In message <001601c9fd68$cefef010$6cfcd0...@co.uk>, "Alans" writes: > Hi, > > > > A reverse zone file changes when transfers from master to slave, see below;
The DNS doesn't transfer "files". It transfers zones. As long as each representation expands to the same conents there is not problem. Mark > Master Zone: 2.3.1.in-addr.arpa > > > > $TTL 1W > > @ IN SOA ns1.domainname.com. root.domiainname.com. ( > > 2008082716 > > 15M > > 10M > > 4W > > 1W ) > > > > IN NS ns1.domainname.com. > > IN NS ns2. domainname.com. > > 1 IN PTR ns1. domainname.com. > > 3 IN PTR ns2. domainname.com. > > 2 IN PTR www. domainname.com. > > > > Slave zone (transferred): 2.3.1.in-addr.arpa > > $ORIGIN . > > $TTL 604800 ; 1 week > > 2.3.1.in-addr.arpa IN SOA ns1. domainname.com. root. domainname.com. ( > > 2008082716 ; serial > > 900 ; refresh (15 minutes) > > 600 ; retry (10 minutes) > > 2419200 ; expire (4 weeks) > > 604800 ; minimum (1 week) > > ) > > NS ns1. domainname.com. > > NS ns2. domainname.com. > > $ORIGIN 2.3.1.in-addr.arpa. > > 1 PTR ns1. domainname.com. > > 2 PTR www. domainname.com. > > 3 PTR ns2. domainname.com. > > > > Is this fine? > > > > Regards, > > Alans > > -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: ma...@isc.org _______________________________________________ bind-users mailing list bind-users@lists.isc.org https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users