Hello,
On Oct 28, 2012, at 23:13 , a b wrote:
How to get PowerDNS to delete zones that are deleted on a Supermasters?
I don't think that is possible: you'll have to delete zones manually
from your PowerDNS `domains` and `records` tables.
If I have a large PowerDNS deployment, let us
Hello,
On Oct 28, 2012, at 23:04 , a b wrote:
We cannot live without the oracle (not goracle) backend; if it weren't
for it, PowerDNS would not be a viable option.
If you can tell us exactly what it is that you would need to keep supporting
it, we might be able to produce it.
We
Hello Stefan,
On Oct 29, 2012, at 9:39 , Stefan Tobé wrote:
Thanks, for you reply
Is it correct -taking your answer into account- to state that multiple Mysql
backends configured in pdns.conf is only there to provide load balancing to
the mysq servers and NOT to increase availability of a
OK thanks, HAproxy or mysql-proxy.are these production ready in your
opinion?
On Mon, Oct 29, 2012 at 9:42 AM, Peter van Dijk
peter.van.d...@netherlabs.nl wrote:
Hello Stefan,
On Oct 29, 2012, at 9:39 , Stefan Tobé wrote:
Thanks, for you reply
Is it correct -taking your answer into
HAproxy is very much production ready!
MySQL-proxy works, but has gotchas and bugs. Best to work around
mysql-proxy if you can!
Regards,
Frank
--
Frank Louwers
COO Openminds
http://www.openminds.be/
Schrijf je in op onze nieuwsbrief: http://openminds.be/nieuwsbrief
Stefan Tobé wrote:
OK
On 28.10.2012 23:13, a b wrote:
How to get PowerDNS to delete zones that are deleted on a Supermasters?
I don't think that is possible: you'll have to delete zones manually
from your PowerDNS `domains` and `records` tables.
If I have a large PowerDNS deployment, let us say one
Hello,
On Oct 29, 2012, at 9:35 , Peter van Dijk wrote:
Depending on your needs, you could write a script to do the cleanup yourself.
The last_check column is a decent indicator of master uptime, in the current
implementation. Note that THIS MIGHT CHANGE.
If someone happens to have, or
Hello list,
When I look in mysql I see this txt record
v=DKIM1; k=rsa; p=MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4G...
but when i do a digg to the txt record im getting the response
v=DKIM1\; k=rsa\;
so the \ is added
is this a bug, normal, or am i doing something wrong
Thanxs
Steffan
Hi,
Op 29-10-12 15:03, Peter van Dijk schreef:
Hello, On Oct 29, 2012, at 9:35 , Peter van Dijk wrote:
Depending on your needs, you could write a script to do the cleanup
yourself. The last_check column is a decent indicator of master
uptime, in the current implementation. Note that THIS
Hello Steffan,
On Oct 29, 2012, at 15:03 , Steffan Noord wrote:
When I look in mysql I see this txt record
v=DKIM1; k=rsa; p=MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4G…..
but when i do a digg to the txt record im getting the response
v=DKIM1\; k=rsa\;
so the \ is added
is this a bug, normal, or am
To support a backend, it needs to be tested automatically - preferably after
each commit. Our testing infrastructure runs Debian 6, and as far I have
seen, setting up Oracle on it would be a pain.
To get the oracle backend into testing, I see two options
(a) provide us with good and
You could do the replication in the database (e.g. postgresql with
slony). Then you do not need the supermaster feature.
That is something we are actually trying to avoid at all costs: we have Oracle
doing regular notify and transfer requests on port 53.
We explicitly do not want to depend
Sent: Monday, October 29, 2012 3:17 PM
Op 29-10-12 15:03, Peter van Dijk schreef:
Hello, On Oct 29, 2012, at 9:35 , Peter van Dijk wrote:
Depending on your needs, you could write a script to do the cleanup
yourself. The last_check column is a decent indicator of master
uptime, in the
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