Joel Roth wrote: > Some nslookup oddities have been bothering me. Does it look > to you like my ISP is blocking certain DNS queries?
Something seems broken. Probably broken rather than blocking. > [maseru]$ nslookup debian.org I know nslookup is the venerable old tool. But it produces a lot of noise in the output. You might look into using with host or dig. $ host debian.org debian.org has address 206.12.19.7 debian.org has address 128.31.0.51 debian.org mail is handled by 0 master.debian.org. $ dig debian.org a +short 128.31.0.51 206.12.19.7 > $ nslookup debian.org 66.33.216.127 > ;; connection timed out; no servers could be reached > > $ nslookup ftp.us.debian.org 66.33.216.127 > ;; connection timed out; no servers could be reached Looks broken to me. I recommend installing a local nameserver and using it instead. Then you shouldn't have this type of problem. Plus since it is broken you are bound to have other problems with other addresses. For example you could install BIND9 and use the default configuration as a local caching nameserver. $ sudo apt-get install bind9 Then ensure that 'nameserver 127.0.0.1' exists in /etc/resolv.conf and you should be set. By "ensure" I mean that you should use either 'resolvconf' to maintain that file or perhaps use a 'dns-nameservers' statement in /etc/network/interfaces or edit the resolv.conf file manually or whatever is appropriate for your system. Bob
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