<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><title>duplicates</title><id>https://evotec.xyz/fr/tags/duplicates/index.atom.xml</id><updated>2022-07-26T17:23:53.0000000Z</updated><subtitle>Evotec Main Website</subtitle><link href="https://evotec.xyz/fr/tags/duplicates" /><link href="https://evotec.xyz/fr/tags/duplicates/index.atom.xml" rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" /><entry><title>Finding duplicate DNS records by IP Address using PowerShell</title><id>https://evotec.xyz/fr/blog/finding-duplicate-dns-records-by-ip-adress-using-powershell</id><link href="https://evotec.xyz/fr/blog/finding-duplicate-dns-records-by-ip-adress-using-powershell" /><updated>2022-07-26T17:23:53.0000000Z</updated><summary>In my earlier blog post, I showed you a way to find duplicate DNS entries using PowerShell, but the focus was on finding duplicate entries based on hostname. But what if you would like to find duplicate entries based on IP Addresses? This was the question I was asked on Reddit, and I thought it was a legitimate request, so today’s focus will be on transposing table output from earlier functions to present data differently.</summary><category term="active directory" /><category term="dns" /><category term="DNSServer" /><category term="duplicates" /><category term="powershell" /></entry></feed>