DNS Sensor
The DNS (Domain Name System or Service) is an Internet
service that translates domain names (which are easier for humans to remember)
into IP addresses (which computer use to address each other). Every time you use
a domain name, therefore, a DNS service must translate the name into the
corresponding IP address. For example, the domain name www.paessler.com might
translate to 62.146.51.168.
The DNS sensor sends a request to resolve a specific domain
name to an IP address to the server it is associated with. This is useful e.g.
to ensure that a company's web server address can be resolved by the outside
world or to check a DNS server in a LAN for availability.
Note: The Server associated with this sensor has to be a
DNS server and not the domain name of the server you want to monitor.
If you only enter the domain name IPCheck Server Monitor
will only check whether the name is resolved to an IP address at all (which
simply means that the DNS server works correctly and the domain name is valid).
If you also enter an IP address the resolved IP address will be compared to this
and the sensor will show an error when the two addresses are different.
Parameters include:
·
Domain—enter the domain name to look up (e.g.
www.yourcompany.com)
·
IP—optionally enter an IP address to compare the result with
More:
What it means when the DNS Sensor is up
What it means when the DNS Sensor is down