Next stage of evolution = Dynamic Update. Never have to futz with bumping serial numbers ever again.

- Kevin

Bradley Giesbrecht wrote:
You may find named-compilezone useful to get your zone files in a consistent format before performing your mass update.

//Brad

On May 2, 2009, at 3:39 PM, Scott Haneda wrote:

I client of mine has thousands of DNS zones that will need a ttl chance and a serial bump. I want to set a relevant ttl to 300 for a few days.

After that, an IP address change will be made, and I would like to change the TTL back to something sane. The general format of the zone looks something like below.

Any suggestions on the best way to go trough these? Some will have variations on them, like some have mx records, most do not:

$TTL 1D
@ IN SOA ns2.example.com. dns.example.com. (
2009041300 ; serial, todays date + todays serial #
8H ; refresh
2H ; retry
4W ; expire
1H ) ; minimum
@ IN NS ns2.example.com. ;Primary Nameserver
@ IN NS ns1.example.com. ;Secondary Nameserver

; http website base
@ IN A 000.122.226.210
www IN A 000.122.226.210

Would the "refresh" be the best value to target in this case?

--
Scott * If you contact me off list replace talklists@ with scott@ *

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