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Strange DNS problem

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 7:47

The basic setup at my house is a DSL modem connected by USB to my flatmate's computer (it's the more convenient one to the phone jack), then WinXP's built-in internet sharing giving me net access on this machine.

It's been working fine for around a year, but just recently I've had major problems with resolving domain names on my box, while the net continues to work fine on my flatmate's. A reset of my machine does nothing, but a reset of his fixes the problem for a couple of hours before it occurs again.

I've tried restarting the DNS service on his machine when the problem happens, but no luck. We both run ZoneAlarm Pro but neither of us have made any changes to the settings, so a firewall problem seems unlikely.

Can anyone possibly come up with some suggestions as to what might be wrong? For reference, my flatmate's box is running WinXP SP2 and I'm running SP1.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 11:03

Hm, as a Ph.D. Computer Scientist, I think you have to install Linux or Firefox.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 11:23

>>2
Truth was told.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 11:26

As a 5th year CS student I ask you, what changes did you and your flatmate do to your systems around the time the problems started appearing? For while I know jack of fixing Windows problems I know that computer systems don't just break without someone fucking with them. One of you, your flatmate, or your ISP is to blame.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 11:43

I know jack of fixing Windows problems
I know that computer systems don't just break without someone fucking with them.

The second statement proves the first.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 11:51

Use Ethereal or a similar network sniffer to see what's happening on the wire. i.e. Are the DNS packets even being sent?

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 17:02

Furryfox will make your problems worse.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 17:13

The moment someone feels compelled to list their qualifications, they've just lost. Especially when those qualifications aren't much to talk about...

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 17:41

>>8
As a Professor of Psychology I feel qualified to say "Whoosh"

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-23 18:15

>>8
SHUT UP, YOU ARE USING TACTICS SIMILAR TO HITLER YOU NAZI

Name: 8 2006-02-23 20:53

SIEG HEIL!

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-24 21:09

>>4
(I'm OP) To the best of my knowledge no changes were made on either my computer or my flatmate's, besides standard user stuff like files being downloaded and such.

>>6
I'll give that a go and see what turns up.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-24 21:48

>>12
OP again. I've tried using Ethereal. DNS request packets leave my computer, arrive at my flatmate's, then get sent to the ISP's DNS servers. The ISP doesn't send a response back.

However, if a DNS request originates from my flatmate's machine the ISP DOES send a response.

This confuses me. Shouldn't the ISP's DNS servers treat all DNS requests the same way?

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-24 21:59

OP once more. This is possibly related: Ethereal has shown a large number of unusual DNS requests being sent out from my flatmate's machine to my ISP's DNS servers. They're unusual in that they're "Standard query PTR [name]" instead of the "Standard query A [name]" that DNS requests being sent from Firefox and IE are.

Should I be worried about this? Could it be at all relevant?

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-24 22:29

>>14
That's probably just the DHCP Client service doing its thing.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-25 22:41

Bump.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-25 23:01

If restarting your flatmates computer fixes the problem (albeit temporarily) then the issue is with his machine, I would say. Change your DNS. Yes, I know it's probably assigned by DHCP, but just ipconfig, get your ip and subnet (192.168.0.2, 255.255.255.0) and use your ISPs DNS directly, or find a free one on the interweb to use. If problems persist, it smells like a firewall issue on your flatmates computer. That, or spyware. Mind you, if he's connecting the modem to his machine via USB, there's no way in hell I'd trust him with my internets. I suggest you set it up via ethernet. USB adds random problems (like this one) so it could be what's at fault.

Actually, buy a router.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-26 1:00

>>17
(OP) I've tried changing my DNS settings to use my ISP's server directly. Hopefully it'll bypass the problem, though I can't know for certain until some hours pass. Thanks for the suggestion.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-26 19:59

>>18
(OP) It appears to have worked. Thanks.

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-27 2:04

Worked, yes, but if you're no longer using his machine to resolve DNS, then something is slightly borked with his machine =P

Name: Anonymous 2006-02-27 3:37

>>20
True, but it's not my machine and I have proper net access again. That's good enough for me.

Don't change these.
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