d6da9453b6
This has most of the non-essential stuff removed (ie: what is not built) bmake glue to follow.
1082 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
1082 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
Setting up a basic DNS server for a domain
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Revision 1.1.1
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Craig Richmond
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craig@ecel.uwa.edu.au
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15th August 1993
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About this document
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I have written this file because it seems that the same questions seem to
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pop up time and time again and when I had to install DNS from scratch the
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first time, we found very little to help us.
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This document covers setting up a Domain Name Server with authority over
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your domain and using a few of the more useful but less well known
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(hopefully this document will take care of that) features of nslookup to
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get information about the DNS and to work out why yours isn't working.
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If you are using a Sun Workstation and you want to make NIS interact with
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the DNS, then this is not the FAQ for you (but it may well be when you try
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to set up the DNS). Mark J. McIntosh <Mark.McIntosh@engr.UVic.CA> points
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out that it is included in the comp.sys.sun.admin FAQ and for the benefit
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of those of you who can't get that (it is posted in comp.sys.sun.admin,
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comp.sys.sun.misc, comp.unix.solaris, comp.answers and news.answers) I have
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included the relevant parts at the bottom in appendix C.
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Contents:
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Contents
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An Overview of the DNS
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Installing the DNS
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*The Boot File
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*The Cache File
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*The Forward Mapping File
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*The Reverse Mapping File
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Delegating authority for domains within your domain
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Troubleshooting your named
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*Named doesn't work! What is wrong?
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*I changed my named database and my local machine has noticed,
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but nobody else has the new information?
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*My local machine knows about all the name server information,
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but no other sites know about me?
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*My forward domain names work, but the backward names do not?
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How to get useful information from nslookup
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*Getting number to name mappings.
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*Finding where mail goes when a machine has no IP number.
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*Getting a list of machines in a domain from nslookup.
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Appendicies
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*Appendix A sample root.cache file
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*Appendix B Excerpt from RFC 1340 - Assigned Numbers - July 1992
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*Appendix C Installing DNS on a Sun when running NIS
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An Overview of the DNS:
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The Domain Name System is the software that lets you have name to number
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mappings on your computers. The name decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au is the number
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130.95.4.2 and vice versa. This is achieved through the DNS. The DNS is a
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heirarchy. There are a small number of root domain name servers that are
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responsible for tracking the top level domains and who is under them. The
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root domain servers between them know about all the people who have name
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servers that are authoritive for domains under the root.
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Being authoritive means that if a server is asked about something in that
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domain, it can say with no ambiguity whether or not a given piece of
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information is true. For example. We have domains x.z and y.z. There are
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by definition authoritive name servers for both of these domains and we
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shall assume that the name server in both of these cases is a machine
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called nic.x.z and nic.y.z but that really makes no difference.
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If someone asks nic.x.z whether there is a machine called a.x.z, then
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nic.x.z can authoritively say, yes or no because it is the authoritive name
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server for that domain. If someone asks nic.x.z whether there is a machine
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called a.y.z then nic.x.z asks nic.y.z whether such a machine exists (and
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caches this for future requests). It asks nic.y.z because nic.y.z is the
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authoritive name server for the domain y.z. The information about
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authoritive name servers is stored in the DNS itself and as long as you
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have a pointer to a name server who is more knowledgable than yourself then
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you are set.
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When a change is made, it propogates slowly out through the internet to
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eventually reach all machines. The following was supplied by Mark Andrews
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Mark.Andrews@syd.dms.csiro.au.
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If both the primary and all secondaries are up and talking when
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a zone update occurs and for the refresh period after the
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update the old data will live for max(refresh + mininum)
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average (refresh/2 +mininum) for the zone. New information will
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be available from all servers after refresh.
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So with a refresh of 3 hours and a minimum of a day, you can expect
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everything to be working a day after it is changed. If you have a longer
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minimum, it may take a couple of days before things return to normal.
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There is also a difference between a zone and a domain. The domain is the
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entire set of machines that are contained within an organisational domain
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name. For example, the domain uwa.edu.au contains all the machines at the
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University of Western Australia. A Zone is the area of the DNS for which a
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server is responsible. The University of Western Australia is a large
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organisation and trying to track all changes to machines at a central
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location would be difficult. The authoritive name server for the zone
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uwa.edu.au delegates the authority for the zone ecel.uwa.edu.au to
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decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au. Machine foo.ecel.uwa.edu.au is in the zone that
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decel is authoritive for. Machine bar.uwa.edu.au is in the zone that
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uniwa.uwa.edu.au is authoritive for.
