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Manually Bypass CloudFlare IP

#1
Hi to all my brothers ....

today i want to show you how to bypass cloudflare IP address without any external tools


Quote:Run Command Prompt (cmd.exe)
Then Type : nslookup -q=NS domainname



Quote:Example:

C:\>nslookup -q=NS 0day.red
Non-authoritative answer:
hackforums.net nameserver = zara.ns.cloudflare.com
hackforums.net nameserver = greg.ns.cloudflare.com

greg.ns.cloudflare.com internet address = 173.245.59.115
zara.ns.cloudflare.com internet address = 173.245.58.148
Reply

#2
Thanks for the share, but this seems a bit short.... Is it really that simple?
Reply

#3
Thanks for the share, but this seems a bit short.... Is it really that simple?
Reply

#4
Quote:(02-18-2014, 01:49 PM)Atmosphere Wrote:

[To see links please register here]

Thanks for the share, but this seems a bit short.... Is it really that simple?

yep you can simple try this ...
first ping the site using cmd which uses cloudfare

and then nslookup -q=NS domainname

you will see the change in ip's yourself ....
Reply

#5
Quote:(02-18-2014, 01:49 PM)Atmosphere Wrote:

[To see links please register here]

Thanks for the share, but this seems a bit short.... Is it really that simple?

No, this thread's fucking retarded.

You can obviously see "cloudflare" in the dns name, meaning you did not bypass it. This kid's an idiot.

Someone should close this.


Quote: (02-18-2014, 02:39 PM)aniketgupta Wrote:

[To see links please register here]

yep you can simple try this ...
first ping the site using cmd which uses cloudfare

and then nslookup -q=NS domainname

you will see the change in ip's yourself ....

A change in the ip doesn't mean you've bypassed it, idiot.

You'll know you've bypassed it when it doesn't say "cloudflare" in the dns name.

Don't believe me? Visit the ip in your browser, it either goes to cloudflare or doesn't load.
Reply

#6
Quote:(02-18-2014, 02:40 PM)Crypt Wrote:

[To see links please register here]

No, this thread's fucking retarded.

You can obviously see "cloudflare" in the dns name, meaning you did not bypass it. This kid's an idiot.

Someone should close this.


A change in the ip doesn't mean you've bypassed it, idiot.

You'll know you've bypassed it when it doesn't say "cloudflare" in the dns name.

Don't believe me? Visit the ip in your browser, it either goes to cloudflare or doesn't load.

Firstly thanx a lot for posting in my thread ....
So bro now would you mind seeing this .... if you resolve the dns in any cloudfare resolver then you will be getting the same addresses .... :smile:
greg.ns.cloudflare.com internet address = 173.245.59.115
zara.ns.cloudflare.com internet address = 173.245.58.148
Reply

#7
Quote:(02-18-2014, 01:49 PM)Atmosphere Wrote:

[To see links please register here]

Thanks for the share, but this seems a bit short.... Is it really that simple?

yep you can simple try this ...
first ping the site using cmd which uses cloudfare

and then nslookup -q=NS domainname

you will see the change in ip's yourself ....
Reply

#8
Quote:(02-18-2014, 01:49 PM)Atmosphere Wrote:

[To see links please register here]

Thanks for the share, but this seems a bit short.... Is it really that simple?

No, this thread's fucking retarded.

You can obviously see "cloudflare" in the dns name, meaning you did not bypass it. This kid's an idiot.

Someone should close this.


Quote: (02-18-2014, 02:39 PM)aniketgupta Wrote:

[To see links please register here]

yep you can simple try this ...
first ping the site using cmd which uses cloudfare

and then nslookup -q=NS domainname

you will see the change in ip's yourself ....

A change in the ip doesn't mean you've bypassed it, idiot.

You'll know you've bypassed it when it doesn't say "cloudflare" in the dns name.

Don't believe me? Visit the ip in your browser, it either goes to cloudflare or doesn't load.
Reply

#9
Quote:(02-18-2014, 02:40 PM)Crypt Wrote:

[To see links please register here]

No, this thread's fucking retarded.

You can obviously see "cloudflare" in the dns name, meaning you did not bypass it. This kid's an idiot.

Someone should close this.


A change in the ip doesn't mean you've bypassed it, idiot.

You'll know you've bypassed it when it doesn't say "cloudflare" in the dns name.

Don't believe me? Visit the ip in your browser, it either goes to cloudflare or doesn't load.

Firstly thanx a lot for posting in my thread ....
So bro now would you mind seeing this .... if you resolve the dns in any cloudfare resolver then you will be getting the same addresses .... :smile:
greg.ns.cloudflare.com internet address = 173.245.59.115
zara.ns.cloudflare.com internet address = 173.245.58.148
Reply

#10
Those addresses are nameservers, nameservers are something you direct your domain to and those servers basically control where your domain should point to.
Going to any of those addresses in your browser will redirect you to nothing, as Crypt said.

"nslookup" is also a command that literally means "NameServer LOOKUP".
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