I am trying to use the code nslookup -q=mx gmail.com to find the mail server of gmail.com, but its not working on my Ubuntu. I have tried it in windows and it works fine. I can't find out what the issue on Ubuntu. The command nslookup gmail.com works though. Here are the responses of both commands;
Response for: nslookup gmail.com
thisisppn@thisisppn-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ nslookup gmail.com
Server: 127.0.1.1
Address: 127.0.1.1#53
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: gmail.com
Address: 216.58.196.5
Response for: nslookup -q=mx gmail.com
thisisppn@thisisppn-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ nslookup -q=mx gmail.com
;; connection timed out; no servers could be reached
nslookupand enter, then typeset type=mxand enter, now just trygmail.com. let me know whether that works? – AzkerM Nov 28 '15 at 12:17;; connection timed out; no servers could be reached
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– Parthapratim Neog Nov 28 '15 at 12:19cat /etc/resolv.conf&route -n. – AzkerM Nov 28 '15 at 12:221.1where it should be127.0.0.1. Well, I might be wrong too. However, for the sake of testing,, can you dosudo nano /etc/resolv.confand comment the linenameserver 127.0.1.1starting with#.. also the same time addnameserver 8.8.8.8then save withCTRL+Oand hit enter. Now remember! this is a temporary edit to see whether changing DNS responds to your query. FQDN refers to Fully qualified domain name which is commonly any domain names that not IP addresses. – AzkerM Nov 28 '15 at 12:34