"Derek D. Martin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Do you own the entire C block? I understand there are tricks you can > do to be responsible for a portion of a C block, and I think BIND 9 > actually has features built into it to allow for that. However, older > versions of BIND were not intended to accomodate networks smaller than > a full class C. You may need to get your upstream provider (or > whoever has been delegated to do reverse DNS for that block) to assign > reverse DNS for you, as I have had to do in the past.
No, we don't own the C block; USDC assigned us a few addresses from it. We had gotten USDC to handle it on their end in the past; I can only guess that they lost the information from their servers somehow. -- John Abreau / Executive Director, Boston Linux & Unix ICQ 28611923 / AIM abreauj / JABBER [EMAIL PROTECTED] / YAHOO abreauj Email [EMAIL PROTECTED] / WWW http://www.abreau.net / PGP-Key-ID 0xD5C7B5D9 PGP-Key-Fingerprint 72 FB 39 4F 3C 3B D6 5B E0 C8 5A 6E F1 2C BE 99
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