Per Byron's answer, you can't set networkaddress.cache.ttl
or networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl
as System Properties by using the -D
flag or calling System.setProperty
because these are not System properties - they are Security properties.
If you want to use a System property to trigger this behavior (so you can use the -D
flag or call System.setProperty
), you will want to set the following System property:
-Dsun.net.inetaddr.ttl=0
This system property will enable the desired effect. "0" (Zero) here means disable DNS caching at the JVM level, thus the original TTL value from the DNS will be consulted and used.
But be aware: if you don't use the -D
flag when starting the JVM process and elect to call this from code instead:
java.security.Security.setProperty("networkaddress.cache.ttl" , "0")
This code must execute before any other code in the JVM attempts to perform networking operations.
This is important because, for example, if you called Security.setProperty
in a .war file and deployed that .war to Tomcat, this wouldn't work: Tomcat uses the Java networking stack to initialize itself much earlier than your .war's code is executed. Because of this 'race condition', it is usually more convenient to use the -D
flag when starting the JVM process.
If you don't use -Dsun.net.inetaddr.ttl=0
or call Security.setProperty
, you will need to edit $JRE_HOME/lib/security/java.security
and set those security properties in that file, e.g.
networkaddress.cache.ttl = 0
networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl = 0
But pay attention to the security warnings in the comments surrounding those properties. Only do this if you are reasonably confident that you are not susceptible to DNS spoofing attacks.
It is worth noting that the Oracle JDK 8 docs recommended approach is to to use networkaddress.cache.ttl
and networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl
as already described in the official documentation here. These two properties cannot be set at the command line but should be set using setProperty()
or utilize the security policy file.