On Wed, 05 Jan 2011 19:42:07 +0100, (François TOURDE) wrote: > Le 14979ième jour après Epoch, > vr écrivait: > >> On Wed, 5 Jan 2011 10:03:36 -0800, Mike Bird wrote: >>> On Wed January 5 2011 09:11:50 vr wrote: >>>> nslookup X.X.X.X >>>> ;; Got recursion not available from x.x.x.x, trying next server >>>> ;; Got recursion not available from x.x.x.x, trying next server >>> >>> Please "cat /etc/resolv.conf" and post the result here. >>> >>> --Mike Bird >> >> nameserver x.x.x.x >> nameserver x.x.x.x >> >> The x's are obviously my IP's which I don't want on a public mailing >> list. > > Your ip is probably 99.30.25.3, which is on your mail headers.. ;) >
No, that's the network I'm posting to this mailing list from. ;-) > It's strange to have your public IP used as a resolver on your local > network. > > Could you give us more infos about your connection and your router? How > are the machines connected ? This is a little difficult because I've been able to experience it on a few different networks with virtualized clients and virtualized DNS servers and others with physical clients and physical DNS servers. I suppose I can outline where I discovered it first with the hopes that the pitchforks won't come out since it's a Linux client querying a Windows 2003 server? In that scenario there is one ESXi 4.0 node hosting Debian Lenny and Windows 2003SP2. They sit on the same physical node. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected] Archive: http://lists.debian.org/[email protected]

