Well, here is what I did; I randomly took a domain.
1. Saw that the A record on slave was not Synched with the master.
2. Forcefully Synched the A record of the domain on the Slave in accordance with the master.
How did you do this?
The proper way would have been to update the serial number on the master and see if that updates the slave.
Quote:
What logs can I access on the Master to see all domains that are not Synched with Slave?
That would all depend on what youe are logging and how you are logging it.
Without knowing the config for logging I really cannot say.
Quote:
Additionally, when you say "check the config on the slave to see what it believes are the zones it receives from the master" could you elaborate a bit further.
Sure. On the slave look at named.conf
In the file there should be something like this:
In the above you will be looking at the master line. This tells you which server the updates come from.
Quote:
I am a beginner; learning every day. I could understand what you have mentioned about the serial numbers.
Thanks for your time
Everyone is a beginner at one point or another.
Glad I could help.
Hi
As a System Admin, I have to handle synchronzing 2 CVS.
But I'm new to CVS & hardly have any knowledge of such tools.
Please help me, is there any way, that can automatize the
process for synchronizing the 2 remotely residing CVS database
with out manual intervension.
Ex:- CVA... (1 Reply)
hi guys,
i am new to this DNS business and i'm having a problem.
the setup is bind 9.2.3 is installed on a sun solaris 8 server and is the primary DNS. men and mice suite is installed on another sun solaris 8 and that is our secondary DNS server.
problem is recently the secondary DNS stopped... (0 Replies)
Hi,
When I invoke a script s1.sh it will call an another script s2.sh by itself. This script s2.sh will call some java files, so while running the script it asks for a file name to be processed. Which we can see in the screen.
The file name to be processed is present in script s1.sh
Now... (1 Reply)
Hi,
When I invoke a script s1.sh it will call an another script s2.sh by itself. This script s2.sh will call some java files, so while running the script it asks for a file name to be processed. Which we can see in the screen.
The file name to be processed is present in script s1.sh
Now I... (2 Replies)
Wellcomes All,
some times ago I 've installed a Debian ditribution on an Hard Disk who was set as Primary Master. Few days ago, I 've decided to install another Hard Disk with a different Operating System. When I did that, I turned off the old hard disk, and I mouted the new one on the Primary IDE... (1 Reply)
Is there a command or better combination of cmds that will give me the list of Unix users in a particular Unix group whether their primary group is that group in question (information stored in /etc/passwd) or they are in a secondary group (information stored in /etc/group).
So far all I got... (5 Replies)
Hi
New here so forgive my ignorance and inability to express myself in an informative manner ;)
I have a Fedora distribution installed on my development computer. The system we build is meant to run on a slackware dist which is all fine and well. But due to our flow of deployment I would have... (2 Replies)
hi there,
i using salaris 10 as my DNS server.
i have 2 dns server primary and secondary. if primary dns server i edit/update, the other secondary dns server must be sync too.
How can i configure if dns server (primary) can sync the secondary? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tappetmus
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
ntptrace
ntptrace(1) General Commands Manual ntptrace(1)NAME
ntptrace - trace a chain of NTP servers back to the primary source
SYNOPSIS
ntptrace [ -vdn ] [ -r retries ] [ -t timeout ] [ server ]
DESCRIPTION
ntptrace determines where a given Network Time Protocol (NTP) server gets its time from, and follows the chain of NTP servers back to
their master time source. If given no arguments, it starts with localhost . Here is an example of the output from ntptrace :
% ntptrace localhost: stratum 4, offset 0.0019529, synch distance 0.144135 server2ozo.com: stratum 2, offset 0.0124263, synch distance
0.115784 usndh.edu: stratum 1, offset 0.0019298, synch distance 0.011993, refid On each line, the fields are (left to right): the host
name, the host stratum, the time offset between that host and the local host (as measured by ntptrace ; this is why it is not always zero
for " localhost "), the host synchronization distance, and (only for stratum-1 servers) the reference clock ID. All times are given in sec-
onds. Note that the stratum is the server hop count to the primary source, while the synchronization distance is the estimated error rela-
tive to the primary source. These terms are precisely defined in RFC-1305.
OPTIONS -d Turns on some debugging output.
-n Turns off the printing of host names; instead, host IP addresses are given. This may be useful if a nameserver is down.
-r retries Sets the number of retransmission attempts for each host (default = 5).
-t timeout Sets the retransmission timeout (in seconds) (default = 2).
-v Prints verbose information about the NTP servers.
BUGS
This program makes no attempt to improve accuracy by doing multiple samples.
SEE ALSO
More documentation is available in the package ntp-doc.
AUTHOR
David L. Mills <mills@udel.edu>
ntp 4.1.1b-r5ntptrace(1)