DNS 0 NOERROR vs 5 REFUSED
Both DNS 0 (NOERROR) and 5 (REFUSED) belong to the DNS Response Codes (RCODEs) category. 0 indicates that no error condition. The query completed successfully and the response contains the requested data. Meanwhile, 5 means that query refused. The name server refuses to perform the requested operation for policy reasons.
Description
No error condition. The query completed successfully and the response contains the requested data.
Quand vous le voyez
This is the normal, successful response to any DNS query — the name was resolved and the answer section contains the requested records.
Comment résoudre
No fix needed. RCODE 0 means the DNS lookup succeeded as expected.
Description
Query refused. The name server refuses to perform the requested operation for policy reasons.
Quand vous le voyez
The server rejected your query due to access control — for example, a recursive resolver that only serves its own network, or a zone transfer blocked by ACL.
Comment résoudre
Check the server's allow-query, allow-recursion, or allow-transfer ACLs. If you are not authorized to use this resolver, switch to a public DNS service.
Différences clés
DNS 0: No error condition. The query completed successfully and the response contains the requested data.
DNS 5: Query refused. The name server refuses to perform the requested operation for policy reasons.
You encounter 0 when this is the normal, successful response to any DNS query — the name was resolved and the answer section contains the requested records.
You encounter 5 when the server rejected your query due to access control — for example, a recursive resolver that only serves its own network, or a zone transfer blocked by ACL.
Quand utiliser lequel
For 0 (NOERROR): No fix needed. RCODE 0 means the DNS lookup succeeded as expected. For 5 (REFUSED): Check the server's allow-query, allow-recursion, or allow-transfer ACLs. If you are not authorized to use this resolver, switch to a public DNS service.