Yann, Create a child DNS domain for the site containing DCb, and establish DCb as the authoritative server for that domain. If you have resources in Sitea you'll then need to ensure there is a forwarder set up for resolution, etc. Remember that separate DNS domains can exist within the one logical windows domain.
At least I think this would solve your problem... themolk. ________________________________ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Yann Sent: Wednesday, 24 January 2007 7:28 AM To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org Subject: [ActiveDir] Question about DNS SRV registration. Hello all and happy new year:-), Say: -> Site A with DCa that is also dns (integrated to AD). -> Site B that is a new site. my goal: dcpromo a new DC (DCb) in site B.DCb will be also dns (integrated to AD). -> DCa & DCb belong to the same domain (domain.local). My AD is w2k3 FFL mode. In order to add the new DCb in the existing domain.com, DCb is dns client to DCa. When dcpromo is finished, i configured: - DCb as dns client for himself - DCa as secondary dns sever for DCb. Everything looks good .. BUT: When clients in site B ask for all DCs in site B (with netlogon process),DCb returns DCb and DCa ! a nslookup set type=srv _ldap._tcp.siteB._sites.domain.local shows the 2 DCs -> DCa.domain.local -> DCb.domain.local When i search in dns console, i found that DCa still present in site B, i think, this is due to the fact that DCb's nic allow dynamic update and thus dynamically records DCa srv records. The only way i found to avoid DCb returning DCa to clients in site B is to delete srv records for DCa in dns (site B). Question: What is the best practice to avoid DCb to return DCa to clients and where in the process i'm wrong ? Thanks, Yann ________________________________ Découvrez une nouvelle façon d'obtenir des réponses à toutes vos questions ! Profitez des connaissances, des opinions et des expériences des internautes sur Yahoo! Questions/Réponses <http://fr.rd.yahoo.com/evt=42054/*http://fr.answers.yahoo.com> . This email (including any attachments) contains confidential information and is intended only for the named addressee. If you are not the named addressee you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this email. Please notify the sender immediately by email if you have received this email by mistake and delete this email from your system and destroy any copies. This email is also subject to copyright. No part of it should be reproduced, adapted or communicated without the written consent of the copyright owner. Email transmission cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free and emails may be interfered with, may contain computer viruses or other defects and may not be successfully replicated on other systems. The sender does not give any warranties nor accepts any liability in relation to any of these matters. If you have any doubt about the authenticity of an email purportedly sent by us, please contact us immediately.