twork.
>>
>> 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 &q
On 2017-07-31, Kenneth Gober wrote:
> It's not totally clear whether
> it's even possible using nsd/unbound and the base dhcpd, but what I've
> seen indicates that it is not.
It could be done with some helper software to read the lease db
and convert to a z
On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 9:58 AM, Steve Williams
wrote:
> 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.
>
> What is the best tool to accomp
On 29/07/17 12:04, Craig Skinner wrote:
What is the best tool to accomplish this these days? Is NSD the
"modern" tool to be using on OpenBSD?
When OpenBSD changed from BIND to NSD & Unbound, I found it simpler to
serve the private domain '.internal' on the LAN;-
An alternative is to use a s
ieve it's called a "split zone" DNS, where my domain is resolved
> locally, but everyone else is resolved using normal resolution
> processes.
>
Yes Steve.
A split horizon DNS zone is where different data is served for the same
zone above & below the horizon (a gatew
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 m
n 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.
>
&g
;
> > 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&quo
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 proces
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
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