My W2K box is configured for web, email (Exchange) and .NET (hence the
reason for the existence of the box, and my background is much stronger on
the Windows end <grins>).  It is running Active Directory for my domain
(open2space.com).  I think the AD might have something to do with how things
WERE working.  I had DNS configured (for AD), so added the A records and
CNAME records for my server.  This was running fine, until I decided that
RRAS on Windows sucked, and put in the Linux router.

The Linux router sits between my network and a Telus DSL connection.  DHCP
for the external NIC, and a static IP of 192.168.0.1 for the internal.  The
server has a static IP of 192.168.0.15.  I have tried it with it using
Superreal as it's DNS servers, as well as my router (first didn't work, so
tried the second).  Superreal has 192.168.0.15 as my domains IP address - so
of course, nobody can see me (being a non-routable address).  This happened
when I was setting up the Linux router.  The external port of the router is
209.x.x.x - this is the address I need updated to Superreal.  The router is
configured for port forwarding - if I use the IP address things are working
properly and I can bring up my web site (just a image for now so I know it
IS my server I'm talking to), and I can FTP to my server.

My primary goal is to get the email running, the web site/ftp is secondary.
I finally hit the point where I want to have my OWN email address that does
not rely on me staying employed at my current job, or hoping an ISP stays in
business and keeps me happy enough to stay with them.  By doing this myself
(as opposed to hosting), I can control my server and it's resources, and
learn a whole bunch in the process. :D  I also have some plans for the
domain once things stabilize for it.  (low volume stuff for now).

I'm going to read through the RFC tonight - those are ALWAYS encredibly
boring, but, a necessary evil..  Maybe I'll find something that helps.

Thanks again Curtis.

Shawn



-----Original Message-----
From: Curtis Sloan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 5:43 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: (clug-talk) Dynamic DNS help?


Yes, I see... you're not necessarily running the Win2K DNS server component,
you just have Win2K Server configured to use DNS (just like any other
computer).  Right?  :-D

What I am poking around at is whether is it in fact a DNS issue, or just a
firewall/port forwarding issue.

What IPs do you want dynamically updated (feel free to sanitize, or spoof --
I'm just trying to figure things out)?  Is this because you host a web
server or something, but use a DHCP-based host like Shaw?

And what are you doing using a Win2K server on a Linux network, anyways?!
;-)  lol

-----Original Message-----
From: Shawn Grover [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 5:35 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: (clug-talk) Dynamic DNS help?


I didn't have to specifically configure forwarders, but the DNS servers for
the server were pointing to Superreal.  Does that help?

-----Original Message-----
From: Curtis Sloan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 5:21 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: (clug-talk) Dynamic DNS help?


Shoot, that last one slipped...  Sorry.  :-P
---

Well, this may not be "help" is the best sense, but maybe it will help me
understand the question better.

Dynamic Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS UPDATE):
http://rfc.sunsite.dk/rfc/rfc2136.html

Is this what you're referring to?

Hmmm, as far as Win2K DNS goes, do you have forwarders enabled, and are they
pointing to the Superreal nameservers?
(Right-click server name | Properties | Forwarders tab).

-----Original Message-----
From: Shawn Grover [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 4:48 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: (clug-talk) Dynamic DNS help?


I was asking a couple people at the Installfest how to update my DNS host
with my dynamic IP address.  I was directed to the client scripts at
www.dyndns.org.  I took a look through those, but it appears all of them
require an account with DynDNS themselves (or another similar service).
However, this is not my case.  I've posted this before, but for the sake of
completeness, I'll reiterate the problem:

I have DNS hosting through Superreal.com (srns1.superreal.net, and
srns2.superreal.net).  If I configure DNS on my Win2K server, it updates
Superreal properly.  However, I now have the W2K server behind a Linux
firewall.  The IP address that gets reported/updated now is an internal
192.168.x.x address.  So, it would appear I need to move my DNS server to my
Linux router (it's a RH8 bare bones installation, with Bind).  Not being
that experienced with DNS at this level, I need some guidance.  I think I
have to treat my Bind installation as a primary, and have it update a
Superreal as a slave.  I'm not 100% sure this is the solution to my problem,
but it's the next logical step I can see.

Can anyone tell me if I'm out to lunch with this approach, or if it is the
right approach, how to proceed?  (even a web resource would be greatly
appreciated).

Thanks for the help!

And what a coincidence that Jason's post appeard while I was typing this....
LOL

Shawn Grover

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