MudRock
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 1,175
- Location
- Manitoba, Canada
Switched to OpenDNS. Works fine. Tried Google, still a lot not resolving.
Forgive my ignorance here but isnt this kind of thing all about what you have cached and what your dns server currently thinks the ip is?
So you can't say i'm using so and so and im fine because maybe you have the correct info cached or maybe ur dns server ur connected to has the correct info. You could however try something like https://dnschecker.org/ to check the results of a bunch of dns servers and then use the ones returning the appropriate ip.
Right right? or no? My networking is weak.
Many sites and services even suggest 5 minute TTLs. Longer TTLs could help if your DNS servers or one in between get attacked, but are terrible if your site is attacked, or if you need to rapidly change hardware/IP/location.You are correct...to a point. There is a setting controlled by the top DNS server that controls the domain (say..computerrepairtech.com), which all DNS servers below that must follow...and that is called the "TTL"...Time To Live".
Historically this used to be 24 hours (86400 seconds). More commonly it's less than that, especially for some high SLA services with redundant or failover sites, it's often as low as 900 seconds now. (15 minutes) (even less probably)
Meaning...say you run a DNS server on your local network...you go lookup a site (www.computerrepairtech.com0 the first time, your workstation will query your DNS server...it will not have it cached locally from a prior lookup, so it will go upstream to the DNS forwarder up on the internet like your ISP or OpenDNS or GoogleDNS) it has and grab that record. It will hold that record for 24 hours...for example (if the TTL of that domain computerrepairtech was defaulted to 86400 seconds...additional visits that day will respond fast because your DNS server caches it for 24 hours. But the following day, after 24 hours, it will "flush itself" from the DNS server and the DNS server will have to turn to its forwarder again.
There are other variables, and some DNS servers will ignore the original TTL and cache records longer. There are pros, and cons, to this.
"..until the elite cease and desist their agenda of a New World Order and abandon their plans of a One World Totalitarian Government."- Ridiculous Alex Jones type conspiracy nonsense. Name one country willing to give up its autonomy.