Overview — GoLook!: Global NSLookup Service for Network Troubleshooting
GoLook! is an online, multi-region NSLookup tool that performs DNS queries from worldwide vantage points to help diagnose DNS and reachability issues.
Key features
- Multi-region queries: Run the same lookup from multiple global locations to detect geo-specific DNS differences and propagation delays.
- Record types: Query A, AAAA, CNAME, MX, NS, TXT, SOA, PTR and other DNS record types.
- Specify resolver: Test against public resolvers (e.g., 1.1.1.1, 8.8.8.8) or authoritative name servers.
- Reverse lookup: PTR lookups to map IP → hostname.
- Verbose/debug output: Packet-level or extended response details for troubleshooting (TTL, flags, DNSSEC/RRSIG info).
- Historical / propagation checks: Compare results over time or across regions to confirm propagation.
- Shareable results: Export or share query outputs (links, raw text, or JSON) for collaboration.
- Rate/time controls: Configure timeouts, retries, and query frequency for robust testing.
Typical use cases
- Verify DNS record changes have propagated globally.
- Troubleshoot split-horizon or geo-based DNS differences.
- Confirm which resolver a client is actually using by testing specific servers.
- Diagnose email delivery issues (MX/TXT/DKIM/DMARC lookups).
- Investigate intermittent or region-specific DNS failures.
How to use (concise steps)
- Enter the domain or IP to query.
- Choose record type(s) and resolver(s) or authoritative server.
- Select regions or “all regions” for parallel checks.
- Set timeout/retry and enable debug if needed.
- Run the lookup and inspect returned records, TTLs, and any inconsistencies.
- Share or export the output for teammates.
Troubleshooting tips
- If results differ by region, check authoritative server responses and regional caches.
- High TTLs can delay visible propagation—verify authoritative SOA serial and TTL values.
- Use reverse lookups to confirm PTR records for mail-server reputation issues.
- Enable debug to see DNSSEC validation failures or malformed responses.
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