On 2015-08-09 21:41, Dave Koelmeyer wrote:
Hi Josh, Heiko
On 09/08/15 18:38, Heiko Richter wrote:
Am 09.08.2015 um 06:58 schrieb Josh Kuo:
> Add www.mydomain.co.nz to your internal zone, that is one common
> way to deal with it. With BIND you can keep the common records in a
> separate file a
Hi Josh, Heiko
On 09/08/15 18:38, Heiko Richter wrote:
> Am 09.08.2015 um 06:58 schrieb Josh Kuo:
> > Add www.mydomain.co.nz to your internal zone, that is one common
> > way to deal with it. With BIND you can keep the common records in a
> > separate file and use "include" statement to avoid doub
On 8/9/15 12:38 AM, Heiko Richter wrote:
Using the same domain with two seperate contents is just bad practice.
And when you decide to use DNSSec sometime in the future it will leave
your home network inoperable, because the trust delegations won't work
anymore.
Since the OP is the RP for the m
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Am 09.08.2015 um 06:58 schrieb Josh Kuo:
> Add www.mydomain.co.nz to your internal zone, that is one common
> way to deal with it. With BIND you can keep the common records in a
> separate file and use "include" statement to avoid double entry.
>
>
>
Add www.mydomain.co.nz to your internal zone, that is one common way to deal
with it. With BIND you can keep the common records in a separate file and use
"include" statement to avoid double entry.
> On Aug 9, 2015, at 12:50 AM, Dave Koelmeyer
> wrote:
>
>> On 09/08/15 16:44, Dave Koelmeyer
On 09/08/15 16:44, Dave Koelmeyer wrote:
> - lookups to www.mydomain.co.nz fail, where www.mydomain.com is my
> public webserver defined in my domain registrar's zone file
Correction: this should obviously read "lookups to www.mydomain.co.nz
fail, where www.mydomain.co.nz is my public webserver d
Hi All,
This question I imagine comes up regularly – I see online there are
several potential solutions so thought it best to see what the accepted
common practice is.
I have configured an internal BIND 9.6 server to act as a split DNS
resolver for an internal (home) network. It uses forwarding f
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