On Thu, 8 May 2008 00:03:30 -0500, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
On Wed, May 7, 2008 at 10:41 PM, Jon Radel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
I assume that if I want to host email for 10 different domains I have
If you're currently using a setup that involves the same IP
On Wed, May 7, 2008 at 11:03 PM, Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, May 7, 2008 at 10:41 PM, Jon Radel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
If you're currently using a setup that involves the same IP
address for both authoritative (domains you host) and recursive
queries (client DNS
On Thu, May 08, 2008 at 12:03:30AM -0500, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
On Wed, May 7, 2008 at 10:41 PM, Jon Radel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
(...) I want to host email for 10 different domains (...)
If you're currently using a setup that involves the same IP
Are you *sure* you don't mean while still providing the _internal
network_ recursive queries or not provide _reverse_ queries? Really,
really sure?
no I am not sure, My DNS skills are not what they need to be. I am
working on improving them.
I am just getting tired of the endless worms and
On 2008/05/07 19:21, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
I assume that if I want to host email for 10 different domains I have
to have these set
allow-recursion { any; };
This allows anybody to use your nameserver as a resolver (e.g.
anyone can ask you to lookup domains for them). You
On Wed, May 7, 2008 at 3:56 PM, Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
now that I am trying to host a mail server, I found out my reverse
lookup is not working correctly
we have a /25 ip block on our T1
...
however if I change my name server to a local ISP (that I do not use
for
On 2008-05-07, Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
here is my trouble, if i use nslookup from a computer that is set to
use my name server(ns.wiscdns.com)
my output is as follows:
Sam# nslookup 12.192.128.135
Server: 12.192.128.131
Address: 12.192.128.131#53
I assume that if I want to host email for 10 different domains I have
to have these set
allow-recursion { any; };
This allows anybody to use your nameserver as a resolver (e.g.
anyone can ask you to lookup domains for them). You shouldn't
do this at all without a very good
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
I assume that if I want to host email for 10 different domains I have
to have these set
allow-recursion { any; };
This allows anybody to use your nameserver as a resolver (e.g.
anyone can ask you to lookup domains for them). You shouldn't
do this at all
On Wed, May 7, 2008 at 10:41 PM, Jon Radel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
I assume that if I want to host email for 10 different domains I have
If you're currently using a setup that involves the same IP
address for both authoritative (domains you host) and
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