Hi,
What to do if the domain name of one of my webserver, that me and some lab members use for work related stuff, is no longer resolved by our university DNS? When I first noticed it, I could see no resolution at all while now the domain resolves to a wrong IP. The site can be normally reached on any other network so there is no problem on my side I think.
Should I just wait (now more than 24 hours) or should I try anything? I am entitled to complain to our IT even though the issue is only with this not-really-professional FreeDNS subdomain?
EDIT: apparently some automatism marked this domain as malicious (absolutely it is not, not willingly and not compromised) and somehow DNS resolves to CNAME sinkhole.paloaltonetworks.com.
Try changing your DNS server in that case!
I tried to set it to 8.8.8.8 but I have still the same result. Can it be overridden at the router level? So far the only solution is to manually add the damn line to etc/hosts.
Probably not your problem but if 8.8.8.8 has some wrong DNS record cached you can flush the cache for one name at https://dns.google/cache and for 1.1.1.1 at https://one.one.one.one/purge-cache/
There are also commands on each of the major operating systems to flush local caches.
It is also possible that DHCP or IPv6 router advertisements reset your manual DNS setting of 8.8.8.8 depending on how you set it.
Another thing that can be happening is that the router or firewall is redirecting all port 53 traffic to their internal DNS servers. (I do the same thing at home to prevent certain devices from ignoring my router’s DNS settings cough Android cough)
One way you can check for this is to run “nslookup some.domain” from a terminal and see where the response comes from.
What does it mean?
nslookup my.domain.com Server: dns.google Address: 8.8.8.8 Non-authoritative answer: Name: my.domain.com Addresses: ::1 xx.x.xx.xxx (wrong IPV4 address from the other side of the world)
If I use 8.8.8.8 at home addresses is first of all “address” and is correct.
That looks like 8.8.8.8 actually responded. The ::1 is ipv6’s localhost which seems odd. As for the wong ipv4 I’m not sure.
I normally see something like
requested 8.8.8.8 but 1.2.3.4 responded
if the router was forcing traffic to their DNS servers.You can also specify the DNS server to use when using nslookup like:
nslookup www.google.com 1.1.1.1
. And you can see if you get and different answers from there. But what you posted doesn’t seem out of the ordinary other than the ::1.Edit just for shits and giggles also try
nslookup xx.xx.xx.xx
where xx.xx… is the wrong up from the other side of the world and see what domain it returns.Now it’s pretty clear, I am mistaken for a malicious site (probably because many different computers in the lab started to exchange data with this obscure freedns subdomain) by this software from Palo Alto Networks https://www.gavstech.com/palo-alto-firewall-dns-sinkhole/ which rewrites the DNS response
Interesting, thanks. I think this is what it is happening. Feels like I can put whatever DNS server and still end up with an internal one.
Your host sets it’s own DNS servers, if the router isn’t on the list, they don’t get pinged. Now they could try to man in the middle you, so you could try DNS over TLS, but it’s probably not your issue.
You’re DNS server settings likely never took hold. Like if you use a DHCP client, then override your DNS settings, that won’t take effect until you request a new DHCP connection.
Some Linux distros will have local DNS servers that you always point to which are a pain to update as well. Not sure about Windows and MAC.
good luck man!