subdomain problem
Barry Margolin
barmar at bbnplanet.com
Wed Sep 1 17:24:27 UTC 1999
In article <852567DF.005BF453.00 at D51MTA10.pok.ibm.com>,
<hoyoung at us.ibm.com> wrote:
>Could anyone tell me what I'm missing here?
>
>Parent domain test.com is on server name.test.com. Server ip is 11.13.x.x
>Sub domain sub.test.com is on server namesub.test.com. Server ip is 11.13.x.x
>
>test.com is authoritive for 13.11.IN-ADDR.ARPA and 12.11.IN-ADDR.ARPA I want
>sub.test.com to be authoritive for 5.12.11.in-addr.arpa. This what I did:
>
>a. In 12.11.IN-ADDR.ARPA.zone on name.test.com, I have:
>
>5 IN NS namesub.test.com.
>14 IN NS namesub.test.com.
>
>b. On namesub.test.com, I have a zone called 5.12.11.in-addr.arpa.zone which has
>the following:
I assume that 5.12.11.in-addr.arpa.zone is the name of the *file* and
5.12.11.in-addr.arpa is the name of the zone.
>$ORIGIN 5.12.11.in-addr.arpa.
>@ IN SOA namesub.test.com. hoyoung.test.com. (980926 600 400 2592000 300
>200 )
> IN NS namesub.test.com.
>11 IN PTR .....
>12 IN ....
>
>ON server namesub.test.com, in etc/hosts, I have 11.13.x.x. and
>namesub.test.com. In /etc/resolv.conf file, I have domain sub.test.com.
/etc/hosts is not used by DNS, so it's irrelevant. What do the
"nameserver" directives in /etc/resolv.conf say?
>I only care about reverse resolution.
>I can't resolve anything. What's wrong with the configuration?
Based on what you've said, things seem OK. What specific errors do you get
when you try to do reverse resolution?
I presume we can't access these servers from the Internet, so we can't test
them directly, right?
--
Barry Margolin, barmar at bbnplanet.com
GTE Internetworking, Powered by BBN, Burlington, MA
*** DON'T SEND TECHNICAL QUESTIONS DIRECTLY TO ME, post them to newsgroups.
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