Thank you Rodolfo and Ross for your help. Unfortunately it is not that easy. My 
internal and external host names need to be the same. Thus, in order for my local 
users to access our mail server, mail.varsitycontractors.com, dns must map to a 
private 10.x.x.x, while my remote users will need dns to map them to a public IP via 
the same hostname. I'm told I need split dns, but I'm having trouble getting it to 
work. For example, I can't get more than one named daemon to run. if anybody has 
detailed info on how to do this, or if there is a better way, I would greatly 
appreciate it. Thanks again for your help so far.

---------- Original Message ----------------------------------
From: "Rodolfo J. Paiz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date:  Tue, 09 Apr 2002 16:56:22 -0600

>At 4/9/2002 04:11 PM -0600, you wrote:
>>I have RH 7.0 setup as a local DNS server for my network. I would like to 
>>set it up to serve public addresses as well. What's the easiest way to do 
>>this? Thanks.
>
>Not difficult at all.
>
>0. Ensure that your DNS server software is patched,
>    up-to-date, and has no known vulnerabilities.
>1. Add zones to /etc/named.conf.
>2. Add zonefiles in the right place, usually /var/named.
>3. Allow traffic from the outside world to your DNS server.
>
>
>-- 
>Rodolfo J. Paiz
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>Redhat-list mailing list
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
>



_______________________________________________
Redhat-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list

Reply via email to