Help, reverse resolve on classless subnet wackyness
Joseph S D Yao
jsdy at cospo.osis.gov
Tue Jun 8 18:11:31 UTC 1999
> This is probably a terrible newbie mistake, as I am in fact a terrible
> newbie, but I couldn't find it in the FAQ, so here goes. I'm trying to run
> my own DNS for a small (16 IPs) subnet. I've set up bind, and when used
> localy, everything is find and dandy. 206.86.17.130 properly resolves to
> "vega.epits.com".
>
> The ISP has delegated reverse DNS to my server, yet when I try to reverse
> DNS my address through an external name server, something frightening
> happens: 206.86.17.130 resolves to "vega.epits.com.17.86.206.in-addr.arpa".
>
> Is this my mistake? My ISP's? They don't know either. Here's the file involved:
Your mistake and your ISP's mistake.
Your ISP has n o t delegated reverse DNS to you. You don't have the
whole subnet, only part of it. Nor have they done RFC 2317 delegation.
If you check, ns[123].best.com are the advertised servers for that
reverse DNS zone. They list all the domains, including yours, that are
in that 24-bit subnet.
All are OK except yours. They didn't put dots at the end of your host
names, I would think.
Your reverse DNS file may not be consulted, or may have been manually
consulted.
--
Joe Yao jsdy at cospo.osis.gov - Joseph S. D. Yao
COSPO/OSIS Computer Support EMT-B
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