On Mon, Nov 08, 2010 at 02:02:52AM +0100,
Michelle Konzack wrote
a message of 94 lines which said:
> If I read the conditions of Networksolutions and Co, spidering of
> WHOIS records is prohibited also the commercial use of the data.
The list of domains in .COM (and other ICANN TLDs) can be o
Right.
Since we do external and internal we actually have separate NICs for our
internal facing network and our external facing network. We do use
virtual IPs for the zone transfers from the master to slaves though.
I wasn't suggesting the OP use dozens or hundreds of views because as I
noted I
Lightner, Jeff wrote:
You would NOT use a single zone for this. Views are designed
specifically to control what is seen. However, that control is mainly
done by acl's specifying which networks access which views.
Or by server IP. You can use match-destinations with views to provide a
differ
> Thanks Alan, I'll try to do more research and I really like to hear from
> you or anyone else about better solutions if possible.
I think your best solution is to not try to play traffic cop with DNS.
If "customers" don't want their users to access XYZ, let THEM run a
proxy or firewall that fi
Hello Sten Carlsen,
Am 2010-11-08 02:32:14, hacktest Du folgendes herunter:
> Did you consider robots.txt? Well behaved spiders should respect that,
> although it does not prevent anything.
It is a VHost without own doc_root, which mean, a robots.txt would block
anything on the Server
> I would
You would NOT use a single zone for this. Views are designed
specifically to control what is seen. However, that control is mainly
done by acl's specifying which networks access which views. Do you
assign specific subnets to each client? If so you could do this with
views but processing neede
> Paul Ebersman writes:
> > category edns-disabled { null; };
> >
> > should make you happier.
On 05.11.10 09:56, Martin McCormick wrote:
> I must get a newer edition of DNS and Bind, but thanks
> to you and the list for your patience.
>
> Actually, I am not sure whether it is me
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