My attempt to explain "stub"...
It's like conditional forwarding, without the recursion. You tell named where
the top of the namespace tree is hosted, and it issues *iterative* (=
non-recursive) queries for names in that part of the tree. (Unless, of course,
you have a definition further down i
Kevin,
Thanks for this post. Its the most succinct description of stub zones
I've ever read. I've often tried to wrap my head around when to use a
stub and when to use a conditional forwarder and I *think* your
description has cleared that up for me.
On Wed, Nov 05, 2014 at 03:21:00PM +, Da
Hi Guys,
I have a requirement to replace certain records in a zone, as e.g:
To the public I want www.domain.com and mail.domain.com to resolve to
1.2.3.4 (Do note that I am not the SOA for domain.com)
To my development environment I would like www.domain.com to resolve to
5.6.7.8, but I still
In message <545a96b6.3020...@insync.za.net>, Pieter De Wit writes:
> Hi Guys,
>
> I have a requirement to replace certain records in a zone, as e.g:
>
> To the public I want www.domain.com and mail.domain.com to resolve to
> 1.2.3.4 (Do note that I am not the SOA for domain.com)
> To my develop
Add a "www.domain.com" zone to your local server.
OMG - YES!
Thanks !
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