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Previously on "nslookup and dns failure"

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  • NotAllThere
    replied
    I'll try various of these things when I'm back at work on Tuesday.

    Leave a comment:


  • DealorNoDeal
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post

    It sometimes works, sometimes doesn't.
    Does ping -a ip_address reveal anything?

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Originally posted by PerfectStorm View Post
    Some domains have ping blocked dont they - could be that
    It sometimes works, sometimes doesn't.

    Leave a comment:


  • PerfectStorm
    replied
    Some domains have ping blocked dont they - could be that

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Sorry. Bunch of typos in the original post. Fixed now.

    I tried my workaround again and it seems it was coincidence. Putting the ip address directly works.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lance
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
    Can anyone explain this? Windows 11.

    I ping something like myserver.nat.com and get: Ping request could not find host myserver.nat.com. Please check the name and try again.
    I then nslookup myserver.nat.com and get something like
    Server: mydnsserver.nat.com
    Address: 10.1.1.1


    Name: myserver.nat.com
    Address: 10.1.1.2


    And now the ping works.
    If I pinged something of mine and got a response based on a different name, it suggests it found a CNAME record rather than an A record. Nslookup should show CNAME lookups as aliases.

    Like this lookup to an autodiscover CNAME

    C:> nslookup autodiscover.domain.com

    Server: custcache01.dns.zen.net.uk
    Address: 212.23.3.100

    Non-authoritative answer:
    Name: autod.ms-acdc-autod.office.com
    Addresses: 2603:1026:c06:141e::8
    2603:1026:c06:23::8
    2603:1026:c06:1f::8
    2603:1026:c06:180d::8
    52.97.211.168
    52.97.129.72
    52.97.129.248
    52.97.179.248
    Aliases: autodiscover.domain.com
    autodiscover.outlook.com
    autod.ha-autod.office.com
    and the corresponding ping would be
    c:\> ping autodiscover.domain.com

    Pinging autod.ms-acdc-autod.office.com [52.97.211.72] with 32 bytes of data:
    Reply from 52.97.211.72: bytes=32 time=14ms TTL=243
    Reply from 52.97.211.72: bytes=32 time=15ms TTL=243
    Reply from 52.97.211.72: bytes=32 time=14ms TTL=243
    Reply from 52.97.211.72: bytes=32 time=20ms TTL=243

    Leave a comment:


  • jamesbrown
    replied
    Windows is probably caching the result of the DNS nslookup so that ping doesn’t then attempt it until it’s deleted from the cache. The ping command ordinarily needs to do the DNS lookup of your hostname and then send/receive packets. If the lookup part fails via ping, I think that would explain it. As to why it fails intermittently, I have no idea. Does it ever fail if you ping the FQDN, for example?

    Leave a comment:


  • DealorNoDeal
    replied
    Weird.

    After you've done nsloopup myserver.nat.com, how long does ping myserver.nat.com keep working? Just for that CMD session, or until you reboot?

    When you get the failure, the following might reveal something:

    ping -a 10.1.1.2

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    started a topic nslookup and dns failure

    nslookup and dns failure

    Can anyone explain this? Windows 11.

    I ping something like myserver.nat.com and get: Ping request could not find host myserver.nat.com. Please check the name and try again.
    I then nslookup myserver.nat.com and get something like
    Server: mydnsserver.nat.com
    Address: 10.1.1.1


    Name: myserver.nat.com
    Address: 10.1.1.2


    And now the ping works.

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