Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: DNS Response Issue
Operating Systems Linux DNS Response Issue Post 302961049 by rbatte1 on Monday 23rd of November 2015 10:12:08 AM
Old 11-23-2015
You can force a particular DNS to be queried like this:-
Code:
nslookup unix.com 172.30.3.246

Does that help?

It may be that your server tries only a few by default, but if some go offline then it will go to the others too. What happens if you knowingly set the first two addresses to servers that don't offer DNS? Does a ping or nslookup still work?



Robin
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. IP Networking

DNS issue.

Hi, We use linux as a DNS server for our local network. ( linuxnol.nollekens.be ) We can ping this machine on all our XP clients like this: C:\>ping linuxnol Until yesterday it was on our XP clients enough to type "ping ibm250" ( our 2de unix server, an AIX ). But after a shutdown of this... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: progressdll
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

DNS issue still not looking in files

anyone ever seen this problem with /etc/nsswitch.conf forcing the system to look in files then dns but the system ignores the files and goes off check the dn servers is there any further config I've missed ??? /etc/resolve.conf name servers >>>> boring IPS /etc/nsswitch.conf is set to... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: kie
5 Replies

3. IP Networking

Apache mod_proxy +DNS slow response problem

My company has a private network, including a Apache web server (Linux) and some WinXP machines. The web server had been configured to use mod_proxy to connect to window update site via another company proxy server. It works for few years. Recently, some parties had setup a DNS server on the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: donaldfung
2 Replies

4. Red Hat

DNS issue in Redhat 9

Hi all m newbie in linux and trying to setup my internal DNS server for local network.After messing with DNS for hours i am posting this. i have configured /etc/resolve.conf, hostname with domain name in /etc/sysconfig/network file,/etc/hosts file with local host entry and zone file... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Vaibhav.T
1 Replies

5. Red Hat

Issue in DNS set up

:wall:I am a beginer in Linux admin. I have build new DNS setting in my system. Please find the below procedure what I followed to build DNS. but at last when I fired nslookup command, its getting error. I am using RHEL5 OS. Please help me to resolve this below issue.. Advance thanks for... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pradipta_pks
1 Replies

6. Red Hat

dns update issue

i have redhat service as public dns i have added new entry but when i reload the named service i got this error in log the working directory is not writable (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: leganti
1 Replies

7. Red Hat

DNS Resolution Issue

Hello, Having issue resolving DNS using the IP address. Using the server Name it resolves fine. Was wondering if there is any configuration issue. # nslookup xxxxxxxx01 Server: Primary DNS IP Address: Primary DNS IP#53 Name: xxxxxxxx01.local domain Address: x.y.z.123 # nslookup... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ikn3
1 Replies

8. IP Networking

Tweaking the DNS response

Hi All, The following is the scenario. I open the browser and request a web page. The DNS query is sent to the DNS server of my company and replies my GNU/Linux machine with a DNS response. I have "insmod"ed a kernel module that picks up the DNS response and over rides the "Addr" field of... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rstnsrr
2 Replies

9. HP-UX

HP-UX DNS issue

Hi All, I'm having some problems with our HP-UX environment. I'm running Oracle EBS on a HP-UX system, and whenever my primary dns server goes down some of my clients can no longer connect. Everything on my windows side continues to work, and clients can reach the internet and other services... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: agonza07
6 Replies
Net::Nslookup(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Net::Nslookup(3pm)

NAME
Net::Nslookup - Provide nslookup(1)-like capabilities SYNOPSIS
use Net::Nslookup; my @addrs = nslookup $host; my @mx = nslookup(type => "MX", domain => "perl.org"); DESCRIPTION
"Net::Nslookup" provides the capabilities of the standard UNIX command line tool nslookup(1). "Net::DNS" is a wonderful and full featured module, but quite often, all you need is `nslookup $host`. This module provides that functionality. "Net::Nslookup" exports a single function, called "nslookup". "nslookup" can be used to retrieve A, PTR, CNAME, MX, NS, SOA, and TXT records. my $a = nslookup(host => "use.perl.org", type => "A"); my @mx = nslookup(domain => "perl.org", type => "MX"); my @ns = nslookup(domain => "perl.org", type => "NS"); my $name = nslookup(host => "206.33.105.41", type => "PTR"); "nslookup" takes a hash of options, one of which should be term, and performs a DNS lookup on that term. The type of lookup is determined by the type argument. If server is specified (it should be an IP address, or a reference to an array of IP addresses), that server(s) will be used for lookups. If only a single argument is passed in, the type defaults to A, that is, a normal A record lookup. If "nslookup" is called in a list context, and there is more than one address, an array is returned. If "nslookup" is called in a scalar context, and there is more than one address, "nslookup" returns the first address. If there is only one address returned, then, naturally, it will be the only one returned, regardless of the calling context. domain and host are synonyms for term, and can be used to make client code more readable. For example, use domain when getting NS records, and use host for A records; both do the same thing. server should be a single IP address or a reference to an array of IP addresses: my @a = nslookup(host => 'example.com', server => '4.2.2.1'); my @a = nslookup(host => 'example.com', server => [ '4.2.2.1', '128.103.1.1' ]) By default, when doing CNAME, MX, and NS lookups, "nslookup" returns names, not addresses. This is a change from versions prior to 2.0, which always tried to resolve names to addresses. Pass the recurse => 1 flag to "nslookup" to have it follow CNAME, MX, and NS lookups. Note that this usage of "recurse" is not consistent with the official DNS meaning of recurse. # returns soemthing like ("mail.example.com") my @mx = nslookup(domain => 'example.com', type => 'MX'); # returns soemthing like ("127.0.0.1") my @mx = nslookup(domain => 'example.com', type => 'MX', recurse => 1); SOA lookups return the SOA record in the same format as the `host` tool: print nslookup(domain => 'example.com', type => 'SOA'); dns1.icann.org. hostmaster.icann.org. 2011061433 7200 3600 1209600 3600 TIMEOUTS
Lookups timeout after 15 seconds by default, but this can be configured by passing timeout => X to "nslookup". DEBUGGING
Pass debug => 1 to "nslookup" to emit debugging messages to STDERR. AUTHOR
darren chamberlain <darren@cpan.org> perl v5.12.4 2011-08-15 Net::Nslookup(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:48 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy