Hello,
I have correctly understood the need to have the NS of a subdomain in the
parent domain to avoid any malfunction with a future migratio to DNSSEC.
But can anybody give me a clear method to detect such missconfiguration?
Is this possible with dig or is it ony possible with the access
Jay,
- Can you give me an example of such configuration?
As anyone else some examples of IPV6 reverse configuration used in production
environment?
Thanks for sharing your experience...
Hugo,
Date: Mon, 12 Mar 2012 16:28:53 -0500
From: jay-f...@uiowa.edu
To: hugo...@hotmail.com
Dear all,
I have this strange behaviour when I do a zone transfer with the following
commande:
dig @name_server zone_name AXFR
== I received 2 SOA records (duplicates).
One SOA record is at the end of the received information.
Is this normal?
Thanks for any feedback,
Hugo,
On 03/19/12 10:33, hugo hugoo wrote:
Dear all,
I have this strange behaviour when I do a zone transfer with the
following commande:
dig @name_server zone_name AXFR
== I received 2 SOA records (duplicates).
One SOA record is at the end of the received information.
Is this normal?
Yes.
Hello,
thanks for this quick answer.
I am a liitle bit lost...
What is the starting and ending SOA record?
In the original zone, there is ony one SOA record...
Hugo,
Date: Mon, 19 Mar 2012 10:41:22 -0700
From: mich...@rancid.berkeley.edu
To: hugo...@hotmail.com
CC:
On 19/03/2012 18:49, hugo hugoo wrote:
thanks for this quick answer.
I am a liitle bit lost...
What is the starting and ending SOA record?
In the original zone, there is ony one SOA record...
The SOA record at the end signals the end of the zone transfer.
Regards,
Anand
What is the starting and ending SOA record?
In the original zone, there is ony one SOA record...
The starting SOA is the SOA in your zone. The final SOA is used to
indicate end-of-transfer and is a copy of the first; you can safely
ignore it or, as Michael pointed out, supress it.
2012/3/19 hugo hugoo hugo...@hotmail.com
Jay,
- Can you give me an example of such configuration?
As anyone else some examples of IPV6 reverse configuration used in
production environment?
Thanks for sharing your experience...
Hugo,
We use IPv6 in production environment. It was a
On 3/19/12 10:49 AM, hugo hugoo hugo...@hotmail.com wrote:
thanks for this quick answer.
I am a liitle bit lost...
What is the starting and ending SOA record?
In the original zone, there is ony one SOA record...
FWIW,
When transferring it is normal to get the SOA as first and last
Dear Support,
I am trying to resolve www.dubaiairport.com from my GW BIND server as below.
But not getting any output
$ dig A www.dubaiairport.com
; DiG 9.3.4-P1 A www.dubaiairport.com
;; global options: printcmd
;; connection timed out; no servers could be reached
Whereas, when i try
On 03/19/12 13:28, babu dheen wrote:
Dear Support,
I am trying to resolve www.dubaiairport.com
http://www.dubaiairport.com from my GW BIND server as below. But not
getting any output
$ dig A www.dubaiairport.com http://www.dubaiairport.com
; DiG 9.3.4-P1 A www.dubaiairport.com
On 19/03/2012 21:28, babu dheen wrote:
Babu,
Dear Support,
I am trying to resolve www.dubaiairport.com from my GW BIND server
as below. But not getting any output
$ dig A www.dubaiairport.com
; DiG 9.3.4-P1 A www.dubaiairport.com
;; global options: printcmd
;; connection timed
On 3/19/12 11:58 AM, Peter Andreev andreev.pe...@gmail.com wrote:
2012/3/19 hugo hugoo hugo...@hotmail.com
Jay,
- Can you give me an example of such configuration?
As anyone else some examples of IPV6 reverse configuration used in
production environment?
Thanks for sharing your
On Mon, 19 Mar 2012, hugo hugoo hugo...@hotmail.com wrote:
Jay,
- Can you give me an example of such configuration?
Sure.
Say I use a DHCP pool of /64_prefix:a123:b456::/96 within each /64 subnet.
For example:
subnet DHCP pool
_
On 3/19/2012 10:08 AM, hugo hugoo wrote:
Hello,
I have correctly understood the need to have the NS of a subdomain in
the parent domain to avoid any malfunction with a future migratio to DNSSEC.
But can anybody give me a clear method to detect such missconfiguration?
Is this possible
Doug,
The problem is that the parent zone and the subzone are on the same name server.
If I do a dig @name_server subzone NS or dig @name_server zone NS ... I
receive the same NS answer.
From: do...@dougbarton.us
To: hugo...@hotmail.com
CC: cat...@isc.org; bind-users@lists.isc.org
On 3/19/2012 3:58 PM, hugo hugoo wrote:
Doug,
The problem is that the parent zone and the subzone are on the same name
server.
If I do a dig @name_server subzone NS or dig @name_server zone NS
... I receive the same NS answer.
Then you would need access to the text files.
--
In message dub109-w94faa059d21622d23e2903ac...@phx.gbl, hugo hugoo writes:
Doug
The problem is that the parent zone and the subzone are on the same name se=
rver.
If I do a dig @name_server subzone NS or dig @name_server zone NS ... =
I receive the same NS answer.
Hugo, you
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