Yupp use unbound it's great

On July 28, 2017 4:47:53 PM GMT+02:00, Liviu Daia <liviu.d...@gmail.com> wrote:
>On 28 July 2017, Steve Williams <st...@williamsitconsulting.com> wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> I recently upgraded to 6.1 and am trying to (finally, after many
>OpenBSD
>> versions over 10 years) fine tune my home network.
>> 
>> I would like to run a local resolver on my internal network that will
>> resolve all my hosts on my local network to IP addresses on my local
>> network(s) rather than resolving to their public IP addresses.
>> 
>> I believe it's called a "split zone" DNS, where my domain is resolved
>> locally, but everyone else is resolved using normal resolution
>processes.
>> 
>> I set this up at one of my previous jobs using BIND, but that was 7
>years
>> ago.  I've never gone to the trouble of doing it at home, but I would
>like
>> to exercise my brain a bit as well as having my home network set up
>> "better".
>> 
>> What is the best tool to accomplish this these days?  Is NSD the
>"modern"
>> tool to be using on OpenBSD?
>> 
>> Are there any hooks for dhcpd to update records?
>> 
>> I've read the NSD(8), nsd.conf(5) man pages and that seems to be the
>way to
>> go, but I thought I'd check the wisdom here to see if there is a
>better
>> approach.
>
>    unbound(8) probably does exactly what you want.  It's mainly a
>recursive resoler, but it can also answer authoritatively for "local"
>zones, or simply override addresses for given hosts (think anti-spam).
>Unless you also want to answer queries for your domain comming from the
>Internet, you don't need a separate authoritative server.
>
>    Regards,
>
>    Liviu Daia

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