dnschecker.org Open in urlscan Pro
2606:4700:20::ac43:49d8  Public Scan

URL: https://dnschecker.org/
Submission Tags: @phish_report
Submission: On November 10 via api from FI — Scanned from FI

Form analysis 2 forms found in the DOM

<form class="" id="f">
  <h1 class="h5 text-uppercase text-start text_blue fw-700">DNS Check</h1>
  <div class="d-flex align-items-center gap-1">
    <input type="text" id="q" class="form-control input_style fw_400" placeholder="example.com">
    <select class="custom-select form-select" id="t">
      <option selected="selected" title="Host address (dotted quad)" value="A">A</option>
      <option title="IP v6 address (address spec with colons)" value="AAAA">AAAA</option>
      <option title="Canonical name for an alias (domain name)" value="CNAME">CNAME</option>
      <option title="Mail exchanger (preference value, domain name)" value="MX">MX</option>
      <option title="Authoritative nameserver (domain name)" value="NS">NS</option>
      <option title="Domain name pointer (domain name)" value="PTR">PTR</option>
      <option value="SRV" title="Service record">SRV</option>
      <option title="Start of Authority" value="SOA">SOA</option>
      <option title="Descriptive text (one or more strings)" value="TXT">TXT</option>
      <option value="CAA" title="Certification Authority Authorization">CAA</option>
      <option value="DS" title="Delegation Signer">DS</option>
      <option value="DNSKEY" title="ZSK / KSK Public Keys">DNSKEY</option>
    </select>
    <button class="btn btn-primary btn_style text-nowrap" id="s" type="submit"><i class="icon icon-search-outline icon-lg-2 me-2"></i> Search</button>
  </div>
  <div class="d-flex justify-content-between mt-2">
    <div class="d-flex gap-2">
      <button class="btn bg_blue py-1 px-2 d-flex align-items-center" type="button" id="o" data-bs-toggle="collapse" data-bs-target="#collapseSetting" aria-expanded="false"
        aria-controls="collapseSetting"><i class="icon icon-settings-adjust"></i></button>
      <button class="add_custom_dns_icon btn bg_gray py-1 px-2 d-flex align-items-center" type="button" data-bs-toggle="modal" data-bs-target="#AddDNSModal"><span data-bs-toggle="tooltip" data-bs-placement="top" title=""
          data-bs-original-title="Add a custom DNS server" aria-label="Add a custom DNS server"><i class="icon icon-plus icon-dark"></i></span></button>
      <div class="d-none d-sm-flex flex-row align-items-top gap-1" id="extra_flags">
        <div class="checkbox_style">
          <input type="checkbox" class="align-text-top" id="cd_flag_checkbox" checked="">
          <label for="cd_flag_checkbox"></label>
        </div>
        <span class="text-nowrap align-self-center" data-bs-toggle="tooltip" data-bs-placement="top" title="Ask DNS Server NOT to perform DNSSEC validation before replying">CD Flag</span>
      </div>
    </div>
    <div class="d-flex align-items-center gap-1">
      <div class="checkbox_style">
        <input type="checkbox" class="align-text-top" id="refresh_every_checkbox">
        <label for="refresh_every_checkbox"></label>
      </div>
      <span data-bs-toggle="tooltip" data-bs-placement="top" title="" data-bs-original-title="Auto refresh after every X seconds">Refresh:</span>
      <input type="number" min="20" max="60" class="py-1 number-input-index-page input_style fw_400 text-dark border-0" id="refresh_every" value="20"> sec.
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="collapse text-start mt-3" id="collapseSetting">
    <div class="box_container shadow-none bg_gray_light pt-2">
      <div class="form-group form-group-sm">
        <label for="c" class="fw_600">Expected Value:</label>
        <div class="form-check float-end ms-2">
          <input class="form-check-input comp_opt" type="radio" name="camp_opt" id="exact_match" value="exact_match" checked="">
          <label class="form-check-label fw_600" for="exact_match"> Exact Match </label>
        </div>
        <div class="form-check float-end ms-2">
          <input class="form-check-input comp_opt" type="radio" name="camp_opt" id="contains" value="contains">
          <label class="form-check-label fw_600" for="contains"> Contains </label>
        </div>
        <div class="form-check float-end">
          <input class="form-check-input comp_opt" type="radio" name="camp_opt" id="reg_match" value="reg_match">
          <label class="form-check-label fw_600" for="reg_match"> RegExp </label>
        </div>
        <input type="text" class="form-control form-control-sm input_style my-2" id="c" placeholder="1.2.3.4">
      </div>
      <div class="row d-none" id="resolved_unresolved_results">
        <div class="col-lg-6"><span class="btn btn-sm btn-success btn-block ev-btn" id="ev_resolved">Resolved DNS: <span>--</span></span></div>
        <div class="col-lg-6"><span class="btn btn-sm btn-danger btn-block ev-btn" id="ev_unresolved">Unresolved DNS: <span>--</span></span></div>
      </div>
    </div>
  </div>
</form>

