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Operating Systems AIX Ldapsearch takes minutes when using FQDN vs IP Post 302944463 by subrkann on Tuesday 19th of May 2015 12:46:56 PM
Old 05-19-2015
So your AD and DNS services are running in one server. I can see you are able to ping your primary DNS IP without any problems. This is not the issue that I was suspecting, looks like this is something else.

---------- Post updated at 07:46 PM ---------- Previous update was at 07:19 PM ----------

Just noticed some non-standard configuration on your /etc/resolv.conf file.

You can keep either domain or search but not both at the same time. This is something not usual. Any specific reason for keeping both domain and search on your /etc/resolv.conf ? If there is no specific reasons then try to update your /etc/resolv.conf and /etc/netsvc.conf files as following:

Take a backup of these two files:

Code:
# cp -p /etc/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf.MMDDYY
# cp -p /etc/netsvc.conf /etc/netsvc.conf.MMDDYY

Update your /etc/resolv.conf exactly same as below:

Code:
# vi /etc/resolv.conf
search    aix.b.a b.a
nameserver    10.0.0.3

Update /etc/netsvc.conf file:

Code:
# vi /etc/netsvc.conf

Search for "hosts=bind,local" on /etc/netsvc.conf and modify it as following:

Code:
hosts = local4 , bind4

This User Gave Thanks to subrkann For This Post:
 

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RESOLV.CONF(5)							File Formats Manual						    RESOLV.CONF(5)

NAME
resolv.conf - Domain Name System resolver configuration SYNOPSIS
/etc/resolv.conf DESCRIPTION
The /etc/resolv.conf is used to configure how the host will use the Domain Name System to resolve hostnames to IP addresses. It may con- tain these two lines: nameserver IP-address domain domain-name The nameserver entry tells the IP address of the host to use for DNS queries. If it is set to 127.0.0.1 (which is the default) then the local name daemon is used that may use the /etc/hosts database to translate host names. You normally only need a nameserver entry if the name server is at the other side of a router. The default nonamed name server can't look beyond the local network. The domain entry tells the default domain to use for unqualified hostnames. This entry is usually not given in which case the domain of the local host is used. The long version of this story can be found in resolver(5). FILES
/etc/resolv.conf DNS resolver configuration file. SEE ALSO
resolver(5), hosts(5), nonamed(8), boot(8). AUTHOR
Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl) RESOLV.CONF(5)
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