On Fri, May 27, 2022 at 3:29 PM Mirsad Goran Todorovac <
mirsad.todoro...@alu.unizg.hr> wrote:
> Hi Crist,
>
> 1. Actually, I am running dynamic updates with BIND9 and ISC DHCP server
> for about a half a year and I am frankly very happy with the way it works.
> This is at the Academy. So, I am fa
Hi Crist,
1. Actually, I am running dynamic updates with BIND9 and ISC DHCP server
for about a half a year and I am frankly very happy with the way it
works. This is at the Academy. So, I am familiar with the dynamic (DDNS)
updates. Though there had been some tricky stuff with sub-/24 reverse
As far as I know, GSS-TSIG is only used for DNS updates, not zone transfers.
https://bind9.readthedocs.io/en/v9_16_5/advanced.html#dynamic-update
Sorry, don't know what capabilities AD has for securing zone transfers
beyond IP ACLs, which of course is not much security at all. I've never had
luck
Dear all,
I have a zone local.grf.hr administered by AD, DHCP and DDNS ran by
Windows Server 2016
(not by my architectural choice). However, since Windows Server 2016 had
round-robin
strategy of inquiring the forwarders, it performed worse than BIND9 on
old Debian server.
So, I had the BIND9
Dear all,
I have a zone local.grf.hr administered by AD, DHCP and DDNS ran by
Windows Server 2016
(not by my architectural choice). However, since Windows Server 2016 had
round-robin
strategy of inquiring the forwarders, it performed worse than BIND9 on
old Debian server.
So, I had the BIND9
Dear all,
I have a zone local.grf.hr administered by AD, DHCP and DDNS ran by
Windows Server 2016
(not by my architectural choice). However, since Windows Server 2016 had
round-robin
strategy of inquiring the forwarders, it performed worse than BIND9 on
old Debian server.
So, I had the BIND9
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