![]() ![]() ![]() In reality, the issue is much more likely to be caused by your network connectivity. Many times, if you open your web browser, go to a URL, and that URL fails to bring up a website, you might erroneously blame DNS. ![]() So how do you troubleshoot this critical network infrastructure service when you are on an end user PC (or your PC) and DNS is not resolving a DNS name? Here are the 10 tips and tricks that I recommend you try to get DNS working again… 1. DNS is “the network” (not that they know what DNS is anyway). In these cases I assure them that the network is up and running fine but it is the DNS servers that are down! As you can imagine, that does not go over very well with them because to an end user, it is all the same thing. As a network admin, I have heard the alarming cry of end users moaning that the network is down, when it would be the cause of the DNS servers. DNS really is not a “nice feature” of a network, it is a requirement. Let’s face it, when DNS resolution is not working, using anything on your computer that has to do with networking is painful because there is good chance it will not work. We all need proper DNS resolution for our network applications. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |