Thanks,

For some reason I wasn't catching that they were referring to a zone
named 192.201.69.65.in-addr.arpa instead of
192/27.201.69.65.in-addr.arpa as I had it.  All works now. I guess I was
expecting my server to need the CIDR notation to know that it needs to
find the delegating server for the rest of the range.  How does that
work?  I don't see any notation of the range in the zone file, does it
assume the largest subnet from that IP?  Just curious.

Thanks,
Chuck Frolick
ArgoNet, Inc.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of R. Scott Perry
Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2003 3:59 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Reverse Lookup Delegation



>I typoed, it is 65.69.201.192/27, and my zone is
>192/27.201.69.65.in-addr.arpa.

Actually, the swbell servers are just sending the request to your DNS 
servers, so DNS clients will look up "192.201.69.65.in-addr.arpa"
(without 
using any CNAMEs).  Your DNS server is not returning any answers for
that.

If you add a PTR record for 192.201.69.65.in-addr.arpa, you should be
all set.

                                                    -Scott

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