On Wed, 13 Feb 2013 14:41:29 -0700, twlllmxxx <
dogb...@twilliam.org>
wrote:
>I've got 3 or 4 computers on a LAN. From all computers and either
>browser (FF or IE), I get the same result: DNS can't find
google.com.
>If I type in an IP address for google, I can get right to it. If I
>bypass the router and go directly to the cable modem, I can type in
>
google.com and get right to it.
What I assume from that is that each of your computers is configured to use
DHCP to acquire its IP address and Netmask, DNS server IP, and Gateway IP.
While each computer will have a different IP address, (naturally), all of
them will share the same values for Netmask, DNS server, and Gateway IP.
Further, the DNS server IP and the Gateway IP (and the DHCP server IP) will
all be the same, and will all be the LAN IP of your router. So far, so good.
>Sounds like a router problem. The strange thing is this problem only
>exists for
google.com. As far as I know, all other URLs are recognized
>by the DNS.
The first thing to check is the router - what is it using for a DNS server
IP? Can you change it? If the router allows that value to be changed, try an
open DNS server such as the ones from OpenDNS, Google, etc. For testing,
since they are easy to remember, I use Google (8.8.8.8) and Level 3 (4.2.2.1
thru 4.2.2.6). In your case, I would try Google's DNS because it would be
ironic indeed if their own DNS couldn't find the Google domain.
If your router doesn't allow you to change the DNS IP's, consider changing
them on your computers. Your computers don't have to use your router's IP as
their DNS server IP; you can enter actual DNS server IP's in those fields.
>So I'm trying to figure out what can go wrong with a router that it
>only malfunctions on one single URL,
google.com. But my knowledge in
>these matters is limited.
>
>Trying to research it out, I come to this mystery: ipconfig says my
>default gateway is one thing, and my router status page says it's
>something else.
On each of your computers, the default gateway is the LAN IP of your router.
On the router, the default gateway IP belongs to your ISP and is your
gateway (pun intended) into their network and from there to the Internet.