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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users [DNS] Reverse Lookup for 2 IP Addresses Post 302234450 by BOFH on Tuesday 9th of September 2008 05:53:38 PM
Old 09-09-2008
The e-mail I received:

Quote:
Server DNS Entry

There are several options for Domain Name Services. Some of which are cost free others with small configuration charges.

1. Your server has DNS installed, but by default it may disabled. Once you enable this you can begin to configure DNS. [Hosting Company] will act as slave to your DNS at your request for no charge, please provide us with the domain name and access to be allowed transfers from your server.

2. If you prefer for [Hosting Company] to act as both slave and master DNS server there is a $20 per domain setup fee and we will handle all of your DNS, please provide us with the domain name, mail server name and IP address and any other hosts and IP addresses you wish to be available.

3. [Hosting Company] can also configure DNS on your server, and add our server as slave. There is a $25 per domain setup fee for this option; however this would allow you to maintain control of your DNS server, and make immediate changes that would automatically replicate to the slave. Please provide access to your server as well as the domain names and hosts you would like configured.
I'm wondering if they're really not going to delegate the two IP's to me and are just talking about A records and not PTR records. I'll have to query them and see what the next step is. I have the A record side ready to go. It's the PTR's that need to work properly for e-mail to be accepted by AOL, Inbox.com, Comcast.Net, and others that are refusing due to a failed reverse lookup.

Carl
 

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Net::DNS::Mailbox(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      Net::DNS::Mailbox(3)

NAME
Net::DNS::Mailbox - DNS mailbox representation SYNOPSIS
use Net::DNS::Mailbox; $mailbox = new Net::DNS::Mailbox('user@example.com'); $address = $mailbox->address; DESCRIPTION
The Net::DNS::Mailbox module implements a subclass of DNS domain name objects representing the DNS coded form of RFC822 mailbox address. METHODS
new $mailbox = new Net::DNS::Mailbox('John.Doe@example.com'); $mailbox = new Net::DNS::Mailbox('John Doe <j.doe@example.com>'); Creates a mailbox object which represents the DNS domain encoded form of the mail address specified by the character string argument. The argument string consists of printable characters from the 7-bit ASCII repertoire. address $address = $mailbox->address; Returns a character string containing the RFC822 mailbox address corresponding to the encoded domain name representation described in RFC1035 section 8. DOMAIN NAME COMPRESSION AND CANONICALISATION
The Net::DNS::Mailbox1035 and Net::DNS::Mailbox2535 subclass packages implement RFC1035 domain name compression and RFC2535 canonicalisation. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c)2009,2012 Dick Franks. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
perl, Net::DNS, Net::DNS::DomainName, RFC822, RFC1035, RFC5322 perl v5.18.2 2014-01-16 Net::DNS::Mailbox(3)
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