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Posted on Apr 09, 2009
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Dns Record not being deleted

Microsoft Windows Server 2003 All Updates installed and rebooted.
1. Deleted old record for a server named 'hops' out of DNS MC.
2. Still can ping 'hops' 192.168.201.207
3. dnscmd grain.guelph.local /RecordDelete guelph.local hops A
4. Record Deleted successfully, i can run this a thousand times and it says that everytime
5. Still can ping hops.
6. dnscmd grain.guelph.local /NodeDelete guelph.local hops A
7. still can ping hops.
8. nslookup hops
returns
*** Can't find server name for address 192.168.201.203: Non-existent domain
Server: Unknown
Address: 192.168.201.203

Name: hops.guelph.local
Address: 192.168.201.207

9.made sure no forwarders are on also.
10.Have another server 2003 syncing dns with this one, it also does the same thing as this one.

  • 1 more comment 
  • Josiah47 Apr 09, 2009

    I always ping by dns. and i get hops.guelph.local back with ip 192.168.201.207, because another server uses that ip now.
    Also Nothing in DNS logs.


  • Josiah47 Apr 17, 2009

    yes.

  • Josiah47 Apr 20, 2009

    I know my dns record is wrong.
    If i put just this server and another computer on its down network it still pings hops.guelph.local 192.168.201.207, and if i take the server down and only the computer on, it doesn't work, so it has to be getting it from the server right?
    this is an old dns record, how do i delete? when i have tried all of the above commands? whats next?


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1 Answer

Abhay Pujari

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  • Posted on Apr 09, 2009
 Abhay Pujari
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Does this server which is deleted from DNS has a static IP? If yes, then you will always be able to ping by IP address. Are you able to ping by name of the server?

Regards,
Abhay.

  • 1 more comment 
  •  Abhay Pujari
    Abhay Pujari Apr 09, 2009

    Are you able to ping by name of the server? 

  •  Abhay Pujari
    Abhay Pujari Apr 17, 2009

    Hi there,
    The basic concept is if you are able to ping it by name then your DNS records are wrong and server is able to resolve its name. Do you have DNS anywhere else, ie on router?


    Regards,
    Abhay.

  •  Abhay Pujari
    Abhay Pujari Apr 21, 2009

    Hi there,
    Can you please check your DNS servers for this entry? It should be somewhere. Please go ahead anddelete it if you find it. Clear cache and reboot DNS server service.


    Regards,
    Abhay.

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How to set DNS setting

This step-by-step article describes how to install and configure DNS on your Windows Server 2003 computer.

Before You Start loadTOCNode(2, 'summary'); Before you start to configure your DNS, you must gather some basic information. Internic must approve some of this information for use on the Internet, but if you are configuring this server for internal use only, you can decide what names and IP addresses to use.

You must have the following information:
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Note: The servers may be your mail servers, public access servers, FTP servers, WWW servers, and others.

Before you configure your computer as a DNS, verify that the following conditions are true:
  • Your operating system is configured correctly. In the Windows Server 2003 family, the DNS service depends on the correct configuration of the operating system and its services, such as TCP/IP. If you have a new installation of a Windows Server 2003 operating system, then you can use the default service settings. You do not have to take additional action.
  • You have allocated all the available disk space.
  • All the existing disk volumes use the NTFS file system. FAT32 volumes are not secure, and they do not support file and folder compression, disk quotas, file encryption, or individual file permissions
Install DNS loadTOCNode(2, 'summary');
  1. Open Windows Components Wizard. To do so, use the following steps:
    1. Click Start, click Control Panel, and then click Add or Remove Programs.
    2. Click Add/Remove Windows Components.
  2. In Components, select the Networking Services check box, and then click Details.
  3. InSubcomponents of Networking Services, select the Domain Name System (DNS) check box, click OK, and then click Next.
  4. If you are prompted, in Copy files from, type the full path of the distribution files, and then click OK.
Configure DNS loadTOCNode(2, 'summary');
  1. Start the Configure Your Server Wizard. To do so, click Start, point to All Programs, point to Administrative Tools, and then click Configure Your Server Wizard.
  2. On the Server Role page, click DNS server, and then click Next.
  3. On the Summary of Selections page, view and confirm the options that you have selected. The following items should appear on this page:
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    • Run the Configure a DNS Wizard to configure DNS
    If the Summary of Selections page lists these two items, click Next. If the Summary of Selections page does not list these two items, click Back to return to the Server Role page, click DNS, and then click Next.
  4. When the Configure Your Server Wizard installs the DNS service, it first determines whether the IP address for this server is static or is configured automatically. If your server is currently configured to obtain its IP address automatically, the Configuring Components page of the Windows Components Wizard prompts you to configure this server with a static IP address. To do so:
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    2. In the Internet Protocols (TCP/IP) Properties dialog box, click Use the following IP address, and then type the static IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway for this server.
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    5. When you finish setting up the static addresses for your DNS, click OK, and then click Close.
  5. After you click Close, the Configure a DNS Server Wizard starts. In the wizard, follow these steps:
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    2. To specify that this DNS hosts a DNS zone that contains DNS resource records for your network resources, on the Primary Server Location page, click This server maintains the zone, and then click Next.
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After you finish the Configure a DNS Wizard, the Configure Your Server Wizard displays the This Server is Now a DNS Server page. To review all the changes that you made to your server in the Configure Your Server Wizard or to make sure that a new role was installed successfully, click Configure Your Server log. The Configure Your Server Wizard log is located at %systemroot%\Debug\Configure Your Server.log. To close the Configure Your Server Wizard, click Finish.

-----------please let me know if this guideline helps-------------
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If you have a router between your computers and your cable-modem (or DSL-modem), then the router can automatically supply the "Primary DNS Server" and "Secondary DNS Server" and "IP Address" to your server computer, if you configure the network-adapter on the server to "automatically obtain an IP Address".

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I have remote software available and would love to help you fix this hands on if possible. I live for network problems ;)
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