2008/11/24 Brandon Betances <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Theres 2 records in my DNS server...how many problems could there be? 2
> records and they both point to the same address.
>
> On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 4:17 PM, Jack Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>>
>> 2008/11/24 Brandon Betances <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> > now, I set the AppPool to NetworkService, and all Impersonation and Anon
>> > Authentication to the Identity Pool, it works again.
>> >
>> > Baffling, really.
>> >
>> > On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 2:38 PM, BBetances <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> I can't stand this anymore. Here's my problem:
>> >>
>> >> IIS starts wonderfully, everything works, the sites work, I can
>> >> connect through VS2008. This is a development server, BTW. When I
>> >> leave VS running idle for a few minutes, usually 10, i'm guessing it
>> >> times out, and I know this because my DNS query doesnt go through. My
>> >> domain is home.net, so when I navigate to www.home.net, instead of
>> >> seeing my page, I see the Internet implementation (a stupid real
>> >> estate link site, check it out). I changed the binding to dc.home.net,
>> >> the name of the server im on, and get a 404.
>> >>
>> >> The real problem here, is that the issue is consistent, but the
>> >> resolution is not. Sometimes, I recycle the app pool, and it works.
>> >> Sometimes I have to change the identity of the app pool, and that
>> >> works. Most of the time, its the anonymous connection settings that
>> >> need to be changed, and sometimes, its the ASP Impersonation that is
>> >> the problem. My issue with these resolutions is that I use my Admin
>> >> identity to connect to everything. No pass-through, no identity pool,
>> >> and if I did use the app identity, it would still be administrative. I
>> >> have full permissions on all drives and paths, so I should'nt be
>> >> getting this problem. But it's very perplexing.
>> >>
>> >> Any ideas?
>> >
>>
>>
>>
>> This has almost nothing to do with IIS, and everything to do with DNS.
>>  Perhaps a little reading is in order
>
>

Your DNS server daemon configuration is not the only setting you
should be concerned about W.R.T. DNS issues. The application hosts
plays a part in this conversation as well.

P.S.
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