18
votes

I have configured a set of DNS records at a new DNS provider. The configuration is complex, with load-balancing, SSL, etc, there are things that could go wrong.

I want to test this configuration before changing the namespace records at registrar.

  • Is there any way to locally provide my machine with the new nameserver for the domain?
  • Are there any tools that might help with this?

Please note: I don't want to just update the A records (e.g. in /etc/hosts) - I want to specifically check the nameserver is returning the A and CNAME records.

2

2 Answers

28
votes

If you're on a *nix system, you should be able to use either nslookup or dig. With both of those commands you can specify what server you would like to query. Simply use your new nameserver as the server. With dig, the query would look something like

dig @<your-nameserver> <hostname-to-look-up>

So, if you wanted to query google's public dns server and ask it about the address www.google.com, you'd use

dig @8.8.8.8 www.google.com

which, amongst other things, would tell you that www.google.com is an alias for www.l.google.com -- and then would give you a bunch of IP address (A records) for that name.

1
votes

For both Windows and my remote Linux(CentOS) servers I use nslookup tool which works on both platforms:

nslookup new-sub.domain.com 8.8.8.8
// and for more details:
nslookup -debug new-sub.domain.com 8.8.8.8