2011/9/23 Kevin Darcy k...@chrysler.com:
NXDOMAIN is a *permanent* response; at least it's permanent in the absence
of any change the relevant DNS RRset or zone.
You're almost certainly getting the NXDOMAIN because you're spoofing the
root servers, and your fake root servers don't have the same
2011/9/26 Matus UHLAR - fantomas uh...@fantomas.sk:
2011/9/23 Kevin Darcy k...@chrysler.com:
NXDOMAIN is a *permanent* response; at least it's permanent in the
absence
of any change the relevant DNS RRset or zone.
You're almost certainly getting the NXDOMAIN because you're spoofing the
2011/9/23 Kevin Darcyk...@chrysler.com:
You're almost certainly getting the NXDOMAIN because you're spoofing
the
root servers, and your fake root servers don't have the same
knowledge as
the real ones, so they'll return NXDOMAIN for some queries (whereas
dig
+trace does not, because it
Why are you going through all of these gyrations? The forwarding algorithm
in BIND has for a long time been based on RTT, so if one forwarder, or a set
of forwarders, stops working, the other(s) will be used automatically. In
other words, forwarder failover works without any special
On 9/21/2011 10:01 PM, Drunkard Zhang wrote:
Why are you going through all of these gyrations? The forwarding algorithm
in BIND has for a long time been based on RTT, so if one forwarder, or a set
of forwarders, stops working, the other(s) will be used automatically. In
other words, forwarder
On 9/22/2011 6:03 AM, Drunkard Zhang wrote:
Oops, I misunderstood. But I want to resolve this problem: take
news.qq.com for example, I DID saw that it's unresolvable to one group
(they returned NXDomain), at meantime it's no problem to another
group, and dig news.qq.com +trace returned correct
2011/9/23 Kevin Darcy k...@chrysler.com:
On 9/21/2011 10:01 PM, Drunkard Zhang wrote:
Why are you going through all of these gyrations? The forwarding
algorithm
in BIND has for a long time been based on RTT, so if one forwarder, or a
set
of forwarders, stops working, the other(s) will be
2011/9/20 Drunkard Zhang gongfan...@gmail.com:
I got 4 DNSs doing recursive resolution, which splited into 2 groups,
and a couple of dns caches. Each group of recursion DNS using their
own net link, which is different.
Here's problem: I want a dns-cache to use one group of recursion DNS
as
2011/9/20 Drunkard Zhang gongfan...@gmail.com:
I got 4 DNSs doing recursive resolution, which splited into 2 groups,
and a couple of dns caches. Each group of recursion DNS using their
own net link, which is different.
Here's problem: I want a dns-cache to use one group of recursion DNS
as
On 9/20/2011 5:08 AM, Drunkard Zhang wrote:
I got 4 DNSs doing recursive resolution, which splited into 2 groups,
and a couple of dns caches. Each group of recursion DNS using their
own net link, which is different.
Here's problem: I want a dns-cache to use one group of recursion DNS
as their
When I query a name, the dns-cache queries forwarders for gTLDs
instead of using local hint file, why?
local hint file? I'm not sure what you mean here.
This file just replace the original root-servers with all my 4
recursive DNS's domain name and IP, nothing other.
And the dns-cache does
Why are you going through all of these gyrations? The forwarding algorithm
in BIND has for a long time been based on RTT, so if one forwarder, or a set
of forwarders, stops working, the other(s) will be used automatically. In
other words, forwarder failover works without any special
I got 4 DNSs doing recursive resolution, which splited into 2 groups,
and a couple of dns caches. Each group of recursion DNS using their
own net link, which is different.
Here's problem: I want a dns-cache to use one group of recursion DNS
as their forwarders, and use another group as backup. (
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