And what does dig report for the same web site on all your DNS servers? Unfortunately these DNS problems tend to heal themselves after a little while, making them a bit hard to diagnose.
Note: You can make the problems less visible by lowering the negative ttls in squid.conf (negative_ttl and negative_dns_ttl). This way Squid will retry the DNS lookup quicker. The default is to remember the lookup failure for 5 minutes. Regards Henrik fre 2003-06-06 klockan 15.53 skrev Jim Shaffer: > Yes, they are all fully capable. Two of them are from my ISP. We did get > it to break again with the same website. > > -----Original Message----- > From: Henrik Nordstrom [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2003 4:53 PM > To: Jim Shaffer; 'Christoph Haas'; Squid-Users (E-mail) > Subject: Re: [squid-users] DNS Question > > > On Thursday 05 June 2003 20.38, Jim Shaffer wrote: > > The server is setup correctly with the three DNS server options. > > One local and two remote servers are listed. As soon as I turned > > off the proxy, the machine didn't have any problems. Now, we can't > > get it to break again. > > Are all the listed DNS server full DNS servers capable of resolving > any Internet names? If not, take away the DNS servers which are > not... > > Regards > Henrik -- Donations welcome if you consider my Free Squid support helpful. https://www.paypal.com/xclick/business=hno%40squid-cache.org Please consult the Squid FAQ and other available documentation before asking Squid questions, and use the squid-users mailing-list when no answer can be found. Private support questions is only answered for a fee or as part of a commercial Squid support contract. If you need commercial Squid support or cost effective Squid and firewall appliances please refer to MARA Systems AB, Sweden http://www.marasystems.com/, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
