That was it ! One of my log files did have a couple of really long empty
lines that Analog inserted in the dnscache file and that caused those
warnings. The problem is that i edited the log file, eliminated those
lines, executed Analog (everything OK) and a day later the log file had
those lines again. I can't figure out what exactly is causing those lines
to appear but one things for sure: it has nothing to do with Analog.
I guess i'll have to ignore the warnings from now on.
Thanks,
Carlos.
At 14:37 17/06/99 , you wrote:
>Now i get it. Sorry ! I hadn't understood your previous reply. So what
>you're saying is that one of my log files is probably corrupt, not the
>dnscache file !!!
>I hadn't thought of that ! I'll check the log files.
>
>Thanks.
>
>
>At 14:30 17/06/99 , you wrote:
>>On Thu, 17 Jun 1999, Carlos Santos wrote:
>>>
>>> I've done that already and after some time they show up again !
>>> If it sends out these warnings but it procedes nonetheless (which it
does),
>>> i guess that's fine. But i'm not sure if it is affecting the IPs name
>>> resolution. Perhaps not. I guess i'll leave as it is but i'm afraid the
>>> number of warnings is going to increase as time goes by and more IPs get
>>> inserted in the file.
>>>
>>
>>Presumably you're analysing the same files, so it's trying to resolve the
>>same corrupt hosts again, and they get put back in the DNS cache file.
>>
>>I doubt it will affect the resolution of other hosts.
-----------------------------------------------------
CARLOS SANTOS (ICQ: 21537583)
NETOSFERA: http://www.netosfera.pt
Tel(Phone): (+351 53 276998)
Fax: (+351 53 274255)
Braga - Portugal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This is the analog-help mailing list. To unsubscribe from this
mailing list, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe analog-help" in the main BODY OF THE MESSAGE.
List archived at http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
------------------------------------------------------------------------