Sounds good to me.  Where do I find the host file?  I am used to 
C:\Windows\System32\Drivers\ETC doubt that will work in this case.

_____________________________________________________________________
Ron Lemon
Information Technology Manager, Maplewood Computing Ltd. | 800.265.3482 | 
www.maplewood.com

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From: Gabriel - IP Guys [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, November 27, 2009 10:35 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [pfSense Support] Split DNS Setup

If your only working with a few servers,  >5 - then I would consider just 
adding those IPs to the host file on pfSense. No need for a shotgun to kill a 
fly!

From: Ron Lemon [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 27 November 2009 15:10
To: [email protected]
Subject: [pfSense Support] Split DNS Setup

Good Morning,

I have a pfSense box that needs to resolve real world IP addresses 
(www.google.ca<http://www.google.ca>) and also internal office IPs for real 
world IPs (www.mydomain.com<http://www.mydomain.com> as 192.168.1.1).  This way 
people in the building can use things just as they would outside but never 
leave our network.

I have installed TinyDNS and it was working for the 
www.mydomain.com<http://www.mydomain.com> with internal addresses but I then 
lost the ability to find google.com, etc.

Any suggestions?

I defined and SOA for mydomain.com and created an A record for it.  I had it 
listening on my LAN IP.  Restarted TinyDNS and all was well, till I tried 
google.  It would not resolve that.

Thanks,

Ron

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