Interpreting a DNS report
Ladislav Vobr
lvobr at ies.etisalat.ae
Sat Jul 10 05:44:43 UTC 2004
When I look at the your reverse class report, it says one fail - Missing
nameservers, which basically means there is a mismatch between the
parent and the child in who should be nameservers authoritative for this
reverse zone. Parent says ns1 and ns2, and inside the authoritative zone
on the child you mentioned just ns1.
This kind of information should be same on parent as well as child, you
might face interminent problems with it.
BTW: you should really have more than single server, this is a must. You
can somehow register with single one "pretending two", as you did, but
at the end this will really turn against you... (and your users)
Ladislav
Tom Gill wrote:
> I am with a small ISP in Orlando, Florida. Some of our users are
> having problems sending email to others and are receiving returned
> messages that say our email server has no reverse lookup.
>
> When I go to www.dnsstuff.com and use the reverse lookup utility on
> our mail server's IP (216.54.161.51), it comes back just fine
> (sun-msg-1.orlandotelco.net).
>
> However, when I go to www.dnsreport.com and do a reverse on the
> 161.54.216.in-addr.arpa zone, I fail some of the tests:
>
> It says we have lame nameservers, and missing (stealth) nameservers.
> Can anyone help interpret these in English? The results of the
> dnsreport can be found here:
>
> http://www.dnsreport.com/tools/dnsreport.ch?domain=161.54.216.in-addr.arpa
>
> Thanks for your time,
> Tom
>
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