Hello all,
This is more of a "Do you know why this works, and can you explain it" question than anything.
I have a new windows 2003 machine that I'm using on my network that serves as (among other things) a DNS server. My initial problem was that DNS lookups were stalling out for about a second before being resolved.
My suspicion was that the forwarder wasn't working properly, and Windows was getting hung up looking around to see if it knew were xxx.com was before giving up and forwarding the request on.
The reason that I thought this was that if I set a client machine to use the address of the forwarder directly as its primary DNS server (instead of the win2003 server), lookups were very snappy. This ruled out there being a problem with the ISP's server.
I compared and compared settings against another box that had DNS working quite well on, and to the best of my abilities, I could not find anything out of the ordinary.
Ok, so now comes the wierd part. I removed the forwarder completely from the Windows DNS, and now DNS lookups are lightning fast.
The only address that the server now has is its default gateway, and that (of course) is pointed at my router. All the clients are then pointed at the server for DNS, and it is all working flawlessly.
I'm very confused by this behavior, and am hoping that someone can explain to me how Windows is figuring out where these addresses resolve to if not with a forwarder.
Thanks for any insight you might be able to provide.
-paul
The answer to getting answered -- faq855-2992
This is more of a "Do you know why this works, and can you explain it" question than anything.
I have a new windows 2003 machine that I'm using on my network that serves as (among other things) a DNS server. My initial problem was that DNS lookups were stalling out for about a second before being resolved.
My suspicion was that the forwarder wasn't working properly, and Windows was getting hung up looking around to see if it knew were xxx.com was before giving up and forwarding the request on.
The reason that I thought this was that if I set a client machine to use the address of the forwarder directly as its primary DNS server (instead of the win2003 server), lookups were very snappy. This ruled out there being a problem with the ISP's server.
I compared and compared settings against another box that had DNS working quite well on, and to the best of my abilities, I could not find anything out of the ordinary.
Ok, so now comes the wierd part. I removed the forwarder completely from the Windows DNS, and now DNS lookups are lightning fast.
The only address that the server now has is its default gateway, and that (of course) is pointed at my router. All the clients are then pointed at the server for DNS, and it is all working flawlessly.
I'm very confused by this behavior, and am hoping that someone can explain to me how Windows is figuring out where these addresses resolve to if not with a forwarder.
Thanks for any insight you might be able to provide.
-paul


The answer to getting answered -- faq855-2992