Deleting PTR Records Containing Upper-Case Characters In Microsoft DNS

This morning I noticed that some of our network elements are using IPs that have more than one PTR associated with them. This isn’t a huge problem, but it was exposed to us because the DNS record in our monitoring system would just randomly pick a PTR when the element was rediscovered. Because these other PTRs were often just out of date cruft, having the old names show up in monitoring was confusing. I took this as a quick project to run through the IPs and resolve the duplicates. The fact that I’m now writing a blog post about it is a pretty good spoiler that it wasn’t as simple as I thought it was going to be.

I went through all the IPs in question (and then also all IPs in the same /24s as those IPs) and came up with a list of about 15 IPs that I changed. I deleted the PTRs with no matching A records, typed up a summary for my group, and was just about to hit send when I did one more check of my work and found that some of the PTRs I had deleted were back. OK. I deleted them again, and they came back again. I reloaded. I refreshed. I manually incremented zone serials. Nothing.

The Problem

A quick Google showed that it is/was a known problem that the DNS snap-in cannot delete PTR records with upper-case characters in them (this page, leading to this Microsoft KB article, were the key hits). This seemed like a likely culprit. All of the records I was still having problems with did contain mixed case characters, and all the ones I had successfully deleted were all lower case. The only thing that confused me was that the KB item was specifically for Windows Server 2003. I was using the snap-in locally from Windows7, and I also had tried it directly from one of the DNS servers running Windows Server 2008, and they all had the same problem.

At this point I tried renaming the PTR to be lower case and then deleting it, but that was a spectacular failure. It renamed in the snap-in, but querying the server then showed three records instead of two, with the one I renamed showing up twice, both with the same upper case characters, even though I had renamed it with lower case. Eesh. I counted myself lucky that when I deleted the lower case version in the snap-in it put me back to where I was when I started (two PTRs, one good, one bad but undeleteable due to upper case characters).

The Solution! (almost)

Back to the Goog! This time I came across this interesting post about programmatically lower-casing all PTRs. It wasn’t directly what I needed (though I’m saving it for later review), but it did introduce the idea of using dnscmd.exe to delete the PTRs that the snap-in won’t touch.

Since I was already logged directly into one of the DNS servers with my admin credentials, I decided to just run the command there. A little bit of experimentation and I ran the following (yes, 10.1.1.1 really was the IP):

C:\>dnscmd . /RecordDelete 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa. 1 PTR
Are you sure you want to delete record? (y/n)y

Command failed:  ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED     5    0x5

Well crap. I relaunched CMD as an even-more-admin-ish account and got the same response. I tried deleting a PTR that didn’t have upper case characters and got the same response, so it wasn’t the same problem. I tried the following, which suggested that I was using the right syntax and it really was a permission issue:

C:\>dnscmd . /RecordDelete 10.in-addr.arpa. 1.1.1 PTR
Are you sure you want to delete record? (y/n)y

Command failed:  DNS_ERROR_ZONE_DOES_NOT_EXIST     9601    0x2581

The Solution For Reals!

One final trip to Google and I turned up this post describing the same “what do you mean access denied, I’m an admin” experience I was having. Following the suggestion to always use an FQDN for the server, I still had the same problem. I then tried it with the IP of the server and it worked:

C:\>dnscmd 10.5.20.5 /RecordDelete 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa. 1 PTR
Are you sure you want to delete record? (y/n)y

Deleted PTR record(s) at 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa.
Command completed successfully.

Here’s the kicker though: When I picked an IP I accidentally picked the IP from a different DNS server (oops). After a bit of experimentation I found that I could use nodename, FQDN, or IP of a different server and it would work, but if I tried to use “.”, nodename, FQDN, or IP of the local server, it would always fail with the ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED error. Fun!

Command

So now I can delete the offending PTRs which is good, but that command also deletes the good PTR, which is not so good. Fortunately I can use dnscmd.exe to put the good PTR right back. Here’s a full before/delete/during/recreate/after example:

C:\>dnscmd 10.5.20.5 /EnumRecords 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa. 5
Returned records:
@ 3600 PTR      PIX-515.example.com.
                 3600 PTR       pix-515-2.example.com.

Command completed successfully.


C:\>dnscmd 10.5.20.5 /RecordDelete 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa. 5 PTR
Are you sure you want to delete record? (y/n)y


Deleted PTR record(s) at 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa.
Command completed successfully.


C:\>dnscmd 10.5.20.5 /EnumRecords 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa. 5
Returned records:

Command completed successfully.


C:\>dnscmd 10.5.20.5 /RecordAdd 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa. 5 PTR pix-515-2.example.com.

Add PTR Record for 5.1.1.10.in-addr.arpa. at 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa.
Command completed successfully.


C:\>dnscmd 10.5.20.5 /EnumRecords 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa. 5
Returned records:
@ 3600 PTR      pix-515-2.example.com.

Command completed successfully.

After running this I saw what I expected in the DNS snap-in (just one record for 10.1.1.5, pix-515-2.example.com). This would be pretty easily scriptable but it’s 13 more PTRs. Maybe next time.

8 thoughts on “Deleting PTR Records Containing Upper-Case Characters In Microsoft DNS

  1. Awesome! Thank you for the nice step by step. Also helped me learn the command syntax correctly. For re creating I used the GUI. Thanks again!

  2. Apparently the DNS entries can also be removed via PowerShell.

    Remove-DnsServerResourceRecord -Name 1 -RRType PTR -ZoneName 10.168.192.in-addr.arpa

  3. Thank you so much. This issue still exists on Windows 2012 R2. No idea why it hasn’t been patched…?
    Your syntax summary at the end helped a lot.

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