<form id="add_dns_form" action="" onsubmit="return false;">
  <div class="modal-header border-0 p-0 pe-2 mb-3">
    <h5 class="modal-title all_tools_h1" id="AddDNSModalTitle">Add Your Custom DNS</h5>
    <button type="button" class="btn-close" style="background-size: cover;height:0.5rem;width:0.5rem;" data-bs-dismiss="modal" aria-label="Close"></button>
  </div>
  <div class="modal-body p-0">
    <div class="row">
      <div class="col-lg-12" id="AddDNSModalAlert"></div>
      <div class="col-lg-12">
        <div class="form-group mb-3">
          <label class="h6" for="add_dns_name">DNS Name <span class="text-danger">*</span></label>
          <input name="add_dns_name" id="add_dns_name" value="" class="form-control form-control-sm bg_gray_light" type="text" placeholder="Mountain View CA, United States">
        </div>
      </div>
      <div class="col-lg-12">
        <div class="row">
          <div class="col-lg-6">
            <div class="form-group mb-3">
              <label class="h6" for="add_dns_ip">DNS IP <span class="text-danger">*</span></label>
              <input name="add_dns_ip" id="add_dns_ip" value="" class="form-control form-control-sm bg_gray_light" type="text" placeholder="8.8.8.8">
            </div>
          </div>
          <div class="col-lg-6">
            <div class="form-group mb-3">
              <label class="h6" for="add_dns_ip">DNS Provider</label>
              <input name="add_dns_provider" id="add_dns_provider" value="" class="form-control form-control-sm bg_gray_light" type="text" placeholder="Sprint">
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div class="col-lg-12">
        <div class="row">
          <div class="col-lg-6">
            <div class="form-group">
              <label class="h6" for="add_dns_latitude">DNS Map Latitude</label>
              <input name="add_dns_latitude" id="add_dns_latitude" value="" class="form-control form-control-sm bg_gray_light" type="text" placeholder="37">
            </div>
          </div>
          <div class="col-lg-6">
            <div class="form-group">
              <label class="h6" for="add_dns_longitude">DNS Map Longitude</label>
              <input name="add_dns_longitude" id="add_dns_longitude" value="" class="form-control form-control-sm bg_gray_light" type="text" placeholder="-122">
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div class="col-lg-12">
        <p class="mt-2 mb-0"><span class="text-danger">*</span> <em>Should not be empty</em></p>
      </div>
      <div class="col-lg-12 pt-2">
        <div class="checkbox_style">
          <input type="checkbox" class="align-text-middle" id="add_dns_public">
          <label class="d-flex gap-2" style="padding-top: 3px;" for="add_dns_public">Add this DNS server to public DNS List</label>
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="modal-footer rounded-0 border-0 justify-content-center gap-4">
    <button type="button" class="btn btn-sm bg_blue px-4 py-2 text-white rounded-3" data-bs-dismiss="modal">Close</button>
    <button type="submit" class="btn btn-sm bg_green px-4 py-2 text-white rounded-3" id="add_custom_dns_form_button" style="min-width:150px;">Yes, Add this DNS</button>
  </div>
</form>