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Installing the DNS:
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First I'll assume you already have a copy of the Domain Name Server
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software. It is probably called named or in.named depending on your
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flavour of unix. I never had to get a copy, but if anyone thinks that
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information should be here then by all means tell me and I'll put it in.
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If you intend on using the package called Bind, then you should be sure
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that you get version 4.9, which is the most recent version at this point in
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time.
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The Boot File:
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First step is to create the file named.boot. This describes to named
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(we'll dispense with the in.named. Take them to be the same) where the
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information that it requires can be found. This file is normally found in
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/etc/named.boot and I personally tend to leave it there because then I know
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where to find it. If you don't want to leave it there but place it in a
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directory with the rest of your named files, then there is usually an
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option on named to specify the location of the boot file.
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Your typical boot file will look like this if you are an unimportant leaf
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node and there are other name servers at your site.
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directory /etc/namedfiles
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cache . root.cache
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primary ecel.uwa.edu.au ecel.uwa.domain
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primary 0.0.127.in-addr.arpa 0.0.127.domain
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primary 4.95.130.in-addr.arpa 4.95.130.domain
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forwarders 130.95.128.1
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Here is an alternative layout used by Christophe Wolfhugel
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<Christophe.Wolfhugel@grasp.insa-lyon.fr> He finds this easier because of
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the large number of domains he has. The structure is essentially the same,
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but the file names use the domain name rather than the IP subnet to
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describe the contents.
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directory /usr/local/etc/bind
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cache . p/root
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;
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; Primary servers
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;
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primary fr.net p/fr.net
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primary frmug.fr.net p/frmug.fr.net
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primary 127.in-addr.arpa p/127
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;
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; Secondary servers
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;
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secondary ensta.fr 147.250.1.1 s/ensta.fr
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secondary gatelink.fr.net 134.214.100.1 s/gatelink.fr.net
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secondary insa-lyon.fr 134.214.100.1 s/insa-lyon.fr
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secondary loesje.org 145.18.226.21 s/loesje.org
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secondary nl.loesje.org 145.18.226.21 s/nl.loesje.org
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secondary pcl.ac.uk 161.74.160.5 s/pcl.ac.uk
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secondary univ-lyon1.fr 134.214.100.1 s/univ-lyon1.fr
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secondary wmin.ac.uk 161.74.160.5 s/wmin.ac.uk
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secondary westminster.ac.uk 161.74.160.5 s/westminster.ac.uk
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;
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;
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; Secondary for addresses
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;
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secondary 74.161.in-addr.arpa 161.74.160.5 s/161.74
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secondary 214.134.in-addr.arpa 134.214.100.1 s/134.214
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secondary 250.147.in-addr.arpa 147.250.1.1 s/147.250
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;
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; Classes C
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;
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secondary 56.44.192.in-addr.arpa 147.250.1.1 s/192.44.56
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secondary 57.44.192.in-addr.arpa 147.250.1.1 s/192.44.57
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The lines in the named.boot file have the following meanings.
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directory
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This is the path that named will place in front of all file names
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referenced from here on. If no directory is specified, it looks for files
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relative to /etc.
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cache
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This is the information that named uses to get started. Named must know
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the IP number of some other name servers at least to get started.
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Information in the cache is treated differently depending on your version
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of named. Some versions of named use the information included in the cache
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permenantly and others retain but ignore the cache information once up and
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running.
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primary
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This is one of the domains for which this machine is authorative for. You
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put the entire domain name in. You need forwards and reverse lookups. The
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first value is the domain to append to every name included in that file.
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(There are some exceptions, but they will be explained later) The name at
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the end of the line is the name of the file (relative to /etc of the
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directory if you specified one). The filename can have slashes in it to
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refer to subdirectories so if you have a lot of domains you may want to
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split it up.
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BE VERY CAREFUL TO PUT THE NUMBERS BACK TO FRONT FOR THE REVERSE LOOK UP
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FILE. The example given above is for the subnet ecel.uwa.edu.au whose IP
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address is 130.95.4.*. The reverse name must be 4.95.130.in-addr.arpa.
