

Select the down arrow to the right of the site whose cookies you want to delete and select Delete. Under Cookies and data stored, select Manage and delete cookies and site data > See all cookies and site data and search for the site whose cookies you want to delete. Perhaps the Edge should lookup the address from time-to-time and avoid reusing of stale addresses. In Edge, select Settings and more > Settings > Cookies and site permissions. The problem is that it doesn't seem to know that the server's address has changed even if the server is currently unreachable. It's as if Edge has created something that behaves like a cache although it appears that it's reusing connections. At that point the local address was retrieved from the local DNS server and the connection was made.īased on comment it would appear that the DNS client is not being consulted even when opening a new window. I changed Edge settings so all processes end when you close the app. Closing and reopening Edge also did not resolve the problem.

The internet server responded with the domain's public IP address which cannot be used to reach the internal server. I thiis case I have a split DNS setup and the local DNS server did not respond with the local address for the host. If you want Edge to automatically delete your cache every time you close the browser, on the Privacy, Search & Services page, select Choose what to clear every. I had a similar problem and determined that occurred when the target host's ip address changed after it had been resolved by a secondary DNS server.
