On Sat, 12 Dec 2009 19:25:43 -0800, Gary Kline wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 13, 2009 at 12:29:30AM +0200, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
>> You have some serious DNS issues with your current setup. I think you
>> should start by:
>>
>> 1) *Removing* from the NS records of your domain the name servers that
>>
On Sat, 12 Dec 2009 10:21:15 -0800, Gary Kline wrote:
>On Sat, Dec 12, 2009 at 11:01:47AM +0200, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
>>On Sat, 12 Dec 2009 00:09:52 -0800, Gary Kline wrote:
>>> Using lynx:
>>>
>>> Looking up www.thought.org
>>> Unable to locate remote host www.thought.org.
>>> Alert!:
Aaron Siegel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello
>
> I am having problems with my FreeBSD 5.4 gateway/firewall. When I enable a
> custom firewall (ipfw) or the "Simple" firewall through rc.firewall my
> clients are unable to resolve DNS when DNS does work with the "Open" ruleset
> that is pr
Hello
I am having problems with my FreeBSD 5.4 gateway/firewall. When I enable a
custom firewall (ipfw) or the "Simple" firewall through rc.firewall my
clients are unable to resolve DNS when DNS does work with the "Open" ruleset
that is provide by rc.firewall. I create the custom firewall co
I am no expert by any means, but the problem I was having sounds simular. I
had a fresh install on friday, I could get to the web but dns resolutions
were incredibly, slow and timing out most of the time. But my box is now
working perfectly.
#1 you dns nameservers addresses need to be in /etc/
> gentle people,
> apologies if this question should have been posted in the newbies
> list, but i saw a similar question in the archives of this mailing
> list, which did not quite answer my question.
>
> i'm trying to install FreeBSD for the first time. i'm installing it on
> my desktop.
>
> the
gentle people,
apologies if this question should have been posted in the newbies
list, but i saw a similar question in the archives of this mailing
list, which did not quite answer my question.
i'm trying to install FreeBSD for the first time. i'm installing it on
my desktop.
the installation ha
Ok, I wasn't getting the IPs in my resolv.conf because I had
dhclient.conf modified to supersede to the local DNS. Here's what I
did to determine the DNS that my ISP was assigning me.
I changed the dhclient.conf back to empty and restarted the network.
This then put the IPs of the two DNS servers
Ah, yes..dig. Forgot that it had a resolve time in there.
Here's a perfect example of the slowness I'm talking about:
su-2.05b# dig yahoo.com
; <<>> DiG 8.3 <<>> yahoo.com
;; res options: init recurs defnam dnsrch
;; res_nsend: Operation timed out
su-2.05b# dig yahoo.com
; <<>> DiG 8.3 <<>> yah
The problem with resolv.conf is that it just puts insightbb.com in
there. Doing a whois on insightbb.com gives a few DNS servers but none
of them are any speedier lookups then the others. If I put the IP that
insightbb.com resolves to it's still slow.
On Sun, 2 Jan 2005 09:41:20 -0600, Josh Paetz
On Sunday 02 January 2005 09:22, David Daugherty wrote:
> I'm running BIND 9 for my own DNS and I'm connecting to the
> Internet through cable modem. In my named.conf I have a forwarders
> section where I put the IPs for my ISPs DNS. Since my connection to
> the ISP is DHCP how can I determine the
David Daugherty wrote:
Are there tools/commands I can use to determine the resolution time
that my lookups are taking? A lot of my web browser requests are
timing out (name lookups) and I have to keep hitting refresh until it
finally resolves.
I'd try using dig:
> dig www.freebsd.org
At the end loo
I'm running BIND 9 for my own DNS and I'm connecting to the Internet
through cable modem. In my named.conf I have a forwarders section
where I put the IPs for my ISPs DNS. Since my connection to the ISP is
DHCP how can I determine the DNS IPs that have been assigned? I don't
see it when man'ing ifc
Hello,
Have a look at the different "ad.doubleclick.net" addresses included in the web site.