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It must be backwards and it must end with .in-addr.arpa. If your reverse
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name lookups don't work, check this. If they still don't work, check this
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again.
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forwarders
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This is a list of IP numbers for forward requests for sites about which we
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are unsure. A good choice here is the name server which is authoritive for
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the zone above you.
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secondary (This line is not in the example, but is worth mentioning.)
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A secondary line indicates that you wish to be a secondary name server for
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this domain. You do not need to do this usually. All it does is help make
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the DNS more robust. You should have at least one secondary server for
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your site, but you do not need to be a secondary server for anyone else.
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You can by all means, but you don't need to be. If you want to be a
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secondary server for another domain, then place the line
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secondary gu.uwa.edu.au 130.95.100.3 130.95.128.1
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in your named.boot. This will make your named try the servers on both of
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the machines specified to see if it can obtain the information about those
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domains. You can specify a number of IP addresses for the machines to
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query that probably depends on your machine. Your copy of named will upon
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startup go and query all the information it can get about the domain in
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question and remember it and act as though it were authoritive for that
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domain.
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Next you will want to start creating the data files that contain the name
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definitions.
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The cache file:
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You can get a copy of the cache file from FTP.RS.INTERNIC.NET. The current
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copy can be found in Appendix A.
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The Forward Mapping file:
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The file ecel.uwa.edu.au. will be used for the example with a couple of
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machines left in for the purpose of the exercise. Here is a copy of what
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the file looks like with explanations following.
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; Authoritative data for ecel.uwa.edu.au
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;
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@ IN SOA decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au. postmaster.ecel.uwa.edu.au. (
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93071200 ; Serial (yymmddxx)
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10800 ; Refresh 3 hours
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3600 ; Retry 1 hour
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3600000 ; Expire 1000 hours
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86400 ) ; Minimum 24 hours
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IN A 130.95.4.2
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IN MX 100 decel
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IN MX 150 uniwa.uwa.edu.au.
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IN MX 200 relay1.uu.net.
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IN MX 200 relay2.uu.net.
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localhost IN A 127.0.0.1
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decel IN A 130.95.4.2
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IN HINFO SUN4/110 UNIX
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IN MX 100 decel
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IN MX 150 uniwa.uwa.edu.au.
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IN MX 200 relay1.uu.net
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IN MX 200 relay2.uu.net
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gopher IN CNAME decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au.
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accfin IN A 130.95.4.3
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IN HINFO SUN4/110 UNIX
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IN MX 100 decel
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IN MX 150 uniwa.uwa.edu.au.
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IN MX 200 relay1.uu.net
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IN MX 200 relay2.uu.net
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chris-mac IN A 130.95.4.5
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IN HINFO MAC-II MACOS
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The comment character is ';' so the first two lines are just comments
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indicating the contents of the file.
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All values from here on have IN in them. This indicates that the value is
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an InterNet record. There are a couple of other types, but all you need
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concern yourself with is internet ones.
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The SOA record is the Start Of Authority record. It contains the
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information that other nameservers will learn about this domain and how to
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treat the information they are given about it. The '@' as the first
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character in the line indicates that you wish to define things about the
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domain for which this file is responsible. The domain name is found in the
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named.boot file in the corresponding line to this filename. All
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information listed refers to the most recent machine/domain name so all
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records from the '@' until 'localhost' refer to the '@'. The SOA record
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has 5 magic numbers. First magic number is the serial number. If you
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change the file, change the serial number. If you don't, no other name
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servers will update their information. The old information will sit around
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for a very long time.
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Refresh is the time between refreshing information about the SOA (correct
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me if I am wrong). Retry is the frequency of retrying if an authorative
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server cannot be contacted. Expire is how long a secondary name server
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will keep information about a zone without successfully updating it or
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confirming that the data is up to date. This is to help the information
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withstand fairly lengthy downtimes of machines or connections in the
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network without having to recollect all the information. Minimum is the
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default time to live value handed out by a nameserver for all records in
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a zone without an explicit TTL value. This is how long the data will live
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after being handed out. The two pieces of information before the 5 magic
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numbers are the machine that is considered the origin of all of this
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information. Generally the machine that is running your named is a good
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one for here. The second is an email address for someone who can fix any
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problems that may occur with the DNS. Good ones here are postmaster,
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hostmaster or root. NOTE: You use dots and not '@' for the email address.
