Dns Spoofing - H3C MSR 2600 Configuration Manual

Layer 3
Hide thumbs Also See for MSR 2600:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Figure 30 DNS proxy application
A DNS proxy operates as follows:
1.
A DNS client considers the DNS proxy as the DNS server, and sends a DNS request to the DNS
proxy. The destination address of the request is the IP address of the DNS proxy.
2.
The DNS proxy searches the local static domain name resolution table and dynamic domain name
resolution cache after receiving the request. If the requested information is found, the DNS proxy
returns a DNS reply to the client.
3.
If the requested information is not found, the DNS proxy sends the request to the designated DNS
server for domain name resolution.
4.
After receiving a reply from the DNS server, the DNS proxy records the IP address-to-domain name
mapping and forwards the reply to the DNS client.
If no DNS server is designated or no route is available to the designated DNS server, the DNS proxy
does not forward DNS requests.

DNS spoofing

DNS spoofing is applied to the dial-up network, as shown in
The device connects to a PSTN/ISDN network through a dial-up interface and triggers the
establishment of a dial-up connection only when packets are to be forwarded through the dial-up
interface.
The device serves as a DNS proxy and is specified as a DNS server on the hosts. After the dial-up
connection is established through the dial-up interface, the device dynamically obtains the DNS
server address through DHCP or other autoconfiguration mechanisms.
Figure
83
31.

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents