I don't think the child domain is on BIND so that may or may not be an option. But, good idea. Thanks for your help!
_____ From: Ben Croswell [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Tuesday, May 08, 2012 1:16 PM To: Mike Bernhardt Cc: [email protected] Subject: RE: How does a child find its parent? Another option would be zone level forwarding on the child to point at the parent or stub zones. -Ben Croswell On May 8, 2012 3:59 PM, "Mike Bernhardt" <[email protected]> wrote: In this case, the root only knows the external public server, not the internal parent who is doing the delegating. So it would seem that slaving the internal parent is the only solution for resolving hosts in the internal parent domain, correct? _____ From: Ben Croswell [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Tuesday, May 08, 2012 12:21 PM To: Mike Bernhardt Cc: [email protected] Subject: Re: How does a child find its parent? The child doesn't know it's parent and goes up to the root like any other server would. -Ben Croswell On May 8, 2012 2:13 PM, "Mike Bernhardt" <[email protected]> wrote: Reading the section on delegation in the O'Reilly book, I'm confused about something: The parent is configured to delegate the subdomain to the child with glue records, etc. But how does the child know who to ask if a host in the subdomain requests a record in the parent zone? They don't show any configuration example for that other than making the child a slave for the parent zone. _______________________________________________ Please visit https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users to unsubscribe from this list bind-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users
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