it is
illegal.
If you put a CNAME at the domain level you are causing the CNAME to collide
with an SOA records, and 1 or more NS records at the very minimum.
--
-Ben Croswell
On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 12:36 PM, RJValenta rjvale...@gmail.com wrote:
forever ago, i set myself up with a solid bandwidth
I have never heard of there being any downside to a large number of NS
records for a domain.
I know internally to my company we have large numbers of NS records for the
internal domains.
--
-Ben Croswell
On Sun, Feb 1, 2009 at 7:51 PM, shulkae shul...@gmail.com wrote:
How may NS entries
This is exactly what we have done in the past to mitigate malware. Just
load somebaddomain.com with no A records or with a wildcard pointing to
127.0.0.1.
--
-Ben Croswell
On Thu, Dec 11, 2008 at 11:29 AM, Baird, Josh jba...@follett.com wrote:
You could just create an authoritative zone
Are there NS records and/or zone forwarding for the 10.131.10.0?
If there is the servers will look to the most specfic domain.
--
-Ben Croswell
On Thu, Dec 11, 2008 at 4:38 PM, Todd Snyder tsny...@rim.com wrote:
Good day,
We are working on an odd issue. I can provide more detail
101 - 104 of 104 matches
Mail list logo