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    Errors When trying to install Monocle-Gateway.exe

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    • P
      pedenfield last edited by

      2nd computer result

      C:\Users\Gerri>nslookup 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io
      Server: UnKnown
      Address: 192.168.0.1

      *** No internal type for both IPv4 and IPv6 Addresses (A+AAAA) records available for 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io

      C:\Users\Gerri>nslookup 192.168.0.110
      Server: UnKnown
      Address: 192.168.0.1

      *** UnKnown can’t find 192.168.0.110: Non-existent domain

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      • P
        pedenfield last edited by

        192.168.0.118 computer is now showing this

        C:\Users\Paul>nslookup 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io
        Server: UnKnown
        Address: 192.168.0.1

        *** No internal type for both IPv4 and IPv6 Addresses (A+AAAA) records available for 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io

        Monocle 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Monocle
          Monocle @pedenfield last edited by

          @pedenfield

          So this confirms that DNS is the issue.

          Here is what I get when attempting the same test:

          $ nslookup 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io
          Server:		172.20.10.1
          Address:	172.20.10.1#53
          
          Non-authoritative answer:
          Name:	2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io
          Address: 192.168.0.110
          

          So you see, I’m getting the actual resolved address of 192.168.0.110 which is correct.

          You can also try the same command using Google DNS server at 8.8.8.8:

          $ nslookup 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io 8.8.8.8
          Server:		8.8.8.8
          Address:	8.8.8.8#53
          
          Non-authoritative answer:
          Name:	2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io
          Address: 192.168.0.110
          

          So the issue is most likely your router which I assume is at address 192.168.0.1 based on your previous attempts.
          The router is probably blocking resolution of the DNS hostname to a local IP address.
          You will need to lookup instructions for how to allow a specific hostname (2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io) to be allowed and not blocked.

          Thanks, Robert

          Monocle: https://monoclecam.com
          Getting Started | Troubleshooting Guide | FAQ | Contact Support

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          • P
            pedenfield last edited by

            Thanks. I will do some checking and let you know what I find. You have been most helpful…

            Monocle 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Monocle
              Monocle @pedenfield last edited by

              @pedenfield

              When trying to research this for your router, the keyword “DNS REBIND” or “DNS REBINDING” is what this behavior is typically called. It’s a security measure that some routers implement.

              Thanks, Robert

              Monocle: https://monoclecam.com
              Getting Started | Troubleshooting Guide | FAQ | Contact Support

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              • P
                pedenfield last edited by

                @pedenfield said in Errors When trying to install Monocle-Gateway.exe:

                nslookup 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io

                Using Google it the lookup works

                C:\Users\Paul>nslookup 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io 8.8.8.8
                Server: dns.google
                Address: 8.8.8.8

                Non-authoritative answer:
                Name: 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io
                Address: 192.168.0.110

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • P
                  pedenfield last edited by

                  @Monocle said in Errors When trying to install Monocle-Gateway.exe:

                  2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io

                  Ping works also

                  C:\Users\Paul>ping 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io

                  Pinging 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io [192.168.0.110] with 32 bytes of data:
                  Reply from 192.168.0.110: bytes=32 time<1ms TTL=128
                  Reply from 192.168.0.110: bytes=32 time<1ms TTL=128
                  Reply from 192.168.0.110: bytes=32 time<1ms TTL=128
                  Reply from 192.168.0.110: bytes=32 time<1ms TTL=128

                  Ping statistics for 192.168.0.110:
                  Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
                  Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
                  Minimum = 0ms, Maximum = 0ms, Average = 0ms

                  Monocle 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Monocle
                    Monocle @pedenfield last edited by

                    @pedenfield

                    The Google lookup worked so that means that your assigned FQDN is valid and publicly resolvable.
                    However, once you resolved it, it is now cached for a little while on your local system/computer.

                    The ping is now working because the DNS hostname is now cached on your local machine.
                    If you go back and try to resolve it again after a while (without the Google DNS server) just using your default DNS servers, it will probably fail to resolve the hostname again.

                    You can use the following command to force a flush of your local DNS cache (on Windows).

                    ipconfig /flushdns
                    

                    I don’t see a way to manually add additional DNS servers to the Alexa Echo device, so the FQDN will need to be resolvable by your router.

                    Thanks, Robert

                    Monocle: https://monoclecam.com
                    Getting Started | Troubleshooting Guide | FAQ | Contact Support

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                    • P
                      pedenfield last edited by

                      You are exactly right; but you knew that. During that short time i was able to see 2 cameras on the spot but not the tablet. I’ll keep working.

                      Monocle 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Monocle
                        Monocle @pedenfield last edited by

                        @pedenfield

                        Also, some routers will allow you to simply override a DNS host to a fixed address of your choosing. This could also be an option for you if your router allows that. You would just use the hostname 2b49b758-a6fd-4a36-a6ac-29b674ff1ce5.mproxy.io and have it pointed to the gateway’s IP address (192.168.0.110). So instead of the router actually resolving the address from a public DNS record, it just returns the overridden IP locally.

                        Thanks, Robert

                        Monocle: https://monoclecam.com
                        Getting Started | Troubleshooting Guide | FAQ | Contact Support

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