On 02/18/2010 03:00 PM, Curtis Maurand wrote: > > nslookup -type=ptr 2.1.13.172.in-addr.arpa > > that also means you need a ptr record in your reverse zone. > > --Curtis > > of course I'm getting nothing, but nslookup is deprecated and may not > work correctly any longer.
Don't worry, I do have PTR entries of course :-) So I can only guess that this really must be some nslookup weirdness, just strange that it happens ... % nslookup -type=ptr 2.1.13.172.in-addr.arpa ;; Got recursion not available from 127.0.0.1, trying next server Server: 172.13.1.2 Address: 172.13.1.2#53 2.1.13.172.in-addr.arpa name = weird.example.com. % nslookup > set type=PTR > 2.1.13.172.in-addr.arpa Server: 127.0.0.1 Address: 127.0.0.1#53 2.1.13.172.in-addr.arpa name = weird.example.com. Just strange that it happens both with nslookup from debian lenny and Mandriva 2010.0. I just tried with Centos 5.4 and there nslookup works ... Quite a broken tool then, just was not aware that it was *so* broken ... -- Udo Rader, CTO http://www.bestsolution.at http://riaschissl.blogspot.com _______________________________________________ Pdns-users mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.powerdns.com/mailman/listinfo/pdns-users
