8.4.4 reverse zone problems
David Price
davelist at blackhole.com
Wed May 26 01:11:02 UTC 2004
> Ok, though this really asserts authority for the whole /16. This will
> be a Bad Thing when you try to resolve addresses that are in
> 10.20.0.0/16 but not in 10.20.192.0/20.
>
I try to avoid Bad Things if possible. What is the correct way to handle
this type (/20) of delegation?
> What do you get from dig? Timeout? NXDOMAIN? Somehting else? Any
> errors when you load the zone?
When I use dig I get nothing back, there is no answer section and no
authority section, just a query section and the summary.
> Concepts like "class A/B/C/D" and CIDR notation are routing elements,
> and the things in DNS that look similar to them are really just naming
> conventions.
If this is true why is an entire RFC (2317) devoted to define how to
delegate smaller-than-C-block sized address spaces? You even used CIDR
notation in describing a problem above. I know CIDR numbers and the
address classes are not directly applicable to DNS but they are
inextricably part of IPv4.
There's no reason that the zone
> "192.20.10.in-addr.arpa" couldn't have 500 records in it, for example,
> or 1000.
>
Does that mean that a "192.20.10.in-addr.arpa" zone would be able to
include pointer records for 200.20.10.in-addr.arpa and
198.20.10.in-addr.arpa and BIND would respond authoritatively to queries
against both of them?
More information about the bind-users
mailing list