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1. Red Hat
Gurus
I have configured bind 9 on Red hat EL 6.4, it can resolve from hostname i.e from domain name (like cnn.com, bbc.com)but through IP its shows following error. Need your expert opinion to solve it.
error
84.23.97.31
Server: 192.168.31.24
Address: 192.168.31.24#53
** server can't... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: smazshah
1 Replies
2. Red Hat
Hi All,
Distros of machines : RHEL6
Bind Vesrion : Bind-9.7-3.2
I am trying to set up a test DNS for my home network. I have two rhel 6 machines A and B. Machine A has 2 NICs and is acting as a router also, one NIC is facing intranet and the otehr is facing intranet. On machine A i have... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rohit Bhanot
0 Replies
3. Red Hat
Hi Friends,
I need help to understand how to publish my public dns to internet.
I have configured bind 9 on thel5 server and it working fine. My question is, as i donot want to expose my orginal hostname to outside and my zone files are configured with the NS recorde of the orginal hostname,... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: arumon
5 Replies
4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I'd like to get some opnions on choosing DNS server:
Windows DNS vs Linux BIND comparrsion:
1) managment, easy of use
2) Security
3) features
4) peformance
5) ??
I personally prefer Windows DNS server for management, it supports GUI and command line. But I am not sure about security... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: honglus
2 Replies
5. Solaris
hi all
forgive my ignorance, but when IVe set up DNS Ive put in the various server details in the /etc/resolv.conf and away I go. Suddenly Ive been reading about DNS, and I need to created a /etc/named.conf file.
so, my question is this. DNS, what part does the /etc/resolv.conf play in... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sbk1972
3 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
Does anyone know anything about DNS/BIND? I need to tell my dns for every sub-domain foward on to my main domain....
so *.example.com gets sent to exmaple.com.
Any ideas. I've looked at bind on my machine and theres about 10 files....i just don't know where to put the rule or exactly... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: elduderino
2 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi GURUs,
I have two queries.
1)I know I can use FTP clients for my File transfer needs, but I want to learn FTP thru command line, any one can point me to some good online resource available to learn FTP command line with examples, of course free except UNIX man pages.
2) Our company has... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: patras
4 Replies
8. IP Networking
I have set up a BIND server running on Redhat AS 3.0 and the question I have is that I can point my laptop to that server and resolve all the hosts I have put in my .zone file but for the life of me I can resolve any outside information. I have verified the server can talk to the world. Any hints... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Acleoma
2 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have a RedHat 7.1 box that we use for DNS in our System Engineering lab. We have a Windows 2000 box that handles DNS in our main office. The Microsoft Admin and I have been given the task of making both of our domains accessible to each other. I had originally made his domain my forwarder, so... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jody
5 Replies
10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
First some back ground info:
I am working on a computer running SuSE 7.3
I am still trying to set up a DNS
I downloaded BIND 9.2.1 and was following a tutorial about BIND. It said at virtually the start of the tutorial that I should find a file called named.conf in my /etc directory. Yes, I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ignus7
1 Replies
zone2ldap(1) General Commands Manual zone2ldap(1)
NAME
zone2ldap /- Load BIND 9 Zone files into LDAP Directory
SYNOPSIS
zone2ldap [-D Bind DN] [-w Bind Password] [-b Base DN] [-z Zone] [-f Zone File ] [-h Ldap Host] [-cd] [-v]
DESCRIPTION
zone2ldap will parse a complete BIND 9 format DNS zone file, and load the contents into an LDAP directory, for use with the LDAP sdb back-
end.
If the zone already exists, zone2ldap will exit succesfully. If the zone does not exists, or partially exists, zone2ldap will attempt to
add all/missing zone data.
Options
-b LDAP Base DN. LDAP systems require a "base dn", which is generally considered the LDAP Directory root. If the zone you are loading
is different from the base, then you will need to tell zone2ldap what your LDAP base is.
-v Print version information, and immediatly exit.
-f Zone file. Bind 9.1 compatible zone file, from which zone information will be read.
-d Dump debug information to standard out.
-w LDAP Bind password, corresponding the the value of "-b".
-h LDAP Directory host. This is the hostname of the LDAP system you wish to store zone information on. An LDAP server should be lis-
tening on port 389 of the target system. This may be ommited, and will default to "localhost".
-c This will create the zone portion of the DN you are importing. For instance, if you are creating a domain.com zone, zone2ldap should
first create "dc=domain,dc=com". This is useful if you are creating multiple domains.
-z This is the name of the zone specified in the SOA record.
EXAMPLES
Following are brief examples of how to import a zone file into your LDAP DIT.
Loading zone domain.com, with an LDAP Base DN of dc=domain,dc=com
zone2ldap -D dc=root -w secret -h localhost -z domain.com -f domain.com.zone
This will add Resource Records into an ALREADY EXISTING dc=domain,dc=com. The final SOA DN in this case, will be dc=@,dc=domain,dc=com
Loading customer.com, if your LDAP Base DN is dc=provider,dc=net.
zone2ldap -D dc=root -w secret -h localhost -z customer.com -b dc=provider,dc=net -f customer.com.zone -c
This will create dc=customer,dc=com under dc=provider,dc=net, and add all necessary Resource Records. The final root DN to the SOA will be
dc=@,dc=customer,dc=com,dc=provider,dc=net.
SEE ALSO
named(8) ldap(3) http://www.venaas.no/ldap/bind-sdb/
BUGS
Send all bug reports to Jeff McNeil <jeff@snapcase.g-rock.net>
AUTHOR
Jeff McNeil <jeff@snapcase.g-rock.net>
8 March 2001 zone2ldap(1)