PDFTutorials.50webs.com
HOME TUTORIALS FAQs ARTICLES CAREERS BOOKS DISCUSSION CHAT GUESTS
 

Cisco CCNA Certification Exam Tutorial: DNS And The IP Name-Server Command 

Tutorial Downloads

BSD Tutorial Downloads
C++ Tutorial Downloads
ECLIPSE Tutorial Downloads
FIREWALLS Tutorial Downloads
J2EE Tutorial Downloads
J2ME Tutorial Downloads
JAVA Tutorial Downloads
JBOSS Tutorial Downloads
LINUX Tutorial Downloads
MULTIMEDIA Tutorial Downloads
MYSQL Tutorial Downloads
NETWORKING Tutorial Downloads
ORACLE Tutorial Downloads
PERL Tutorial Downloads
PHP Tutorial Downloads
PYTHON Tutorial Downloads
SAP Tutorial Downloads
SOLARIS Tutorial Downloads
SQL Tutorial Downloads
SYMBIAN Tutorial Downloads
SYSTEM ADMIN Tutorial Downloads
UML Tutorial Downloads
UNIX Tutorial Downloads
VB Tutorial Downloads
WEBLOGIC Tutorial Downloads
XML Tutorial Downloads

MAINFRAME Tutorial Downloads
COBOL Tutorial Downloads
C# Tutorial Downloads
DOTNET Tutorial Downloads

(See Full List)


DATABASE TUTORIAL DOWNLOADS


Interview Questions

 C++
 Java
 J2EE
 J2ME
 CCNA
 Networking
 Software Testing/QA
 Visual Basic
 SAP-ABAP
 

(See Full List)


 

DNS behaviors of a Cisco router are important topics for both the CCNA exam and real-world production networks, and you probably didn't know there were so many DNS details before you began studying for the exam! In this tutorial, we'll look at the ip name-server command and its proper usage.

 

When a command is mistyped on a Cisco router, the default behavior of the router is to attempt to resolve it via DNS. First, the router looks for an IP Host table on the local router to perform this resolution – that’s what the “translating” word in the output is referring to. If there’s no IP Host table or the IP Host table doesn’t contain an entry for what you typed, the router will send a broadcast in an attempt to resolve this name through a remote DNS server. To prevent this broadcast, enter the global command no ip domain-lookup. Of course, to use DNS to resolve hostnames, ip domain-lookup would have to be reenabled if it’s been turned off.

R2#contin

Translating "contin"...domain server (255.255.255.255)

% Unknown command or computer name, or unable to find computer address

A command is mistyped as “contin”. The Cisco router’s default behavior is to resolve this entry locally via an IP Host table, which isn't present on the router. A broadcast is then sent out to find a DNS server to perform the name resolution. The DNS lookup attempt must time out before the configuration can continue.

R2#conf t

R2(config)#no ip domain-lookup

R2#contin

Translating "contin"

% Unknown command or computer name, or unable to find computer address

With “no ip domain-lookup” configured, the router doesn’t attempt to find a remote DNS server. It sees there is no local resolution configured and almost immediately sends a message to the console that the name can’t be resolved.

R2#conf t

R2(config)#ip domain-lookup

R2(config)#ip name-server 10.1.1.1

R2#contin

Translating "contin"...domain server (10.1.1.1)

A DNS server is installed on the network with the IP address 10.1.1.1. DNS lookup is reenabled with the command ip domain-lookup, and the IP address of the DNS server is specified with the ip name-server command.

It's just that easy to tell a Cisco router exactly where the DNS server is!

 

Back To Articles

 

Google