In article <mailman.483.1287158389.555.bind-us...@lists.isc.org>, João Alberto Kuchnier <joao.kuchn...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Ari, > > I fixed it to use only one reverse file. Like this below: > > zone "0-15.101.198.200.in-addr.arpa" { > type master; > file "/etc/bind/rev"; > allow-transfer { slave; }; > }; > > The rev file is like this: > > ; 101.198.200.in-addr.arpa > $ORIGIN 0-15.101.198.200.IN-ADDR.ARPA. > $TTL 86400 > @ IN SOA ns1.dataprom.com. postmaster.dataprom.com. ( > 2010101501 ; Serial > 10800 ; Refresh > 3600 ; Retry > 1209600 ; Expire > 3600 ) ; Negative Cache TTL > ; > @ IN NS dataprom.com. > 3 IN PTR ns1.dataprom.com. > 4 IN PTR ns2.dataprom.com. > 5 IN PTR mail.dataprom.com. > > There are more domains in the same file using the same IPs. Is this a > problem? Do you mean that both foo.dataprom.com and bar.someotherdomain.com both resolve to the same IP? That's not a problem. While you can legally have multiple reverse entries for the IP, it's not generally necessary or recommended. Pick one of the names and use that in the reverse entry. -- Barry Margolin, bar...@alum.mit.edu Arlington, MA *** PLEASE don't copy me on replies, I'll read them in the group ***
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