syncronizing 2 dns server (windows/linux)

Josh Hyles josh.maillists at gmail.com
Mon Sep 26 00:07:34 UTC 2005


Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Content-Disposition: inline
I'm using gmail, no idea why it would be doing that.

Thanks for the info on $ORIGIN

Is all that stuff in a document somewhere? I feel like DNS is the least
documented service, yet it runs the backend of Everything. *shrugs*

On 9/24/05, Barry Margolin <barmar at alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>
> In article <dh2s2r$ptl$1 at sf1.isc.org>,
> Josh Hyles <josh.maillists at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=3DISO-8859-1
> > Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
> > Content-Disposition: inline
>
> Why are the above header lines showing up in the body of your messages?
> Is there something wrong with your mail program?
>
> > In my example, the one using @ doesn't have an origin, and none of the
> line=3D
> > s
> > above the first origin have the domain on them, so how is that record
> > functioning correctly?
>
> There's always an origin. It starts out as the zone name (from
> named.conf), and you can use $ORIGIN to change it.
>
> --
> Barry Margolin, barmar at alum.mit.edu
> Arlington, MA
> *** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
>
>
>




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