Propagate new slave
Barry Margolin
barmar at genuity.net
Fri Oct 19 17:31:59 UTC 2001
In article <9qpjm9$6tq at pub3.rc.vix.com>,
Ralph Brown <php4u at pacbell.net> wrote:
>;; AUTHORITY SECTION:
>policing.net. 86400 IN NS
>www.policing.net.policing.net.
This is the problem. In your DB file you wrote:
IN NS www.policing.net
Since you didn't put a "." at the end of the hostname, it appended the
origin, resulting in:
IN NS www.policing.net.policing.net.
Since there's no hostname by this name, once this NS record is cached by a
server it won't be able to look anything up in your domain.
You have the same problem in your MX record:
IN MX 1 mail.policing.net.policing.net.
Another problem is that your ISP has apparently not reconfigured
ns2.pbi.net from master to slave.
A third problem is that all your A records point to private IP addresses.
How is someone from outside your network supposed to access your mail/web
server when it has a 192.168.x.x address? If you have NAT, you need to put
the public address in your DNS.
--
Barry Margolin, barmar at genuity.net
Genuity, Woburn, 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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