06-19-2002
You will want to pick up the bible "DNS and Bind" from O'Reilly at your favorite book store.
You need this before
Mr. DNS will answer any question but you can look through the FAQ's at the site.
Also look at
BIND versions from ISC
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Anyone can give me some idea about DNS Server Configuration that I want to load balancing my Web Servers . (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ottobian
1 Replies
2. AIX
My only question is Can we have two auteritative Name servers for a single domain? Just a question. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vjm
1 Replies
3. AIX
Hello,
I've created new DNS servers and changed all of the clients /etc/resolv.conf to point to them, but when I check the old DNS logs, I see that the clients are still querying it. Does anybody know why?
thanks, (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ctcuser
2 Replies
4. IP Networking
Hello,
I'm using CentOS 5.3, and I connect to a VPN in order to work. The problem is that I'm constantly accessing things on the local network and the remote network. But once I'm connected to the VPN I can't access local addresses by name, I have to use the ip-address.
What I'd like is to... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: martincastell
4 Replies
5. 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
6. Red Hat
I am trying to setup a CentOS 6.2 server that will be doing 3 things DHCP, DNS & Samba for a very small office (2 users). The idea being this will replace a very old Win2k server. The users are all windows based clients so only the server will be Linux based.
I've installed CentOS 6.2 with... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: FireBIade
4 Replies
7. IP Networking
Hey everyone, I've noticed that when I do a dig command, I don't get any authoritative records back. For example a dig to cnn.com just yields:
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;cnn.com. IN A
;; ANSWER SECTION:
cnn.com. 300 IN A 157.166.226.25
cnn.com. 300 IN ... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lost in Cyberia
8 Replies
8. Linux
I have read many tutorials on bind and i understand the A,MX, CNAME records.
Internally, on a LAN we can install bind and create all these records and we can tell all PC and servers to use this bind as DNS server.that's fine.
On the Internet, when we have purchased a valid domain like... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: coolatt
5 Replies
9. Ubuntu
Since a few weeks i use Ubuntu 16 on my laptop:
# uname -a
Linux xxxx 4.8.0-52-generic #55~16.04.1-Ubuntu SMP Fri Apr 28 14:36:29 UTC 2017 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
Because i want to use a custom name server i set the properties in the "Edit Connections" dialogue to the following:
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bakunin
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
httppower
httppower(8) powerman httppower(8)
NAME
httppower - communicate with HTTP based power distribution units
SYNOPSIS
httppower [--url URL]
DESCRIPTION
httppower is a helper program for powerman which enables it to communicate with HTTP based power distribution units. It is run interac-
tively by the powerman daemon.
OPTIONS
-u, --url URL
Set the base URL.
INTERACTIVE COMMANDS
The following commands are accepted at the httppower> prompt:
auth user:pass
Authenticate to the base URL with specified user and password, using ``basic'' HTTP authentication which sends the user and password
over the network in plain text.
seturl URL
Set the base URL. Overrides the command line option.
get [URL-suffix]
Send an HTTP GET to the base URL with the optional URL-suffix appended.
post [URL-suffix] key=val[&key=val]...
Send an HTTP POST to the base URL with the optional URL-suffix appended, and key-value pairs as argument.
FILES
/usr/sbin/httppower
/etc/powerman/powerman.conf
ORIGIN
PowerMan was originally developed by Andrew Uselton on LLNL's Linux clusters. This software is open source and distributed under the terms
of the GNU GPL.
SEE ALSO
powerman(1), powermand(8), httppower(8), plmpower(8), vpcd(8), powerman.conf(5), powerman.dev(5), powerman-devices(7).
http://sourceforge.net/projects/powerman
powerman-2.3.5 2009-02-09 httppower(8)