On Thu, 2008-10-16 at 07:57 +0200, Alan DeKok wrote: > Karl Auer wrote: > > We have a very broken NAS - it basically only half-understands realms. > DHCP does DDNS. RADIUS doesn't.
NASes may.. > Why the heck would the NAS be doing DDNS updates? In what alternate > reality is this useful? Here's the full scoop then: This "NAS" is a tunnel broker. When you bring up a tunnel, you get an endpoint allocated to you. The tunnel broker then registers that address against your name in an appropriate domain. If you are "fred", it will register "fred.domain" for you, with an forward record mapping the name to the allocated address. It also registers the allocated address in the appropriate reverse zone, with a reverse record mapping the address to the name. > > any practical way to get the RADIUS server to do the dynamic DNS > > instead. > > I'm not sure what you mean by that... having the RADIUS server *also* > do DDNS wouldn't seem to help. I can turn the DDNS updates from the NAS *off*, I just can't fix them so they are *right*. So I'm thinking turn off the broken functionality in the NAS, and let the RADIUS server do the updates. It has all the information it needs except the nameserver to talk to, which could be configured into this hypothetical module or script. Regards, K. -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Karl Auer ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) +61-2-64957160 (h) http://www.biplane.com.au/~kauer/ +61-428-957160 (mob) GPG fingerprint: DD23 0DF3 2260 3060 7FEC 5CA8 1AF6 D9E3 CFEE 6B28
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