Find out the ip address and put them in your /etc/hosts file like this:
206.65.183.95 ad.doubleclick.net
206.65.183.95 uk.doubleclick.net
206.65.183.95 ad.uk.doubleclick.net
On Wed, Apr 14, 2004 at 08:43:53PM +, Travis Troyer wrote:
> I am running FreeBSD 5.2.1-Release on two systems, a server that acts as a NAT
> Gateway for my cable service, and a client. When trying to load various
> websites on the client machine, I get a delay, usually about 25 seconds,
>
I am running FreeBSD 5.2.1-Release on two systems, a server that acts as a NAT
Gateway for my cable service, and a client. When trying to load various
websites on the client machine, I get a delay, usually about 25 seconds,
during which Mozilla will tell me it's resolving the hostname. I also
I got it fixed (or atleast, as good as it can be fixed)
For future reference, here's what went wrong.
During the weekend, SAIX upgraded and repaired all Cisco equipment on their
network. During this repair, they somehow managed to break something major.
The /etc/ppp/options file on the offendin
On Thursday 31 July 2003 0:16, someone, possibly Barney Wolff, typed:
> On Wed, Jul 30, 2003 at 11:16:37PM +0200, Willie Viljoen wrote:
> > When connected to their ISP, SAIX, the machine can ping any live
> > internet IP and it can traceroute to anywhere, but, it can not talk to
> > any DNS server.
On Wed, Jul 30, 2003 at 11:16:37PM +0200, Willie Viljoen wrote:
>
> When connected to their ISP, SAIX, the machine can ping any live internet IP
> and it can traceroute to anywhere, but, it can not talk to any DNS server.
> Any traffic to port 53 UDP simply seems to dissapear.
Sheer guess, but
This gets a 10.0 on my weird-o-meter.
I have a FreeBSD 4.7-RELEASE machine sitting at a client which dials in and
collects their mail via POP3, and sends outgoing mail via a smarthost which
points to an SMTP server at their ISP.
This machine has worked fine since late last year, but started giv
Hey guys, I got it to work.
The issue was that I needed
send host-name "xxx.yyy.zzz"
and then not request a hostname or domain from the DHCP server.
I'm in the DNS now find. Thanks all of you for your suggestions.
-r
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd
>Are you using a special Dynamic DNS update client, or relying on some
>functionality in dhclient? Is the DHCP server a MS DHCP server, that
I guess I am relying on dhclient. I am not well versed in this business.
dhclient used to work (this was also a time when win2k worked, then things
chang
ad IP address lipperra-p1.rkv.ad.celera.com.
>
>which may be of interest because it shows the DNS entry being persistent
>right up until just after FreeBSD's dhclient starts, and then the DNS
>entry disappears.
>
>-r
>
>
>
>>From: "David" <[EMAI
t; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>References: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: Re: MS Dynamic DNS problems
>Date: Thu, 18 Jul 2002 08:11:59 -0700
>MIME-Version: 1.0
>Content-Type: text/plain;
> charset="iso-885
- Original Message -
> Thanks for the quick reply, Steve.
>
> I suspect that since they were about to modify my laptop's win2k install
> so that it started showing up in DNS, that there must be something doable
> on the client-side alone, if only I knew what that was.
>
> I have since rebo
on" which might have also been checked during the fix.
While win2k was up, I was able to ping the laptop. Then I rebooted to
FreeBSD (getting the same IP addr from DHCP) and pinged again and my DNS
entry had disappeared, no ping. Though pings by raw IP addr work fine.
-r
>Subject: Re: MS
On Thu, 2002-07-18 at 07:19, Ross Lippert wrote:
>
> I think I am having problems similar to those described here:
>
>http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/getmsg.cgi?fetch=2292608+2295040+/usr/local/www/db/text/2002/freebsd-questions/20020623.freebsd-questions
>
> Basically, something in the network at w
I think I am having problems similar to those described here:
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/getmsg.cgi?fetch=2292608+2295040+/usr/local/www/db/text/2002/freebsd-questions/20020623.freebsd-questions
Basically, something in the network at work here changed and now my
FreeBSD laptop no longer updates
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