Hello,
This is my Zone File
$TTL 1
@ IN SOA hp3bl5PSXDNS.testnet.com. root.testnet.com. (
2017051700 ; Serial number (mmdd-num)
8H ; Refresh
2M ; Retry
4W ; Expire
1D ) ; Minimum
IN NS hp3bl5PSXDNS
hp3bl5PSXDNS A 10.54.213.8
testnet.com.
I run a small dev system on my home network, housing dns etc all under the one
server.
System: ubuntu16.04 server, ispconfig etc etc etc, you get the idea.
Anyway, the problem i am having comes down to the router rebooting (is it
crashing? I cant tell) every time bind starts/restarts. This ordi
Chris,
First, what a strange problem to have.
You really need to spend some time capturing the traffic placed on the wire via
tcpdump and then slicing it up for clues with wireshark.
If you set a continuous ping to the router that would be a good timestamp that
you can use to correlate as a ma
Even home routers sometimes try to police DNS traffic and I would
expect there is a bug in the code doing that.
As this is a ISP supplied router (if my Google Foo is accurate)
report the fault to the ISP. It is their job to fix it.
If it wasn't a ISP supplied router, update the router firmware
As far as I know, the only "special" thing that BIND does consistently on a
restart, that it doesn't do on a regular basis in normal operation, is a
"priming" query to whatever is configured as root nameservers. I suppose it's
_possible_ that there is something about priming queries, particularl
RFC 3404
At this time only four flags, "S", "A", "U", and "P", are defined.
The "S", "A" and "U" flags are for a terminal lookup. This means
that the Rule is the last one and that the flag determines what the
next stage should be. The "S" flag means that the output of this
Rule i
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