I haven't done it with GoDaddy but many providers WILL delegate reverse IPs to 
you if you request it.

Personal editorial comment:
Were it me I wouldn't use GoDaddy for anything.   I detest GoDaddy because 
their whole business model seems aimed at forcing you to leap through hoops to 
do anything useful.   They've recently started refusing external whois queries 
again so you must go to their website.   Often when we acquire companies and 
have to take on their domains if they're at GoDaddy they throw roadblocks in 
our way for transferring the domain to our preferred Registrar.   A new trick 
they started is denying transfers for 60 days if Registrant is updated.  They 
say they do all this to protect their customers but it seems obvious to me it 
is more to protect their bottom line.


From: bind-users [mailto:bind-users-boun...@lists.isc.org] On Behalf Of John W. 
Blue
Sent: Sunday, July 17, 2016 10:47 PM
To: bind-users@lists.isc.org
Subject: Re: Questions on how to setup Reverse DNS in bind 9

Ken,

You typically will not be delegated reverse DNS.  Honestly, I would contact 
godaddy support directly and see if they can adjust it for you.  As in, not on 
your server directly but either tell you how to do it in a control panel on 
your side of the fence or they just do it from their side.

Best regards,

John

Sent from Nine<http://www.9folders.com/>

From: Spork Schivago <sporkschiv...@gmail.com<mailto:sporkschiv...@gmail.com>>
Sent: Jul 17, 2016 9:24 PM
To: bind-users@lists.isc.org<mailto:bind-users@lists.isc.org>
Subject: Questions on how to setup Reverse DNS in bind 9

Hello,

I'm new to operating a website and I'm leasing a virtual private server (VPS) 
from GoDaddy.   I'm paying for cPanel / WHM as well.   It's running CentOS 6.8 
Final.  I'd like to setup reverse DNS but I'm having trouble.   I'm not 100% 
sure how to do it.   I have my hostname, 
franklin.jetbbs.com<http://franklin.jetbbs.com>   and there's two IP addresses 
assigned to that hostname, 104.238.117.105 and 132.148.11.44.   I was trying to 
setup a round robin kinda thing but I don't think I set it up correctly.

Anyway, I have ns1.jetbbs.com<http://ns1.jetbbs.com> which has the IP of 
104.238.117.105   and then I have ns2.jetbbs.com<http://ns2.jetbbs.com> that 
has the IP address of 132.148.11.44.   I wanted to know if someone could look 
over what I have so far and let me know if it's correct and how I should 
proceed.

So, in the /var/named directory, I create a file called: 
0.117.238.104.in-addr.arpa

The contents of 0.117.238.104.in-addr.arpa are as follows:
$TTL 1D
@       IN SOA  ns1.jetbbs.com<http://ns1.jetbbs.com>. 
spork.jetbbs.com<http://spork.jetbbs.com>. (
                                        2016071705      ; serial
                                        1D              ; refresh
                                        1H              ; retry
                                        1W              ; expire
                                        3H )            ; minimum

0.117.238.104.in-addr.arpa.        IN      NS      
ns1.jetbbs.com<http://ns1.jetbbs.com>.
0.11.148.132.in-addr.arpa.         IN      NS      
ns2.jetbbs.com<http://ns2.jetbbs.com>.

104     IN      PTR     franklin.jetbbs.com<http://franklin.jetbbs.com>.
44      IN      PTR     franklin.jetbbs.com<http://franklin.jetbbs.com>.


Does that look correct?   If not, how should I change it?   If so, what's the 
next step?   Thank you for your help!

Sincerely,
Ken
_______________________________________________
Please visit https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users to unsubscribe 
from this list

bind-users mailing list
bind-users@lists.isc.org
https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users

Reply via email to