Chrome certainly uses the system DNS settings and not anything specific to itself, furthermore its network connectivity preferences makes use of the system preferences (on Windows at any rate, I haven't checked how this is handled on the recent Mac release) unlike Firefox which has it's own connectivity preferences stack but it will still have to make use of the underlying DNS and ip-settings of the machine there is no way for it to find any alternatives unless you set them at the (shared) system level.
There have been many complaints about its DNS pre-fetching feature, I haven't experienced problems with it but the volume of complaints indicates that if you are having any name resolution issues it should be the first thing you should look at.
AFAIK Chrome always issues IPv6 AAAA name requests, if your network setup uses a DNS setup
that doesn't respond nicely to these requests you can get extremely long delays with name lookup as it waits for an acceptable response before timing out and reverting to ipv4. Firefox had a similar problem but recent versions appear to handle poor\invalid ipv6 responses with more grace, I've tended to disable ipv6 lookup in Firefox (about:config, search for ipv6 and set network.dns.disableipv6 to true) so I don't see this in general anymore but recent versions of Firefox do not exhibit the symptom for me. Likewise the developer channel Chrome builds I use don't have a problem with this but I did see this on the early production releases and the Chrome OS VM's that have been doing the rounds suffer badly from it. There is an ongoing discussion about this on the browser\OS development front, handling poor ipv6 responses strictly is increasingly being seen as important as masking the failures means the real problem (poor DNS setups/poor support for ipv6 especially in consumer level networking hardware) doesn't come under pressure to be fixed.
My home DSL router (a Netopia 2247-02) defaults to setting itself up as DNS proxy and its responses to ipv6 AAAA requests trigger can this problem. I'm pretty sure that whether your setup will have problems with this depends on the specific behavior of the DNS you are using, changing the DNS provider (and making sure that the proxy behavior described above is disabled) should help.
1Is this relevant to modern (circa 2015) versions of Chrome? I can't find the option today – G-. – 2015-03-01T14:00:09.277
1@G Yes, it's now (v42) under
Menu > Settings > Show advanced settings... > Privacy > Prefetch resources to load pages more quickly
. BUT, disabling that hasn't solved the incessant DNS errors I get (only in Chrome) since updating from Chrome 36 (I think) to 41 and now 42:net::ERR_NAME_NOT_RESOLVED
,This webpage is not available
. Ridiculous. – JMM – 2015-05-21T15:24:58.327An example where this causes issues, If you have your own DNS and website you configured with a new A record, run
ipconfig /flushdns && ping example.com
(on Windows). Verify the correct address shows. If the Google DNS resolver has a different address you will see it inchrome://net-internals/#dns
If you clear this cache and refresh example.com in the browser, you will see which address it resolved. Sometimes I have noticed Google's server uses the*
(asterisk) entry instead of the named entry. – Bron Davies – 2016-01-19T15:30:35.0972I doubt that uses a different DNS than the operating system's settings? – Arjan – 2009-11-04T11:14:25.693
5Bit dated, but I thought I'd respond anyway since I believe this is misinformation. Google Chrome does ignore your system's settings first, and uses Google's DNS first (2001:4860:4860::8888). I've seen this for a while, so I verified with a completely fresh, clean system, firewall logs, and packet sniffer. I haven't witnessed the same behavior on other browsers and worked around this "problem" by simply blocking with my firewall. – Michael Prescott – 2014-01-19T15:32:04.610