not authoritative
Barry Margolin
barmar at genuity.net
Fri Jan 12 20:46:22 UTC 2001
In article <93noc4$in2 at pub3.rc.vix.com>,
Steven Fagan <SFagan at evokesoft.com> wrote:
>I have only a partial class C from Verio. I am not looking to make it
>available to the world, just local users. Verio was nice enough to refer me
>to the makers of my router (I have no idea why). All I want to do is run a
>local DNS for local users with a reverse lookup. Do I have to go to a
>10.xx.xx.xx network to do that?
What you can do is make a separate zone for each address in the partial
class C. E.g. if you have 192.168.10.32-47, you would do:
zone "32.10.168.192.in-addr.arpa" {
type master;
file "db.192.168.10.32";
};
zone "33.10.168.192.in-addr.arpa" {
type master;
file "db.192.168.10.33";
};
....
zone "47.10.168.192.in-addr.arpa" {
type master;
file "db.192.168.10.47";
};
Each db file would contain an SOA record, NS record, and a single PTR
record. E.g. db.192.168.10.32 would looke like:
@ IN SOA ns.yourdomain.com. hostmaster.yourdomain.com. (
... ) ; SOA parameters don't matter much since you're not publishing this
IN NS ns.yourdomain.com.
IN PTR host10.yourdomain.com.
--
Barry Margolin, barmar at genuity.net
Genuity, Burlington, MA
*** DON'T SEND TECHNICAL QUESTIONS DIRECTLY TO ME, post them to newsgroups.
Please DON'T copy followups to me -- I'll assume it wasn't posted to the group.
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