get_nameservers will return information if there's a nameserver created
based on the domain in question...
I.E. moo.moo has the nameservers moo1.moo.moo and moo2.moo.moo, a
"get_nameservers" will return moo1.moo.moo (etc) with IP address
information.
BTW - register a .moo domain here *grin* http://moo.tucows.com/
Derek Glidden wrote:
>
> Daniel Manley wrote:
> >
> > Derek Glidden wrote:
> >
> > > [....]
> > > Registering a new domain and giving it nameserver information doesn't
> > > help as that new domain still does not return any nameserver data on a
> > > request.
> >
> > the action "get_nameservers" will return nameservers that reside in the same
>namespace as the domain associated with the cookie.
>
> I'm not sure I understand exactly what that means (I'm more a programmer
> than a DNS guy) but....
>
> > To get the nameservers "serving" a domain (primary, secondary, ...) use the
>"get_domain_info" action with the "type" parameter set to "nameservers".
>
> ...this does exactly what I'm looking for. Thanks!
>
> So, trying to understand that first paragraph a little better, does that
> mean that "get_nameservers" actually doesn't return the nameservers that
> "service" that domain, but any nameservers that are running in that
> domain? (i.e. if "ns1.nks.net" manages DNS for nks.net, illusionary.com
> and pherret.com, it will really only show up with "get_nameservers" if
> the "nks.net" domain is being managed and not "illusionary.com" or
> "pherret.com" because it exists as part of the "nks.net" domain?)
>
> > ps. I like your email signature!
>
> Thanks, me too. :)
>
> --
> -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
> With Microsoft products, failure is not Derek Glidden
> an option - it's a standard component. http://3dlinux.org/
> Choose your life. Choose your http://www.tbcpc.org/
> future. Choose Linux. http://www.illusionary.com/
--
Charles Daminato
OpenSRS Support Manager
[EMAIL PROTECTED]