DNS addresses go in /etc/resolv.conf.

If it's just a matter of adding the name and address of your z/OS host,
why not add it to the local hosts file?

James Melin wrote:
Good afternoon, fellow list dwellers....

I've a question/philosophical problem to pose.

To frame this, in normal production I point my virtual servers at a primary and 
secondary DNS server that run in our network on a non-z platform. I
don' tknow what platform and for the scope of this, it's irrelevant. I also 
used to point to the DNS on z/OS (using the non-vipa address) as a
tertiary DNS source. I was asked to change this because the z/OS TCP/IP person 
was seeing errors logged for DNS requests to the z/OS machine from the
Linux machines when DNS wasn't up (Even though the DNS was the third position)

On z/OS we have a DNS server running that basically gets the DNS information 
available from the other DNS servers but is not a primary node of any
kind and we don't use it to answer DNS requests except at Disaster Recovery, 
when no other DNS service is available (Because our distributed folks are
still not doing a real DR model, they do second site failover as a strategy).

The problem is compounded by the fact that my virtual servers use RACFLDAP on 
z/OS as the authentication mechanisim, and at DR, only the 'local/real/'
address of the z/OS recovery system is available (It is the same as the 
production z/OS image at home) but the VIPA expopsed address is not used/not
enabled so that we can have a single flat network all in the same subnet. The 
LDAP confg has a DNS-resolved name as the target LDAP server which is
then used by the PAM modules to authenticate.

Because I was asked to remove the address for the z/OS DNS server from the 
Linux configuration, we of course had difficulty getting LDAP calls to go
through because the DNS resolved address was unavailable. This caused LDAP 
requests to time out.

I was wondering what people have done in a situation like this, and if anyone 
could tell me what configuration file to change during startup of Linux
(before tcp/ip starts) to define the DR DNS address, or if there was a better 
solution to this proposal. I can very easily enable the detection of
whether or not a disaster recovery/test recovery in process, but I'm not sure 
what all needs to change to supply the correct IP address for DNS
services in this case.


Any thoughts/comments appreciated.

-J

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Rich Smrcina
VM Assist, Inc.
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