round-robin
Michele Chubirka
chubirka at gwu.edu
Thu Nov 8 20:01:36 UTC 2001
Only problem is that stricter Sendmail security will reject the mail if
forward and reverse records don't match.
-----Original Message-----
From: bind-users-bounce at isc.org [mailto:bind-users-bounce at isc.org]On
Behalf Of Barry Margolin
Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2001 1:41 PM
To: comp-protocols-dns-bind at moderators.isc.org
Subject: Re: round-robin
In article <9seit8$cp5 at pub3.rc.vix.com>,
Joe Kattner <joe.kattner at adelphia.com> wrote:
>That looks correct. As the DNS & BIND book recommends, shorten the ttl on
>round robin records to something fairly low (they use 60 in the example),
so
>that these records don't live very long and get cycled.
That's not necessary. The caching server caches *all* the records and
round-robins them, so it will still work with a normal TTL.
>The reverse should match the forward, especially in cases where you know
>that a provided service on that host uses forward and reverse name checking
>to make sure they match up as a security feature. You show a 1 PTR to 1 A
>record, in the example which would be correct.
While the setup he showed will work, I would recommend something like:
$ORIGIN gwu.edu.
smtp IN A 10.10.10.3
IN A 10.10.10.4
smtp1 IN A 10.10.10.3
smtp2 IN A 10.10.10.4
$ORIGIN 10.10.10.in-addr.arpa.
3 PTR smtp1.gwu.edu.
4 PTR smtp2.gwu.edu.
This way, when you're doing system administration you can go to a specific
server to work on it. And mailer logs that show where a message came from
will be more specific.
Also, if this hostname is only used in MX records, you don't need the
"smtp" entry. Just use two equal-preference MX records:
$ORIGIN gwu.edu.
@ IN MX 10 smtp1
IN MX 10 smtp2
These MX records will be round-robin'ed, and the sender is also supposed to
try them in a random order.
>-----Original Message-----
>What is the correct way to add pointer records for round-robined records?
>$ORIGIN gwu.edu.
>smtp IN A 10.10.10.3
>smtp IN A 10.10.10.4
>
>Should I have two pointer records for each IP address pointing to smtp?
>
>$ORIGIN 10.10.10.IN-ADDR.ARPA.
>3 PTR smtp.gwu.edu.
>4 PTR smtp.gwu.edu.
--
Barry Margolin, barmar at genuity.net
Genuity, Woburn, MA
*** DON'T SEND TECHNICAL QUESTIONS DIRECTLY TO ME, post them to newsgroups.
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