also sprach Jesse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.01.18.1939 +0100]: > We have a caching only nameserver on our firewall. Apparently, whoever > setup the original DNS on that machine "had" to put zone files in there > pointing to our internal host in order for the local lan to access our > hosted sites. The caching nameserver's A records all use a > 192.168.1.XXX address to point to the internal server.
if it's caching-only, why does it even have A records? it shouldn't have a zone, and there is no reason why you have to put one there. > The internal > server is running DNS and all it's A records use the actual registered > (is that the right word?) static IP official/global would be better. > 1. How does the actual IP address translation happen? If external > requests hit our caching nameserver which then points to an internal > IP, does the caching nameserver query the internal one, and then pass > the IP address it gets back from the internal nameserver to the > external request? if you want me to answer this, then send the named.conf of all involved servers, and all zone files to me privately. also include a topological map of your network, and how you want it to work ideally. > 2. The mail services are currently defined using A records something > like this: > mail.ourdomain.com IN A ip_address > > where ip_address is a local ip on the caching nameserver and the > registered ip on the internal server. I tried changing these to MX > records and mail just died. I used this form: > mail.ourdomain.com IN MX 10 ourdomain.com. what's the MTA? again, i need to see the zone files for that. -- martin; (greetings from the heart of the sun.) \____ echo mailto: !#^."<*>"|tr "<*> mailto:" net@madduck 1-800-psych hello, welcome to the psychiatric hotline. if you are co-dependent, please ask someone to press 2.
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