Can please let me know what is the difference between the single line mode and multi line mode in regular expresions?
Thanks,
Chidhambaram B (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have these entries in the /etc/esolv.conf:
------------
domain xxxxxx
search yyyyyy
nameserver 127.0.0.1
nameserver aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
nameserver bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
-------------
When I use 'dig' or 'nslookup' command, like 'dig yahoo.com' it uses the localhost as the server.
I... (2 Replies)
I am relatively new to this forum and Unix scripting.
ksh script:
part 1 :will call a PL\SQL program will create 3 CSV file at the unix directory.
part 2 : will sftp the files to the EFT server.
Once the EFT server receives these file , it will transfer them to a shared windows folders.
... (3 Replies)
Dear All,
I want to get all the IPs of the A RECORDS for mail.google.com.
The aim is to deny access to these IPs.
I learnt that mail.google.com has several IPs.
I did the following steps:
1. whois google.com
2. I got the following as its DOMAIN SERVERS:
3.# dig @ns1.google.com a... (1 Reply)
Hey everyone,
Okay, so I've been having some fun with the dig command, and wanted to dig my old school. Two questions came up from this. So I:
dig @8.8.8.8 +recurse njcu.edu ANY
and the result is about 8 records, including the SOA record. One of them is this weird TXT record, and the other is... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am testing some code to match a grep to see if one of the dns server exists but it does not seem to match:
ERROR:
=======
CRITICAL: google.com DNS : ns3.google.com NOT found
CODE:
=====
if ; then
echo "OK: google.com DNS : ns3.google.com exists"
else
echo... (5 Replies)
Hi there, I'm currently working on an exercise to connect to a Windows iscsi target via a Red Hat initiator machine. I'm using Windows Server 2012 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux v7.1
I have created the target on the Windows Server box and the two devices can communicate with each other. Verified... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tech87
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
interface-order
INTERFACE-ORDER(5) resolvconf INTERFACE-ORDER(5)NAME
interface-order - resolvconf configuration file
DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/resolvconf/interface-order is used to control the order in which resolvconf nameserver information records are processed by
those resolvconf update scripts that consult this file. (The name of the file is apt because a resolvconf nameserver information record is
named after the interface with which it is associated.)
The file contains a sequence of shell glob patterns, one per line. The position of a record in the order is the point at which its name
first matches a pattern.
Patterns may not contain whitespace, slashes or initial dots or tildes. Blank lines and lines beginning with a '#' are ignored.
Resolvconf update scripts in /etc/resolvconf/update.d/ that consult this file include the current default versions of dnsmasq, pdnsd and
libc. (Actually they don't read the file directly; they call the utility program /lib/resolvconf/list-records which lists records in the
specified order and omits the names of empty records.)
EXAMPLE
# /etc/resolvconf/interface-order
# Use nameservers on the loopback interface first.
lo*
# Next use records for Ethernet interfaces
eth*
# Next use records for Wi-Fi interfaces
wlan*
# Next use records for PPP interfaces
ppp*
# Last use other interfaces
*
AUTHOR
Resolvconf was written by Thomas Hood <jdthood@gmail.com>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2004, 2011 Thomas Hood
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU-
LAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO resolvconf(8)resolvconf 18 May 2011 INTERFACE-ORDER(5)