Text Content

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and process personal data, such as unique identifiers and standard information
sent by a device for personalised ads and content, ad and content measurement,
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Privacy Policy Accept


 * Home
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 * 2a02:ed04:3581:6::2e

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 * DNS CHECK
   
   A AAAA CNAME MX NS PTR SRV SOA TXT CAA DS DNSKEY Search
   
   CD Flag
   
   Refresh: sec.
   Expected Value:
   Exact Match
   Contains
   RegExp
   Resolved DNS: --
   Unresolved DNS: --

San Francisco CA, United States
OpenDNS 208.67.222.220 - Mountain View CA, United States
Google 8.8.8.8 - Berkeley, US
Quad9 9.9.9.9 - Miami, United States
AT&T Services 12.121.117.201 - Virginia, United States
VeriSign Global Registry Services 64.6.64.6 - San Francisco, US
Quad9 149.112.112.112 - United States
CenturyLink 205.171.202.66 - Burnaby, Canada
Fortinet Inc 208.91.112.53 - Yekaterinburg, Russian Federation
Skydns 195.46.39.39 - Cullinan, South Africa
Liquid Telecommunications Ltd 5.11.11.5 - Weert, Netherlands
Pyton Communication Services B.V. 193.58.204.59 - Paris, France
Association Gitoyen 80.67.169.40 - Madrid, Spain
Prioritytelecom Spain S.A. 212.230.255.1 - Zizers, Switzerland
Oskar Emmenegger 194.209.157.109 - Innsbruck, Austria
nemox.net 83.137.41.9 - Byfleet, United Kingdom
4D Data Centres Ltd 37.209.219.30 - Copenhagen, Denmark
Tele Danmark 80.196.100.209 - Saarland, Germany
Probe Networks 82.96.64.2 - Monterrey, Mexico
Marcatel Com 200.56.224.11 - Santa Cruz do Sul, Brazil
Claro S.A 200.248.178.54 - Shah Alam, Malaysia
TT Dotcom Sdn Bhd 211.25.206.147 - Research, Australia
Cloudflare Inc 1.1.1.1 - Melbourne, Australia
Pacific Internet 61.8.0.113 - Auckland, New Zealand
Global-Gateway Internet 122.56.107.86 - Singapore
Tefincom S.A. 103.86.99.100 - Seoul, South Korea
LG Dacom Corporation 164.124.101.2 - Hangzhou, China
Aliyun Computing Co. Ltd 223.5.5.5 - Antalya, Turkey
Teknet Yazlim 31.7.37.37 - Ariyalur, India
Railwire 112.133.219.34 - Islamabad, Pakistan
CMPak Limited 209.150.154.1 - Viana do Castelo, Portugal
CLOUDITY Network 185.83.212.30 - Ireland
Daniel Cid 185.228.168.9 - Dhaka, Bangladesh
Mango Teleservices Limited 114.130.5.6 -

Add A Custom DNS Server Note: Complete DNS Resolution may take up to 48 hours.


CHECK DNS PROPAGATION

Whether you have recently changed your DNS records, switched web host, or
started a new website - checking whether the DNS records are propagated globally
is essential. DNS Checker provides a free DNS propagation check service to check
Domain Name System records against a selected list of DNS servers in multiple
regions worldwide. Perform a quick DNS propagation lookup for any hostname or
domain, and check DNS data collected from all available DNS Servers to confirm
that the DNS records are fully propagated.

