On 18/03/2020 00:30, Sasha Litvak wrote:
> Simon,
>
> Hosts in domain .consul are resolved by DNS servers forwarding requests
> to a consul clusters. I also have hard coded direct consul server
> records for .consul in dnsmasq config. Nothing in /etc/hosts . Consul
> returns records with TTL
Simon,
Hosts in domain .consul are resolved by DNS servers forwarding requests to
a consul clusters. I also have hard coded direct consul server records for
.consul in dnsmasq config. Nothing in /etc/hosts . Consul returns records
with TTL 0 . I perhaps wrongly thought it meant they are not ca
On 17/03/2020 01:31, Sasha Litvak wrote:
> I couldn't find a specific answer anywhere so hopefully someone has a
> clue on this list
>
> We are using dnsmasq on our servers as a caching dns solution.
>
> Most of our domains are resolved by a wildcard record like this
>
> $TTL 3600 ; 1 hour
Geert,
What is the meaning of this?
On Tue, Mar 17, 2020, 1:48 AM Geert Stappers wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 16, 2020 at 08:31:17PM -0500, Sasha Litvak wrote:
> > I couldn't find a specific answer anywhere so hopefully someone has a
> > clue on this list
> >
> > We are using dnsmasq on our servers as
Geert,
Just in case, .consul is not a registered domain name. It is assigned
with Hashicorp consul service discovery product and is internal to us.
Whence forwarders.
On Tue, Mar 17, 2020, 9:08 AM Sasha Litvak
wrote:
> Geert,
>
> What is the meaning of this?
>
> On Tue, Mar 17, 2020, 1:48 AM
On Mon, Mar 16, 2020 at 08:31:17PM -0500, Sasha Litvak wrote:
> I couldn't find a specific answer anywhere so hopefully someone has a
> clue on this list
>
> We are using dnsmasq on our servers as a caching dns solution.
>
> Most of our domains are resolved by a wildcard record like this
>
> $TT
I couldn't find a specific answer anywhere so hopefully someone has a
clue on this list
We are using dnsmasq on our servers as a caching dns solution.
Most of our domains are resolved by a wildcard record like this
$TTL 3600 ; 1 hour
A 10.10.10.23
$ORIGIN exam