On 07/31/2012 01:29 PM, Michael Richardson wrote:
"Ted" == Ted Lemon <[email protected]> writes:Ted> You secondary a zone so that the contents of the zone will be Ted> there when a query happens, but why would a query happen if the Ted> CPE device isn't reachable? What would trigger that query? Ted> So I think you can get away with _not_ secondarying the zone. Ted> But if you do want to secondary it, why would the ISP be Ted> responsible for that? Presumably the customer is pretty Ted> savvy; a secondary for their reverse tree would just be another Ted> service they'd want to buy or set up, and the ISP could wash Ted> their hands of it or sell it, whichever they chose.My suggestion is that the ISP secondary the zone from the CPE, but actually advertise only their server in the NS delegation. (The CPE remains a stealth primary)
Do you mean (in bind parlance at least) the CPE is the master, and the ISP is the slave even though it's authoritative? Mike _______________________________________________ homenet mailing list [email protected] https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/homenet
