That's not good. The 169.x.x.x address is coming from a Windows service
called APIPA (Automatic Private IP-addressing). APIPA is a service to
dynamically assign IP addresses to network clients when they can't reach the
DHCP server.

Mike
-----Original Message-----
From: Bryan Garmon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2008 8:38 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: NSLookup - results are not as expected

I'm losing hair on my head trying to understand what determines the order of
the IP addresses when they are listed in NSLookup?

For example when I run nslookup against my AD Domain name, I receive the
result:

Name: name.domain.com
Addresses: 169.254.0.152, 169.254.0.150, 169.254.0.151

What I am expecting to see is this:

Name: name.domain.com
Addresses: 169.254.0.150, 169.254.0.151, 169.254.0.152


How can the order be changed? 



~ Upgrade to Next Generation Antispam/Antivirus with Ninja!    ~
~ <http://www.sunbelt-software.com/SunbeltMessagingNinja.cfm>  ~




~ Upgrade to Next Generation Antispam/Antivirus with Ninja!    ~
~ <http://www.sunbelt-software.com/SunbeltMessagingNinja.cfm>  ~

Reply via email to