Troubleshooting
If you are unable to access your tenant's global URL, you can try flushing your DNS cache. Use the following procedure for your OS:
Windows 10/11
To flush your DNS cache on Windows, use the following steps:
- Open the command line.
- Type
ipconfig /flushdnsand press Enter.
MacOS
To flush your DNS cache on MacOS, use the following steps:
- Open the Terminal application.
- Type
sudo dscacheutil -flushcache; sudo killall -HUP mDNSResponderand press Enter. - Type your Mac password and press Enter.
For older versions of MacOS, use the following commands:
- El Capitan or later:
sudo killall -HUP mDNSResponder - Lion, Mountain Lion, and Mavericks:
sudo killall -HUP mDNSResponder - Snow Leopard:
sudo dscacheutil –flushcache - Leopard:
sudo lookupd –flushcache - Tiger:
lookupd –flushcache
Linux
On most Linux systems, the DNS resolver is either systemd-resolved or dnsmasq.
To determine which one your system uses, run $ sudo lsof -i :53 -S and view the output.
If you're using
systemd-resolved:- Run
$ sudo systemd-resolve --flush-cachesto flush the DNS cache. - If you want to verify that the cache flushed successfully, run
$ sudo systemd-resolve --statisticsand view the Current Cache Size.
- Run
If you're using
dnsmasq:- Run
$ sudo killall -HUP dnsmasqto flush the DNS cache. - If you want to verify that the cache flushed successfully, run
$ sudo killall -USR1followed by$ tail -f -n1000 /var/log/syslog | grep "cache size".
- Run