On 07/17/07 09:20, Michael Nottebrock wrote: > On Tuesday, 17. July 2007, Yuri Pankov wrote: >> On Mon, Jul 16, 2007 at 11:19:41PM +0200, Michael Nottebrock wrote: >>> I finally updated my desktop from 5.5-RELEASE to 6-STABLE. This got me a >>> new named.conf, which I modified to run named as a local resolver, like I >>> had before: >>> >>> listen-on { 127.0.0.1; }; >>> listen-on-v6 { ::1; }; >>> forward only; >>> forwarders { >>> 192.168.8.1; >>> }; >>> >>> Everything else is default. However, with this default configuration, >>> named will not resolve any hosts of my local domain (my.domain), which >>> uses addresses in the 192.168.8 subnet. My dns server on 192.168.8.1, >>> running 6.2-RELEASE, has a very simple dynamic dns setup: a zone >>> "my.domain" and a reverse zone 8.168.192.in-addr.arpa which are both >>> dynamically updated by dhcpd. >>> >>> To make this work again, I had to delete everything in the default >>> named.conf from "/* Slaving the following zones from the root [...]" >>> to "zone "ip6.int" { type master; >>> file "master/empty.db"; };". >>> >>> I'm a DNS n00b, but I suspect that such drastic measures shouldn't be >>> required and somehow my setup is flawed. What can I do to make this work >>> right? >>> >>> >>> Cheers, >>> -- >>> ,_, | Michael Nottebrock | [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>> (/^ ^\) | FreeBSD - The Power to Serve | http://www.freebsd.org >>> \u/ | K Desktop Environment on FreeBSD | http://freebsd.kde.org >> Hi Michael, >> >> If I understood you correctly, you can't resolve 8.168.192.in-addr.arpa >> anymore, and the line below (from default named.conf) is the cause: >> >> zone "168.192.in-addr.arpa" { type master; file "master/empty.db"; }; > > Yes - and this: > > zone "." { > type slave;
The root zone MUST be of type hint. You do not want to be a slave of the root... don't you? ;) > file "slave/root.slave"; > masters { > 192.5.5.241; // F.ROOT-SERVERS.NET. > 192.228.79.201; // B.ROOT-SERVERS.NET. > 192.33.4.12; // C.ROOT-SERVERS.NET. > 192.112.36.4; // G.ROOT-SERVERS.NET. > 193.0.14.129; // K.ROOT-SERVERS.NET. > }; > notify no; > }; > > prevents me from resolving hostnames in "my.domain". What I'm still wondering > though, is this an oversight or by design? I can't imagine setups like mine > are very rare. Doug? > Yes, if the servers of the root zone can't be resolved, all queries will fail. If you've got a file /etc/namedb/named.root set it like file "/etc/namedb/named.root"; and change the zone type to "hint" and all should be well again. Volker _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"