hello list, I use dhcpd-4.2.1 with bind-9.7.3 on a SuSE system.
I have 3 network cards with under 700 differents subnets declared in the dhcpd.conf. eth0 = 10.1.1.50 eth1 = 172.16.1.50 eth2 = 192.168.1.50 We use Dynamic DNS update with the dhcp-client-identifier option to set settings to my different clients. We also use Bind View to differentiate all differents zones with differents subnets (we have almost 90 zones) This is a part of our dhcpd.conf file: if substring (lcase (option dhcp-client-identifier), 1, 9) = "marketing" { option domain-name "marketing.example.com"; option domain-search "marketing.example.com"; zone marketing.example.com. { primary 10.1.1.50; key OUR_KEY; } } elsif substring (lcase (option dhcp-client-identifier), 1, 6) = "design" { option domain-name "design.example.com"; option domain-search "design.example.com"; zone design.example.com. { primary 10.1.1.50; key OUR_KEY; } } else { option domain-search "publisher.example.com"; } Another part of dhcpd.conf with subnet declarations: subnet 10.1.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 { option routers 10.1.1.1; range 10.1.1.20 10.1.1.199; option subnet-mask 255.255.255.0; option domain-name-servers 10.1.1.50; zone 1.1.10.in-addr.arpa. { primary 10.1.1.50; key OUR_KEY; } } subnet 172.16.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 { option routers 172.16.1.1; range 172.16.1.20 172.16.1.199; option subnet-mask 255.255.255.0; option domain-name-servers 172.16.1.50; zone 1.16.172.in-addr.arpa. { primary 172.16.1.50; key OUR_KEY; } } subnet 192.168.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 { option routers 192.168.1.1; range 192.168.1.20 192.168.1.199; option subnet-mask 255.255.255.0; option domain-name-servers 192.168.1.50; zone 1.168.192.in-addr.arpa. { primary 192.168.1.50; key OUR_KEY; } } This is a part of the named.conf file: view "10.1" { match-destinations { 10.1.1.50; }; match-clients { 10.1.1.0/24; }; zone "marketing.example.com" in { allow-update { key OUR_KEY; }; allow-transfer { none; }; file "dyn/marketing.exemple.com_10.1"; type master; }; zone "design.example.com" in { allow-update { key OUR_KEY; }; allow-transfer { none; }; file "dyn/design.example.com_10.1"; type master; }; view "172.16" { match-destinations { 172.16.1.50; }; match-clients { 172.16.1.0/24; }; zone "marketing.example.com" in { allow-update { key OUR_KEY; }; allow-transfer { none; }; file "dyn/marketing.exemple.com_172.16"; type master; }; zone "design.example.com" in { allow-update { key OUR_KEY; }; allow-transfer { none; }; file "dyn/design.example.com_172.16"; type master; }; view "192.168" { match-destinations { 192.168.1.50; }; match-clients { 192.168.1.0/24; }; zone "marketing.example.com" in { allow-update { key OUR_KEY; }; allow-transfer { none; }; file "dyn/marketing.exemple.com_192.168"; type master; }; zone "design.example.com" in { allow-update { key OUR_KEY; }; allow-transfer { none; }; file "dyn/design.example.com_192.168"; type master; }; The problem is that when i use a client in the others subnets than 10.1.1.0/24, all dynamics updates harent writed to the zone (marketing.example.com or design.example.com) with the primary address of 10.1.1.50 and a message of "Forward map from .... FAILED: Has an address record but no DHCID, not mine." And when you read the forward zone (e. g with nano or cat) the A adress is entered but from the wrong subnet. Example for the file desing.example.com_10.1 (zone dedicated laptop A 172.16.1.17 // updated dynamically The solution, i think, is to test the client (with dhcp-server-identifier ?) when DHCPDISCOVER message appaers and modify the statement "{ primary 10.1.1.50; key OUR_KEY; }" with { primary 172.16.1.50; key OUR_KEY; } and { primary 192.168.1.50; key OUR_KEY; } before DHCPREQUEST. How a do that ? Any idea are much appreciated. Thank you very mutch list. Banana _______________________________________________ bind-users mailing list bind-users@lists.isc.org https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users