thats the space im talking about, infrastructure like <speed>-<portID>-<localsite>-<remotesite>.domain.com for traceroutes (remote site matches my ip documentation and will help catch a forgotten update if we move a backhaul) i guess alot of it is how much is enough, not enough, and too much, I assume i dont want <username/password> in it
On Wed, Aug 24, 2016 at 9:27 AM, Jesse DuPont <[email protected] > wrote: > I pretty much stick to these: > > dyn-192-168-1-1.celerityinternet.com > static-192-168-1-1.celerityinternet.com > <real-host-name>.celerityinernet.com > > I know it's forward notation, but I prefer to keep them simple. > Also valuable in some cases is setting a longer TTL value for your > non-dynamic-use PTR records (like 86400 or 43200). It avoids you having to > change them later when someone with a static IP gets black listed on a DUL > email server list. > > Also, right or wrong, I use loose geographical naming conventions (based > on CLLI naming convention) for PTR records for L3 interfaces so traceroutes > are more intuitive. So, one of our towers is called SDPB and it's in > Spearfish so I might use "sprf-sdpb-ccr-eth1.celerityinternet.com". If > nothing else, as the network grows, it's helpful internally. > > *Jesse DuPont* > > Network Architect > email: [email protected] > Celerity Networks LLC > > Celerity Broadband LLC > Like us! facebook.com/celeritynetworksllc > > Like us! facebook.com/celeritybroadband > On 8/24/16 8:11 AM, That One Guy /sarcasm wrote: > > I know this is alot like asking which mail server is best or which cable > to use. Im putting up a DNS server with our rfc1918 space thats in use on > it. Ive been reading a ton of conventions people use, some granular, some > vague. > anybody care to share some examples? > > -- > If you only see yourself as part of the team but you don't see your team > as part of yourself you have already failed as part of the team. > > > -- If you only see yourself as part of the team but you don't see your team as part of yourself you have already failed as part of the team.
