Re: DNS/Domain questions

2001-09-28 Thread Mark Lanett
but your SOHO box probably has it built in. Anyway, if this is your situation then the one thing you don't need, and can't use, is DNS. ~mark - Original Message - From: "Matthew Daubenspeck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: Sent: Friday, September 28, 2001 8:44 AM Subje

Re: DNS/Domain questions

2001-09-28 Thread Tommi Jensen
On Fri, Sep 28, 2001 at 01:22:22PM -0400, Doug Fields wrote: > 1) Buy DNS & BIND, 4th edition, and read it cover to cover the DNS-HOWTO is also quite alright for newcomers to DNS > 2) Use BIND9 instead of BIND, as that provides "views." Views allow you to > present one set of DNS entries to "the

Re: DNS/Domain questions

2001-09-28 Thread Doug Fields
In short: 1) Buy DNS & BIND, 4th edition, and read it cover to cover 2) Use BIND9 instead of BIND, as that provides "views." Views allow you to present one set of DNS entries to "the rest of the world" and another set internally Cheers, Doug At 11:44 AM 9/28/2001, Matthew Daubenspeck wrote:

Re: DNS/Domain questions

2001-09-28 Thread Jason Healy
At 1001695456s since epoch (09/28/01 11:44:16 -0400 UTC), Matthew Daubenspeck wrote: > I just recently purchased a domain name and am wondering on a few things. You were a little vague, but I'll do my best here... > Which package would be best to create my own name server? A lot of places > ha

DNS/Domain questions

2001-09-28 Thread Matthew Daubenspeck
I just recently purchased a domain name and am wondering on a few things. Which package would be best to create my own name server? A lot of places have it, but for an extra fee. Why pay when I have Debian is my slogan . I have done some researching on BIND and have looked through a lot of it's