Hmmm, not sure I understand your question, by local nameserver, do you mean the router's nameserver (192.168.0.1) or do you mean the BIND9 instance I would be setting up on my machine. If it is the former, then I think I already have it such that the local nameserver is searched first:
If it is the latter, then this is exactly why I came here, I don't know how to set up a local BIND9 server with conditional forwarding i.e. a DNS server that forwards all lookups under domain internal.net to 10.0.0.1 and forwards other queries to 192.168.0.1.
Hi again guys,
It seems this is a global thing affecting all the DNS bind versions prior to July 28 2008. I have my work cut out for me very soon, I see at least a handful of servers in my list that either need to patching or upgrading.
How many of you guys are affected? Anybody successfully... (4 Replies)
so we had bind 9.3.0...
we upgraded to 9.5.0 patch 1
we kept the exact same named.conf
now we have a problem that some DMZ server cant do lookups from our DNS slave anymore.
in the named.log we see things like this:
22-Jul-2008 16:05:04.694 security: info: client <our DMZ servers... (2 Replies)
Hi,
from my workplace we use a proxy to connect to the outside world, including external ssh servers.
The problem is that the server is seeing the connection coming from the proxy and knows nothing about the client behind it. The ssh connection itself works fine, but x-forwarding does not work as... (1 Reply)
Hello guys, can anyone help me with the below error I'm getting from bind9? I'm trying to make bind read all the zone info from openldap, I have already created the schema and I've put some info into the ldap. I have also tried to google the error with no success.
I'm aware there is an problem... (1 Reply)
Hi there,
I have the following problem.
I have a Debian server with bind9.
I can also use my ISP DNS server through the internet box (192.168.1.1).
I would like to fool my client workstation to a local machine when they query for one specific hostname within a domain.
I want to let the... (5 Replies)
I have configured a Bind9 DNS on a X4270 machine with Solaris10
I am excuting some repformance tests with DNSPERF tool and maximun CPU usage is 23%. I have seen with
prstat -L -p PID
that named process usses only 2 of the 8 available CPU at the same time although threads for all CPUs exist.... (2 Replies)
how can i set default permission for nslookup,
i have in my nslookup
timeout = 0 retry = 3 port = 53
but i want to set it to :
timeout = 2 retry = 2 port = 53
i'm using bind9 , where can i set the default timeout for it?
thanks in advance (0 Replies)
We're moving an app from a server in our domain to a server hosted by the vendor in their domain.
This app had it's own domain setup that we're authoritative for.
Do I need to create a new zone file? zone-vendor_com and set up the CNAME records in this file? Or if I can just edit the one I... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I've a litte problem to get rollerd running and signing my zones if the ZSK of my zones are near expiring or expired.
rollerd is running but do nothing
startet with:
/usr/bin/perl /usr/sbin/rollerd -rrfile /etc/bind/all.rollrec -directory /etc/bind -logfile /dev/stdout
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: xabbu
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
resolv.conf
resolv.conf(5) File Formats Manual resolv.conf(5)Name
resolv.conf - resolver configuration file
Description
The resolver configuration file, contains information that the resolver routines read the first time they are invoked by a process. The
resolver file contains ASCII text and lists the name-value pairs that provide various types of resolver information.
The file is required if your system is running BIND. This file must contain the BIND domain name for the local area network. If your sys-
tem is a BIND client, this file must also contain nameserver entries.
There are two entry formats for the file:
domain binddomain
This line specifies the default domain to append to local host names. If no domain entries are present, the domain returned by
after the first dot (.) is used. If the host name does not contain a domain, the root domain is assumed.
nameserver address
In this entry, the address is the IP address, in dot notation, of the BIND server that should be queried to resolve host name and
address information. You should have at least one name server listed. Two or more name servers reduces the possibility of inter-
rupted BIND service in the event that one of the servers is down. You can list up to (10) name servers. If more than one server is
listed, the resolver library queries you to try them in the order listed. If no name server entries are present, the default is to
use the name server on the local machine.
The algorithm used is to try a name server, and, if the query times out, to try the next, until out of name servers or the query is
resolved. The last step is to repeat trying all the name servers until a maximum number of retries has been made or the query has
been resolved.
The name value pair must appear on a single line, and the keyword or must start each line.
Examples
The following is an example of a file:
;
; Data file for a client
;
domain cities.us
nameserver 128.11.22.33
Lines beginning with a semicolon (;) are comment lines.
FilesSee Alsogethostname(2), resolver(3), named(8)
Guide to the BIND Service
resolv.conf(5)