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DNS Propagation Map by DNSChecker.orgServer LocationResolvedNot Resolved


DNS LISTS



IPS

Public IPv4
Public IPv6

CONTINENTS

Africa
Antarctica
Asia
Europe
North America
Australia
South America

COUNTRIES

United States
Canada
Germany
Russian Federation
Denmark
United Kingdom
Netherlands
Pakistan
Switzerland
Turkey
Spain
South Africa
Japan
Malaysia
India
France
Mexico
China
Brazil
Australia
Singapore
Austria
Ireland
South Korea
New Zealand
Saudia Arabia
Bangladesh
Portugal


ADD YOUR CUSTOM DNS

DNS Name *
DNS IP *
DNS Provider
DNS Map Latitude
DNS Map Longitude

* Should not be empty

Add this DNS server to public DNS List
Close Yes, Add this DNS


DNS PROPAGATION CHECKER - HOW TO CHECK DNS PROPAGATION GLOBALLY?

Perform a quick DNS propagation lookup for any domain. Our DNS Propagation Test
tool features a comprehensive list of 100+ global DNS servers, which makes
global DNS checks more effortless than ever. It is designed to collect, parse,
and display all the DNS propagation results on the map, going beyond text-based
propagation reports.

It visually represents how your DNS changes are propagated across different DNS
servers in different regions globally. This enhances your understanding and
makes identifying any regional variations or issues easier. Now monitor and
manage your DNS records effectively.

Here’s how you can use our tool for performing a free DNS Propagation Test
online:


ENTER THE DOMAIN OR HOSTNAME

Get started by providing the website domain name for which you want to carry out
a DNS propagation test.


SELECT DNS RECORD FOR PROPAGATION STATUS CHECK

Select the DNS record whose propagation status you would like to check. Click on
the drop-down menu right next to the search bar and choose any of the following
records:

 * A record: contains the IPv4 address info of the hostname.
 * AAAA record: contains the IPv6 address info of the hostname.
 * CNAME record: also known as alias record. It points the sub-domain to its
   domain, like pointing www.dnschecker.org to dnschecker.org. Get comprehensive
   insights about the domain’s CNAME records with CNAME record lookup.
 * MX record: contains the info where the domain's email should be routed to and
   mail servers priority. Lookup MX record for more info about the domain’s MX
   records.
 * NS record: contains information about the authoritative nameservers of a
   domain. NS Checker will provide you with all the name servers associated with
   a domain.
 * PTR record: used in reverse IP lookup to map an IP address to a domain name,
   allowing the identification of the host associated with a particular IP
   address.
 * SRV record: specifies the location and configuration of a particular service,
   such as email or voice over IP (VoIP), allowing clients to discover and
   connect to the appropriate server.
 * SOA record: the start of authority is responsible for holding and specifying
   information about the DNS zone.
 * TXT record: is commonly used for other DNS records configurations like SPF,
   DKIM, or DMARC records.
 * CAA record: used to assist in SSL validation by highlighting which
   authorities can issue certificates for a domain.
 * DS record: acts as a delegation signer, maintaining a chain of trust between
   the parent zone and child zone. Use the DS record Lookup tool to dig deeper.
 * DNSKEY record: contains the public signing keys like Zone Signing Key (ZSK)
   and Key Signing Key (KSK). Check the DNSKEY record for more info.


PERFORM QUICK DNS PROPAGATION

Once everything is set, click “Search” to run our DNS propagation check tool. It
will take a moment to display the results, highlighting all server locations
with their respective propagation statuses.

Here are a few things to keep in mind while checking DNS propagation status:

 * ✔️ indicates that the DNS records have been propagated.
 * ❌ shows that the DNS records haven’t been propagated.

More clearly - the green tick shows that the requested DNS record is available
in the DNS server, and the cross shows that it is not. The green tick may also
mean that the DNS record matches the updated value that the user has set in the
expected value field. In contrast, the cross may denote that the value does not
match the expected or updated value (the user expects it to be).


HOW TO ADD A CUSTOM DNS SERVER?

If you want to add a  DNS Server, do it easily with our tool. Simply click on
the “+” button and enter the following information:

 * DNS Name
 * DNS IP
 * DNS Provider
 * DNS Map Latitude
 * DNS Map Longitude

The DNS Name and DNS IP address are compulsory to specify, or else it will not
work.

