Error 1000 Ray ID: 911d9da09d00b4e3 • 2025-02-14 14:05:54 UTC DNS points to prohibited IP What happened? You've requested a page on a website (lexestudio.com.ar) that is on the Cloudflare network. Unfortunately, it is resolving to an IP address that is creating a conflict within Cloudflare's system.
What can I do? If you are the owner of this website: you should login to Cloudflare and change the DNS A records for lexestudio.com.ar to resolve to a different IP address.
Resolving DNS entries is complex and involves many parties (your browser, your operating system, your router and then your ISP's resolver). Any and all of these intermediaries can potentially cache your DNS request and serve stale content, even though you just updated it.
I'm working with a client and they are trying to accomplish the following. User domain/website DNS managed outside Cloudflare. example.com Client is providing a Google Cloud Platform instance for hosting all files as a service for the user. They want to give the user a DNS record to add so that all the files served from GCP load using a subdomain files.example.com but make sure the IP address of that GCP is hidden potentially using Cloudflare for files.client.com since they can't use Cloudflare for the User domain. The current solution is giving the User a CNAME record pointing to a Cloudflare proxied subdomain ) files.client.com which hides the IP. the issue currently though is that the SSL handshake failes for the GCP. Wondering if this is the best way or even possible.
I keep on getting emails from Cloudflare about my tunnels becoming degraded and then going back to healthy, just wondering if there's something going on with Cloudflare
It can be rather spammy, normal as far as I know though. Degraded just means one of the redundant tunnel connections died, your tunnel was still reachable via one of the other ones. I think it's just maintenance on the underlying hosts. I only have notifs set up for tunnels going down entirely