I finally had time to fiddle with this and everything is working fine.
I used your examples and the "view" statement mentioned my Mathew Seaman
to build a BIND 9 DNS server that is authoritative for
mykitchentable.net. that is viewable only from clients in my private
LAN. My public DNS inform
Drew Tomlinson wrote:
> I use virtual servers with Apache. To access those from the inside, I
> have to use the same URL as is used on the outside. So from the
> Internet, I need drew.mykitchentable.net to resolve to my public IP but
> on the inside, I need it to resolve to 192.168.0.x. Thus
On 6/28/2006 7:43 AM Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
On 2006-06-23 14:26, Drew Tomlinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If you use NAT, then I can guide you through setting up a local
``master zone'' that is only visible inside your home network, and a
``slave zone'' that pulls stuff from ZoneEdit for t
On 2006-06-28 10:10, Drew Tomlinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On 6/28/2006 7:43 AM Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
>>> So assuming I understand correctly, yes, please guide me in setting
>>> up a local master zone.
>>
>> Assuming that your local home network uses addresses in the
>> 192.168.0.0/16 range
On 2006-06-23 14:26, Drew Tomlinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> If you use NAT, then I can guide you through setting up a local
>> ``master zone'' that is only visible inside your home network, and a
>> ``slave zone'' that pulls stuff from ZoneEdit for the
>> ``mykitchentable.net'' domain. I alr
TECTED]>,FreeBSD Questions
Subject: Re: Simple DNS For Private LAN
> If you're getting a static IP, then you can become master for your
> domain, but you'll still need a secondary NS, and most (if not all)
> registrars will require that the secondary NS be on a differe
If you're getting a static IP, then you can become master for your
domain, but you'll still need a secondary NS, and most (if not all)
registrars will require that the secondary NS be on a different IP. I
Don't know about the others, but dotster doesn't care.
My domain is one box, 5 IP's. bind
On 6/23/2006 8:54 AM Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
On 2006-06-23 08:21, Drew Tomlinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm having a hard time understanding what I need to do. I have
a small home network that uses a 3Com DSL modem/router as the
last hop to the Internet. Currently, the DSL modem/router
On 6/23/2006 8:44 AM Andy Greenwood wrote:
If you're getting a static IP, then you can become master for your
domain, but you'll still need a secondary NS, and most (if not all)
Whoops, I forgot about needing a static IP. I don't have one currently
and I don't know if the new IP will be stati
On 2006-06-23 08:21, Drew Tomlinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm having a hard time understanding what I need to do. I have
> a small home network that uses a 3Com DSL modem/router as the
> last hop to the Internet. Currently, the DSL modem/router to
> provides DNS for both my home network an
If you're getting a static IP, then you can become master for your
domain, but you'll still need a secondary NS, and most (if not all)
registrars will require that the secondary NS be on a different IP. I
prefer to have mine on a completely seperate Class A, but that's just
personal. I'd leave ns3
I'm having a hard time understanding what I need to do. I have a small
home network that uses a 3Com DSL modem/router as the last hop to the
Internet. Currently, the DSL modem/router to provides DNS for both my
home network and the Internet. Basically I have a few static entries
for machines
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