On Tue, Oct 5, 2010 at 20:30, Eivind Olsen <eiv...@aminor.no> wrote: >> However, another site that _does_ work (with both nameservers on this >> host, not just ns1) shows the same thing: >> >> # nslookup ns1.sharingserver.eu 178.63.65.136 >> Server: 178.63.65.136 >> Address: 178.63.65.136#53 >> >> ** server can't find ns1.sharingserver.eu: NXDOMAIN > > How do you mean this one is working? It's working just as badly as your > first example. >
Yes, but typing the domain into Firefox brings up the webpage that I've put on that server! > I've tried looking up the domain "sharingserver.de" and "sharingserver.eu" > on both the IP addresses you listed, and in all cases your nameserver > replies with NXDOMAIN - it doesn't know about those domains. > >> I don't see a named or bind log, but messages is clean of such things. > > I don't think you've mentioned which OS you're running, and whether you run > a bundled or self-compiled version of BIND, so I'm not sure where it puts > its logs by default. Do you see _any_ mention of "named" in your > /var/log/messages or /var/log/syslog or similar files if you restart BIND? > How to restart it depends on your distribution, whether you use bundled BIND > etc. It might be "service named restart" on one distribution, and "rndc > stop" followed by "/usr/local/sbin/named" on another, or "/etc/rc.d/named > restart" on yet another.. And I'm not good at guessing :D > Sorry, it's CentOS 5.5 and I'm running the distro's packaged bind. There are a few Bind messages in /var/log/messages but no errors (other than no-start error when I have a bad config). > Anyway - if you don't see a single line about "named" in the logs even after > restarting it, you need to look into fixing that, as I'm guessing BIND is > then really trying to give you some nice information in the logs but it > can't.. > -- Dotan Cohen http://gibberish.co.il http://what-is-what.com _______________________________________________ bind-users mailing list bind-users@lists.isc.org https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users