On 2013-10-16 09:47, Manson, John wrote:
I would add that Windows PC OSs by default have the dns client cache set to
'enable'.
Yes. And like Windows Server's DNS cache, these honour TTLs too, so as
long as TTLs are set properly, it's not an issue.
--
Dave Warren
http://www.hireahit.com/
htt
I would add that Windows PC OSs by default have the dns client cache set to
'enable'.
John Manson
U.S. House of Representatives | HIR Data Communications | Washington, DC 20515
Desk: 202-226-4244 | NCC: 202-226-6430 | john.man...@mail.house.gov
___
Plea
Thanks a lot . Now its very clear.
Regards
Babu
On Tuesday, 15 October 2013 6:28 PM, Steven Carr wrote:
On 15 October 2013 15:53, babu dheen wrote:
> If I change the TTL value on the particular zone after modifying a record
> in Redhat Linux BIND Caching DNS server, My Redhat bind Cach
In message <525d9517.6050...@chrysler.com>, Kevin Darcy writes:
>
> There's no way within the DNS protocol itself to reach out and tell a
> nameserver to purge an entry in its cache that hasn't expired yet.
>
> There are "out of band" ways: e.g. restart, recycle, rndc commands, etc.
> All of t
There's no way within the DNS protocol itself to reach out and tell a
nameserver to purge an entry in its cache that hasn't expired yet.
There are "out of band" ways: e.g. restart, recycle, rndc commands, etc.
All of those require admin access to the nameserver instances in
question. But nothi
On 15.10.13 22:53, babu dheen wrote:
To: Matus UHLAR - fantomas , "bind-users@lists.isc.org"
Hi Matus,
you don't need to send me private copies - we are using a mailing list for
a purpose... thank you.
If I change the TTL value on the particular zone after modifying a record
it's alread
On 15 October 2013 15:53, babu dheen wrote:
> If I change the TTL value on the particular zone after modifying a record
> in Redhat Linux BIND Caching DNS server, My Redhat bind Caching DNS server
> cache would be refreshed after 300 seconds but what if my backend windows
> DNS server is still r
On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 10:53:13PM +0800, babu dheen wrote:
> Hi Matus,
> "The standard way to handle this situation is, when you know you
> are going to make a change, to lower TTL of a particular RR to a
> small value (e.g. 300) and after change to restore the TTL to
> sane standard value (e.g
Hi Matus,
"The standard way to handle this situation is, when you know you are going to
make a change, to lower TTL of a particular RR to a small value (e.g. 300)
and after change to restore the TTL to sane standard value (e.g. 43200)."
I just need clarification on your above update.
If I c
On 15.10.13 19:38, babu dheen wrote:
I am running BIND caching DNS server in Redhat Linux. This DNS server is
used as name server for other DNS servers which are running in Windows
2003. Whenever I modify a existing record in BIND DNS caching server zone,
its not immediately taking affect in my
Hi,
I am running BIND caching DNS server in Redhat Linux. This DNS server is used
as name server for other DNS servers which are running in Windows 2003.
Whenever I modify a existing record in BIND DNS caching server zone, its not
immediately taking affect in my Windows DNS servers. But if I
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