There are 4 properties that can be used to override the default behaviour.java
networkaddress.cache.ttl (default: -1) Specified in java.security to indicate the caching policy for successful name lookups from the name service. The value is specified as as integer to indicate the number of seconds to cache the successful lookup. A value of -1 indicates "cache forever". networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl (default: 10) Specified in java.security to indicate the caching policy for un-successful name lookups from the name service. The value is specified as as integer to indicate the number of seconds to cache the failure for un-successful lookups. A value of 0 indicates "never cache". A value of -1 indicates "cache forever". sun.net.inetaddr.ttl This is a sun private system property which corresponds to networkaddress.cache.ttl. It takes the same value and has the same meaning, but can be set as a command-line option. However, the preferred way is to use the security property mentioned above. sun.net.inetaddr.negative.ttl This is a sun private system property which corresponds to networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl. It takes the same value and has the same meaning, but can be set as a command-line option. However, the preferred way is to use the security property mentioned above.
So you can disable caching by adding -Dsun.net.inetaddr.ttl=0 on the command line starting the JVM. But you can't set the value of networkaddress.cache.ttl on the command line. You can set the required value in the java.security file located in %JRE%\lib\securityapp
networkaddress.cache.ttl=60 networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl=10
or set the value in your code withide
java.security.Security.setProperty("networkaddress.cache.ttl" , "0");