Did you check /etc/resolv? Does it point to any DNS by domain name? Zeeshan A Zakaria
-- www.ilovetovoip.com On 2010-06-18 2:04 PM, "sean darcy" <[email protected]> wrote: On 06/18/2010 01:42 PM, Zeeshan Zakaria wrote: > Based on my somewhat similar experience a few times... > www.ilovetovoip.com <http://www.ilovetovoip.com> > >> On 2010-06-18 1:29 PM, "sean darcy" <[email protected] >> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: >> >> On 06/18/2010 12:57 PM, Tim Nelson wrote: >> > ----- ... >> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: >> >> We h... >> >> Yes, it is a typo. The network is 10.10... >> <http://10.10.10.0/255.255.255.0>. >> >> sean >> If the internet server is down, there can't be a valid DNS server accessible to Asterisk. The asterisk server is a caching name server, but obviously won't be able to resolve addresses not in its cache. Asterisk clearly doesn't need to resolve addresses to connect calls internally or over the T1. Is there any way to turn off its requirement for a DNS server? Or at least not fail catastrophically? sean -- _____________________________________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and C...
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