Recognizing remote IP in shared connections

2017-02-28 Thread Job
Hi, for policies purpuose, we need to know which remote site is resolving a Bind 9.x public DNS Server. The problem occurs when some carriers "share" the same IP address between more customers and they surf behind a shared NAT. Is there a way? Perhaps with DNS crypt o dnssec? Thank you! /F ___

Re: Recognizing remote IP in shared connections

2017-02-28 Thread Alberto Colosi
ut is so a large log file (as network accounting, can't be live for "too much". Alberto Colosi IT NetWork & Security Architect Engineer From: bind-users on behalf of Job Sent: Tuesday, February 28, 2017 2:35 PM To: bind-users@lists.isc.org S

Re: Recognizing remote IP in shared connections

2017-02-28 Thread Alberto Colosi
esday, February 28, 2017 2:35 PM To: bind-users@lists.isc.org Subject: Recognizing remote IP in shared connections Hi, for policies purpuose, we need to know which remote site is resolving a Bind 9.x public DNS Server. The problem occurs when some carriers "share" the same IP address between

Re: Recognizing remote IP in shared connections

2017-02-28 Thread G.W. Haywood
Hi there, On Tue, 28 Feb 2017, Job wrote: for policies purpuose, we need to know which remote site is resolving a Bind 9.x public DNS Server. The problem occurs when some carriers "share" the same IP address between more customers and they surf behind a shared NAT. Sounds like a trial. Is

Re: Recognizing remote IP in shared connections

2017-02-28 Thread Matus UHLAR - fantomas
On 28.02.17 14:35, Job wrote: for policies purpuose, we need to know which remote site is resolving a Bind 9.x public DNS Server. The problem occurs when some carriers "share" the same IP address between more customers and they surf behind a shared NAT. Is there a way? Perhaps with DNS crypt o

Re: Recognizing remote IP in shared connections

2017-03-01 Thread Alex Dupuy via bind-users
> for policies purpuose, we need to know which remote site is resolving a Bind > 9.x public DNS Server. > The problem occurs when some carriers "share" the same IP address between > more customers and they surf behind a shared NAT. > > Is there a way? You could use DNS Cookies (https://tools.ie