Our tool will also allow you to add the custom DNS server to the public DNS list
as required.


HOW TO ADD EXPECTED VALUE OF IP ADDRESS?

If your IP Address has been changed now, then leverage the smart controls to
specify the expected value of the new IP address by highlighting its “regular
expressions,” “containing numbers,” or “exact match number.”


HERE'S WHAT ELSE YOU CAN DO…

If required, you can go to the “DNS Lists” section to leverage our tool’s smart
search capabilities. It will enable you to check the DNS propagation status of
your website with respect to a specific:

 * IP Address
 * Continent
 * Country

Simply click on the respective IP address type, continent name, or country name
(server location). Our DNS status checker will reload, allowing you to enter the
hostname or IP and validate its propagation status accordingly.

Let’s say you would like to check the DNS propagation status of a website in
Asia (continent). Click on it and then proceed as guided earlier. It will show
you whether the given hostname DNS has been propagated in the Asia continent or
not. The same goes for IPv4, IPv6, and all countries worldwide.


FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Here’s the insider scope you need to know all about DNS!


WHAT IS DOMAIN NAME SYSTEM?

Domain Name System (DNS) is a hierarchical decentralized system that maps domain
names to IP addresses. It is the internet's equivalent of a phone book, mapping
human-readable domain names to IP addresses.


WHAT IS DNS RESOLUTION?

DNS resolution translates the domain name into its server IP address. You need a
site's IP address to know where it’s on the Internet.

The four DNS Servers work together (in a chain) to convert a domain name to its
IP address, enabling the requested web resource to load on the user screen.

Here is how the DNS resolution process works:

 * Recursive DNS server (DNS resolver): These servers are the first in the DNS
   check process. Receive DNS queries from clients and resolve the
   human-readable domain name to an IP address. That server tracks the IP
   address for the searched domain or hostname.
 * Root DNS servers: These servers are at the top of the DNS hierarchy and
   provide a list of top-level domain (TLD) servers to resolvers.
 * TLD Name Servers: These servers return the authoritative name servers for
   each domain. These are responsible for handling the requests for specific
   top-level domains like .com, org, etc. The .com TLD name servers will return
   results for abc.com but not abc.org.
 * Authoritative DNS servers: These servers are the last stop in the DNS
   resolution process. The authoritative nameservers for the searched domain
   hold the actual DNS records and respond to queries with the correct IP
   addresses.


HOW DOES THE DNS PROCESS WORK?

Suppose you request to open the URL https://xyz.com in your web browser's bar.
Here’s how it works:

 1. Your browser sends a DNS query to a DNS resolver (recursive Server), usually
    provided by your Internet Service Provider (ISP).
 2. The recursive resolver checks its cache to see if it already has the
    requested DNS information for the domain name. If it does, it returns to
    your computer, and the process ends.
 3. If the recursive resolver doesn't have the DNS information in its cache, it
    sends a query to the root DNS servers. These servers maintain a database of
    all the top-level domain names, such as .com, .org, .net, etc.
 4. The recursive resolver then contacts the root DNS servers that respond to
    the query with the IP of appropriate TLD (Top-Level Domain) DNS servers.
 5. The TLD DNS servers respond to the query by referring to the authoritative
    DNS servers for the domain name. These servers are responsible for
    maintaining the DNS records for the domain.
 6. The authoritative DNS servers respond to the query with the requested DNS
    records for the domain name.
 7. The DNS resolver caches the updated/latest fetched DNS records and returns
    them to your computer, which can now be used for whatever purpose those
    records were requested.


WHAT IS DNS PROPAGATION?

DNS propagation is the time DNS changes take to be updated across the internet
over the globe. It can take up to 48 hours to propagate worldwide. Use our
Global DNS Propagation Checker for free to get a quick report on your DNS
propagation status.


HOW DO DNS RECORDS PROPAGATE?

