--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], "Joel N. Eusebio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
> 
> I know a lot of ISP's have their DNS servers have a secondary IP.
Like 10.10.10.10 or 101.101.101.101 so that it would be easier to
guide their clients in setting up the DNS settings in their dial ups.
I tried to this in our DNS server, I've placed another IP
(ifcfg-eth0:0) in my ../sysconfig/network-scripts. I also placed the
necessary entries in our named.conf but I can't seem to make it work.
Any help will be greatly appreciated. Thanks
> 
> -------------->jOEl

hmmm... smells like a routing problem. set your gateway router to have
an explicit route to your linux box having the 10.x's ip. even though
the two ip's are in a single physical network, logically they belong
to different networks. however, if the dns box is same as your
gateway, you would not be having this kind of problem.

OTOH, consider using DHCP for your local network it would definitely
make your life simpler. If you have dialups, you could make the access
servers to send the nameservers during PPP negotiations.

Regards,

-Mark Anthony Mercado


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