On Dec 1, 2009, at 7:50 PM, Joseph S D Yao wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 01, 2009 at 04:59:16PM -0800, Hans Jacobsen wrote:
>> If a.stanford.edu is a cname (say to b.stanford.edu)
>> can I delegate subdomain.a.stanford.edu? Are there documents that
>> point to this being an ok or bad practice?
>>
>> I k
type master;
allow-transfer { other.servers.ip.addresses; };
perhaps?
I tend to do
options {
...
allow-transfer {"none";};
...
};
But this wouldn't explain why all the rest can transfer and the one zone
can't.
Have you made sure that the slaved copies for
On Tue, Dec 01, 2009 at 04:59:16PM -0800, Hans Jacobsen wrote:
> If a.stanford.edu is a cname (say to b.stanford.edu)
> can I delegate subdomain.a.stanford.edu? Are there documents that
> point to this being an ok or bad practice?
>
> I know all records for a.stanford.edu are relegated to recor
If a.stanford.edu is a cname (say to b.stanford.edu)
can I delegate subdomain.a.stanford.edu? Are there documents that
point to this being an ok or bad practice?
I know all records for a.stanford.edu are relegated to records for
b.stanford.edu
What about subdomains?
-hej
Hans Jacobsen
Dir
Many thanks for all the help first up :-) I really do appreciate it!
Am just wondering, I'm running BIND 9.6.0-P1 on Solaris 9 to achieve
this, so could this be a bug or something else yet not implemented into
Bind or perhaps somehow the way it was compiled as I'm using the
Blastwave version..
Acl's are "first match".
What you had devolves to
match-clients { any; };
Try.
match-clients { !192.168.0.0/22; !127.0.0.1; any; };
Adjust all the other acls
Ok so these are similar to Cisco IOS Acl's now I get it :-)
Unfortunately the reverse zone is still not transferr
In message <4b1576eb.2020...@netscape.net>, Kaya Saman writes:
> Hi,
>
> now that I have my zones and reverse files sorted out I have managed to
> come across a problem which seems I had before even beginning any of this!
>
> Basically for some reason my reverse zone for the external view isn't
David M. Dowdle wrote:
I suspect your secondary has the IP address of 192.168.1.101 ? your
match statement blocks it, as the FIRST match stops procssing, and the
first match is the !192.168.0.0/22, prohibiting queries. Move the
permit before the deny in this case. (the general case is put more
Hi,
now that I have my zones and reverse files sorted out I have managed to
come across a problem which seems I had before even beginning any of this!
Basically for some reason my reverse zone for the external view isn't
transferring to my slave server this is quite strange as all the
ot
gmspro wrote:
> What's the main difference between zone and domain?
In what context? Unfortunately both terms get used by various
people/vendors in different ways. A little more detail is needed to
answer your question (although if you're talking strictly DNS terms
Chris' answer was quite detailed
Yes, remove the A records for the name servers. They shouldn't be here - they
belong in the zone named optiplex-networks.com.
Also, the last line of your zone looks quite odd. You should never have an IP
address on the left side of a DNS record.
Chris Buxton
Professional Services
Men & Mice
On
birimgrup.com. IN A
192.168.1.170 www.birimgrup.com. IN A
192.168.1.170
___
ok this is really weird!
In the actual zone file they are stacked on top of each other
Chris Buxton wrote:
Yes, remove the A records for the name servers. They shouldn't be here - they
belong in the zone named optiplex-networks.com.
Also, the last line of your zone looks quite odd. You should never have an IP
address on the left side of a DNS record.
Chris Buxton
Professional S
Many thanks for the response Chris
As you where writing and sending this I sort of worked it out but this
makes things much clearer :-)
I really do appreciate all the help!
--Kaya
Chris Buxton wrote:
You can create the NS record as you have described (type = NS, not A), but
remember
Ok I think I have got somewhere but still a bit unsure of what's going on!!
dig birimgrup.com
; <<>> DiG 9.6.0-P1 <<>> birimgrup.com
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 567
;; flags: qr aa rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 2, ADDITIONA
You can create the NS record as you have described (type = NS, not A), but
remember to put a dot on the end:
birimgrup.com. in NS ns1.optiplex-networks.com.
This is quite common. Here are some real-world examples:
com.IN NS a.gtld-servers.net.
menandmice.com.
Hi,
I'm wondering if it's possible in Bind like my domain providers DNS
servers to use a different domain as the name server ns record for
another domain??
Excuse the horrific explanation I will try to describe what I mean:
I am about to start hosting a domain called birimgrup.com in my netw
Dear list,
I try to simplify our DNS administration and want to create proper zone files
with h2n.
Our network structure consists of several class C networks and several top
level domains. We are using fictional TLDs internally (e.g. tdl1, tld2). The
tricky thing ist that all TLDs can have ad
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