Hi
Most "broadband routers" will provide basic DNS relaying, and if you use DHCP to allocate addresses, they will specify their own address as the DNS address that machines on the LAN should use. But you can usually specify the IP address of your ISPs DNS server instead on the machine that you are running Analog on. That might improve matters.
I should have been more clear on this. The router is used as a pass-through, it does not use DHCP. Furthermore, there is a fully active name server on the machine. the ISPs DNS servers are listed as secondary. So, unfortunately, your solution does not help.
I think the best solution is to make analog be more subtle with its DNS requests. However I could not find any rate limiting options. Any suggestions?
joris
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