Am Sun, 13 Jun 2010 14:45:22 -0700
schrieb JINMEI Tatuya / 神明達哉 :
> At Tue, 8 Jun 2010 11:03:55 +0200,
> Torsten wrote:
>
> > Everything works perfectly okay except queries for
> > 1.0.0.127.in-addr.arpa and 0.0.0.0.in-addr.arpa. These are refused
> > by the caching server (denied entries in def
On 06/13/10 15:55, Merton Campbell Crockett wrote:
Providing access to the web-based tools to IT personnel might not be
that big of a challenge;
Excellent!
however, the problem remains: Using "nslookup"
is an ingrained behavior for the general user.
I would assert that "the general user" h
On Jun 13, 2010, at 2:21 PM, Doug Barton wrote:
>> The problem with the erroneous functioning of Microsoft's nslookup.exe
>> is that it requires a corporate wide change. There are a number of
>> reasonably intelligent users that assume nslookup.exe is providing them
>> correct information. I woul
At Tue, 8 Jun 2010 11:03:55 +0200,
Torsten wrote:
> Everything works perfectly okay except queries for
> 1.0.0.127.in-addr.arpa and 0.0.0.0.in-addr.arpa. These are refused by
> the caching server (denied entries in default log).
> Asking those queries on an identical server without views returns
On 06/13/10 14:08, Merton Campbell Crockett wrote:
On Jun 13, 2010, at 1:08 PM, Doug Barton wrote:
On 06/13/10 13:00, Merton Campbell Crockett wrote:
Microsoft's nslookup is broken. What alternative applications that can
be installed and used in a Windows XP environment that will continue to
On Jun 13, 2010, at 1:08 PM, Doug Barton wrote:
> On 06/13/10 13:00, Merton Campbell Crockett wrote:
>> Microsoft's nslookup is broken. What alternative applications that can
>> be installed and used in a Windows XP environment that will continue to
>> work in a Windows 7 environment after a dec
On 06/13/10 13:00, Merton Campbell Crockett wrote:
Microsoft's nslookup is broken. What alternative applications that can
be installed and used in a Windows XP environment that will continue to
work in a Windows 7 environment after a decision is made to upgrade Windows?
In the past I've instal
Recently, I implemented an instance of BIND that provides a "tailored" name
services for a private network connection between two organization. This
instance of BIND returns responses for a limited portion of our internal name
and address space that the other organization is permitted to access
On 06/11/10 02:51, John Marshall wrote:
BIND 9.7.1rc1
FreeBSD 8.1-PRERELEASE
I've just stepped into the world of nsupdate (instead of doing the
freeze/edit/thaw dance). I have had success using TSIG (nsupdate -k)
but I would like to use TKEY-GSS (nsupdate -g). When I try to do that,
nsup
On 06/13/10 06:15, sasa sasa wrote:
Hi list,
Is it ok to upgrade from 9.4.2 to 9.7.0-P2 directly?
Yes, but you should do some testing before you install the new version
on your live, production system. There are some differences in the
defaults for named.conf, and when upgrading to a new ver
sorry, forgot the subject. not very good on my first posting
Hello,
I'm seeing an unfamiliar error while attempting to start a newly built from
source named instance. I've search on the net and within the bind-user list
without luck, DST returns lots of hits, but nothing with "named D
Hello,
I'm seeing an unfamiliar error while attempting to start a newly built from
source named instance. I've search on the net and within the bind-user list
without luck, DST returns lots of hits, but nothing with "named DST".
hoping someone here might know what its about. Is it real
Warren Kumari
--
Please excuse typing, etc -- This was sent from a device with a tiny
keyboard.
On Jun 13, 2010, at 9:15 AM, sasa sasa wrote:
Hi list,
Is it ok to upgrade from 9.4.2 to 9.7.0-P2 directly?
Yup, no worries...
i mean i already have 9.4.2, i can install latest one w
Hi list,
Is it ok to upgrade from 9.4.2 to 9.7.0-P2 directly?
i mean i already have 9.4.2, i can install latest one with ./configure, make
and make install, is there a problem with this steps?
please note i already tried it and it worked fine on a cache-only DNS.
regards,
Sasa
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