<p>Did you check /etc/resolv? Does it point to any DNS by domain name?<br></p>
<p>Zeeshan A Zakaria</p>
<p>--<br>
<a href="http://www.ilovetovoip.com">www.ilovetovoip.com</a></p>
<p><blockquote type="cite">On 2010-06-18 2:04 PM, "sean darcy" <<a href="mailto:seandarcy2@gmail.com">seandarcy2@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br><br><p><font color="#500050">On 06/18/2010 01:42 PM, Zeeshan Zakaria wrote:<br>
> Based on my somewhat similar experience a few times...</font></p>> <a href="http://www.ilovetovoip.com" target="_blank">www.ilovetovoip.com</a> <<a href="http://www.ilovetovoip.com" target="_blank">http://www.ilovetovoip.com</a>><br>
<p><font color="#500050">><br>>> On 2010-06-18 1:29 PM, "sean darcy" <<a href="mailto:seandarcy2@gmail.com">seandarcy2@gmail.com</a></font></p><p><font color="#500050">>> <mailto:<a href="mailto:seandarcy2@gmail.com">seandarcy2@gmail.com</a>>> wrote:<br>
>><br>>> On 06/18/2010 12:57 PM, Tim Nelson wrote:<br>>> > ----- ...</font></p><p><font color="#500050">>> <mailto:<a href="mailto:seandarcy2@gmail.com">seandarcy2@gmail.com</a>>> wrote:<br>
>> >> We h...<br>>><br>>> Yes, it is a typo. The network is 10.10...</font></p>>> <<a href="http://10.10.10.0/255.255.255.0" target="_blank">http://10.10.10.0/255.255.255.0</a>>.<br>
>><br>
>> sean<br>
>><br>
<br>
If the internet server is down, there can't be a valid DNS server<br>
accessible to Asterisk. The asterisk server is a caching name server,<br>
but obviously won't be able to resolve addresses not in its cache.<br>
<br>
Asterisk clearly doesn't need to resolve addresses to connect calls<br>
internally or over the T1. Is there any way to turn off its requirement<br>
for a DNS server? Or at least not fail catastrophically?<br>
<p><font color="#500050"><br>sean<br><br><br>-- <br>_____________________________________________________________________<br>-- Bandwidth and C...</font></p></blockquote></p>