When you update your DNS records, the changes may take up to 48 hours. During
this period, ISPs worldwide update their DNS cache with new DNS information for
your domain.

However, DNS records may take some time to propagate due to different DNS cache
levels. Thus, some visitors might be directed to the old server’s IP until the
DNS propagation process finishes worldwide. However, most visitors see updated
DNS records shortly after they change. You can look up A, AAAA, CNAME, and
additional DNS records lookup from our DNS lookup tool.


WHY DNS PROPAGATION TAKES TIME?

Suppose you changed your domain's nameservers and requested to open your domain
on the web browser. Your request will not go to the hosting directly. Each ISP
node first checks its DNS cache, whether it has the DNS information for that
domain. If it is not there, it will look it up by fetching DNS information from
the authoritative DNS server of the domain to serve the user’s request. It also
saves that info for future use to speed up the DNS lookup process. Thus, the new
nameservers will not propagate instantly. ISPs have different cache refreshing
levels resulting in some still having the old DNS information in their cache.


WHY IS DNS NOT PROPAGATING?

The ISPs across the world have different caching levels. The DNS client or the
server may cache the information of the DNS records in its DNS cache. That
information is temporarily cached, and DNS servers will go for the updated DNS
information when TTL (Time to Live) expires.

Note: If your new DNS changes are still not reflecting, you can go for a DNS
health check to ensure that your DNS changes are up to the mark and following
the standards. You can also flush your DNS cache.


WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF THE DOMAIN NAME DOES NOT EXIST?

The DNS server will return a name error, also known as an NXDomain response (for
a non-existent domain), to symbolize that the query's domain name does not
exist.


WHAT IS THE PORT USED BY DNS?

DNS uses both TCP and UDP port 53. However, the most frequently used port for
DNS is UDP 53. That is used when the client's computer communicates with the DNS
server to resolve the domain name. When using the UDP 53 for DNS, the maximum
size of the query packet is 512 bytes.

TCP 53 is used primarily for Zone Transfers and when the query packet exceeds
512 bytes. That is true when DNSSEC is used, which adds extra overhead to the
DNS query packet. You can test all the server ports using a port scanner online.


WHAT IS DNS FAILURE?

DNS failure means that the DNS server cannot convert the domain name into an IP
address in a TCP/IP network. That failure may occur within the company's private
network or the internet.


WHICH ARE THE BEST DNS SERVERS?

Some of the best Global DNS servers are as follows:

 1. Google Public DNS:
    * IPv4:
      * Primary: 8.8.8.8
      * Secondary: 8.8.4.4
    * IPv6:
      * Primary: 2001:4860:4860::8888
      * Secondary: 2001:4860:4860::8844
 2. OpenDNS:
    * IPv4:
      * Primary: 208.67.222.222
      * Secondary: 208.67.220.220
    * IPv6:
      * Primary: 2620:119:35::35
      * Secondary: 2620:119:53::53
 3. Quad9 (Malware Blocking Enabled):
    * IPv4:
      * Primary: 9.9.9.9
      * Secondary: 149.112.112.112
    * IPv6:
      * Primary: 2620:fe::fe
      * Secondary: 2620:fe::9
 4. DNS.Watch:
    * IPv4:
      * Primary: 84.200.69.80
      * Secondary: 84.200.70.40
    * IPv6:
      * Primary: 2001:1608:10:25::1c04:b12f
      * Secondary: 2001:1608:10:25::9249:d69b
 5. Comodo Secure DNS:
    * IPv4:
      * Primary: 8.26.56.26
      * Secondary: 8.20.247.20
 6. Cloudflare:
    * IPv4:
      * Primary: 1.1.1.1
      * Secondary: 1.0.0.1
    * IPv6:
      * Primary: 2606:4700:4700::1111
      * Secondary: 2606:4700:4700::1001
        
        

Public DNS Servers by country provide a complete list of all DNS servers,
including the world's best IPv4 and IPv6 public DNS servers.






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