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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users One of the two DNS server going down causes impacts Post 303043083 by broy32000 on Friday 17th of January 2020 08:23:47 PM
Old 01-17-2020
One of the two DNS server going down causes impacts

Our computing enviornment consists for Linux, Solaris , AIX, Windows. /etc/resolv.conf file of each *nix has two entries. When the 2nd one goes down we are seeing impacts on AIX hosted services. We are breaking our head, to no avail yet. We have not seen any impact on non-AIX hosted services. While 2nd DNS server remains down, nslookup returns hostnames immediately.

We are trying to avoid running tcpdump, and was trying to capture DNS traffic from client through netstat. But netstat does not capture DNS traffic either.

Would you please give us a hand?
 

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EDITCAP(1)						   The Ethereal Network Analyzer						EDITCAP(1)

NAME
editcap - Edit and/or translate the format of capture files SYNOPSYS
editcap [ -F file format ] [ -T encapsulation type ] [ -r ] [ -v ] [ -s snaplen ] [ -t time adjustment ] [ -h ] infile outfile [ record# ... ] DESCRIPTION
Editcap is a program that reads a saved capture file and writes some or all of the packets in that capture file to another capture file. Editcap knows how to read libpcap capture files, including those of tcpdump, Ethereal, and other tools that write captures in that format. In addition, Editcap can read capture files from snoop and atmsnoop, Shomiti/Finisar Surveyor, Novell LANalyzer, Network General/Network Associates DOS-based Sniffer (compressed or uncompressed), Microsoft Network Monitor, AIX's iptrace, Cinco Networks NetXRay, Network Asso- ciates Windows-based Sniffer, AG Group/WildPackets EtherPeek/TokenPeek/AiroPeek, RADCOM's WAN/LAN analyzer, Lucent/Ascend router debug out- put, HP-UX's nettl, the dump output from Toshiba's ISDN routers, the output from i4btrace from the ISDN4BSD project, the output in IPLog format from the Cisco Secure Intrusion Detection System, pppd logs (pppdump format), the output from VMS's TCPIPtrace utility, the text output from the DBS Etherwatch VMS utility, traffic capture files from Visual Networks' Visual UpTime and the output from CoSine L2 debug. There is no need to tell Editcap what type of file you are reading; it will determine the file type by itself. Editcap is also capable of reading any of these file formats if they are compressed using gzip. Editcap recognizes this directly from the file; the '.gz' extension is not required for this purpose. By default, it writes the capture file in libpcap format, and writes all of the packets in the capture file to the output file. The -F flag can be used to specify the format in which to write the capture file; it can write the file in libpcap format (standard libpcap for- mat, a modified format used by some patched versions of libpcap, the format used by Red Hat Linux 6.1, or the format used by SuSE Linux 6.3), snoop format, uncompressed Sniffer format, Microsoft Network Monitor 1.x format, the format used by Windows-based versions of the Sniffer software, and the format used by Visual Networks' software. A list of packet numbers can be specified on the command line; the packets with those numbers will not be written to the capture file, unless the -r flag is specified, in which case only those packets will be written to the capture file. Ranges of packet numbers can be specified as start-end, referring to all packets from start to end (removing them all if -r isn't specified, including them all if -r is specified). If the -s flag is used to specify a snapshot length, frames in the input file with more captured data than the specified snapshot length will have only the amount of data specified by the snapshot length written to the output file. This may be useful if the program that is to read the output file cannot handle packets larger than a certain size (for example, the versions of snoop in Solaris 2.5.1 and Solaris 2.6 appear to reject Ethernet frames larger than the standard Ethernet MTU, making them incapable of handling gigabit Ethernet captures if jumbo frames were used). If the -t flag is used to specify a time adjustment, the specified adjustment will be applied to all selected frames in the capture file. The adjustment is specified as [-]seconds[.fractional seconds]. For example, -t 3600 advances the timestamp on selected frames by one hour while -t -0.5 reduces the timestamp on selected frames by one-half second. This feature is useful when synchronizing dumps collected on different machines where the time difference between the two machines is known or can be estimated. If the -T flag is used to specify an encapsulation type, the encapsulation type of the output capture file will be forced to the specified type, rather than being the type appropriate to the encapsulation type of the input capture file. Note that this merely forces the encap- sulation type of the output file to be the specified type; the packet headers of the packets will not be translated from the encapsulation type of the input capture file to the specified encapsulation type (for example, it will not translate an Ethernet capture to an FDDI cap- ture if an Ethernet capture is read and '-T fddi' is specified). OPTIONS
-F Sets the file format of the output capture file. -T Sets the packet encapsulation type of the output capture file. -r Causes the packets whose packet numbers are specified on the command line to be written to the output capture file, and no other pack- ets to be written to the output capture file. -v Causes editcap to print a number of messages while it's working. -s Sets the snapshot length to use when writing the data. -t Sets the time adjustment to use on selected frames. -h Prints the version and options and exits. SEE ALSO
tcpdump(8), pcap(3), ethereal(1), mergecap(1) NOTES
Editcap is part of the Ethereal distribution. The latest version of Ethereal can be found at http://www.ethereal.com. AUTHORS
Original Author -------- ------ Richard Sharpe <sharpe@ns.aus.com> Contributors ------------ Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu> 0.9.8 2002-08-08 EDITCAP(1)
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