> All /24's get reverse DNS.. "generic" names for normal residential/commercial 
> prefixes (eg, 1-2-3-4.cust.blah.com).

Thats what I am doing now.  Just wandering how necessary it is anymore.

> On Mon, Jul 29, 2019 at 5:15 PM Matt <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> We have several fiber backbones feeding different geographic sections
>> of our network.  I know I could setup a slave DNS and mirror it in
>> different section.  I don't want too.  Wearing too many hats and do
>> not want headache of maintaining anymore servers then I have too.  I
>> really just want an affordable web interface to log into and do this
>> and let them take care of hardware and security updates.  Our email
>> server I hope to outsource before long too.
>>
>> If there is a very simple web panel I could install on a VM in cloud I
>> would be interested.  I just need security updates etc to be a push
>> button or automatic.
>>
>> How is everyone else doing reverse DNS anyway?  Are you doing generate
>> to create a reverse DNS for each IPv4?  Or are you only doing records
>> for the IP's with servers on them?
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Jul 29, 2019 at 12:22 PM Matt <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >
>> > Currently use a Centos 7 VM running bind to internally host our
>> > forward and reverse DNS records.  After a cut in fiber that this rode
>> > on few months back I am thinking it would be better to out source
>> > this.  Plus, I just want less boxes to update.  What is everyone else
>> > using for DNS hosting that supports pointer records?
>>
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