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eg root.decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au is correct
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and
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root@decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au is incorrect.
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We now have an address to map ecel.uwa.edu.au to. The address is
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130.95.4.2 which happens to be decel, our main machine. If you try to find
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an IP number for the domain ecel.uwa.edu.au it will get you the machine
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decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au's IP number. This is a nicety which means that
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people who have non-MX record mailers can still mail fred@ecel.uwa.edu.au
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and don't have to find the name of a machine name under the domain to mail.
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Now we have a couple of MX records for the domain itself. The MX records
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specify where to send mail destined for the machine/domain that the MX
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record is for. In this case we would prefer if all mail for
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fred@ecel.uwa.edu.au is sent to decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au. If that does not
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work, we would like it to go to uniwa.uwa.edu.au because there are a number
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of machines that might have no idea how to get to us, but may be able to get
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to uniwa. And failing that, try the site relay1.uu.net. A small number
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indicates that this site should be tried first. The larget the number the
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further down the list of sites to try the site is. NOTE: Not all machines
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have mailers that pay attention to MX records. Some only pay attention to
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IP numbers, which is really stupid. All machines are required to have
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MX-capable Mail Transfer Agents (MTA) as there are many addresses that can
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only be reached via this means.
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There is an entry for localhost now. Note that this is somewhat of a
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kludge and should probably be handled far more elegantly. By placing
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localhost here, a machine comes into existance called
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localhost.ecel.uwa.edu.au. If you finger it, or telnet to it, you get your
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own machine, because the name lookup returns 127.0.0.1 which is the special
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case for your own machine. I have used a couple of different DNS packages.
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The old BSD one let you put things into the cache which would always work,
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but would not be exported to other nameservers. In the newer Sun one, they
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are left in the cache and are mostly ignored once named is up and running.
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This isn't a bad solution, its just not a good one.
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Decel is the main machine in our domain. It has the IP number 130.95.4.2
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and that is what this next line shows. It also has a HINFO entry. HINFO
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is Host Info which is meant to be some sort of an indication of what the
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machine is and what it runs. The values are two white space seperated
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values. First being the hardware and second being the software. HINFO is
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not compulsory, its just nice to have sometimes. We also have some MX
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records so that mail destined for decel has some other avenues before it
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bounces back to the sender if undeliverable.
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It is a good idea to give all machines capable of handling mail an MX
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record because this can be cached on remote machines and will help to
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reduce the load on the network.
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gopher.ecel.uwa.edu.au is the gopher server in our division. Now because
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we are cheapskates and don't want to go and splurge on a seperate machine
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just for handling gopher requests we have made it a CNAME to our main
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machine. While it may seem pointless it does have one main advantage.
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When we discover that our placing terrabytes of popular quicktime movies
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on our gopher server (no we haven't and we don't intend to) causes an
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unbearable load on our main machine, we can quickly move the CNAME to
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point at a new machine by changing the name mentioned in the CNAME. Then
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the slime of the world can continue to get their essential movies with a
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minimal interuption to the network. Other good CNAMEs to maintain are
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things like ftp, mailhost, netfind, archie, whois, and even dns (though the
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most obvious use for this fails). It also makes it easier for people to
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find these services in your domain.
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We should probably start using WKS records for things like gopher and whois
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rather than making DNS names for them. The tools are not in wide
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circulation for this to work though. (Plus all those comments in many DNS
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implementation of "Not implemented" next to the WKS record)
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Finally we have a macintosh which belongs to my boss. All it needs is an
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IP number, and we have included the HINFO so that you can see that it is in
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fact a macII running a Mac System. To get the list of preferred values,
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you should get a copy of RFC 1340. It lists lots of useful information
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such as /etc/services values, ethernet manufacturer hardware addresses,
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HINFO defualts and many others. I will include the list as it stands at
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the moment, but if any RFC superceeds 1340, then it will have a more
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complete list. See Appendix B for that list.
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NOTE: If Chris had a very high profile and wanted his mac to appear like a
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fully connected unix machine as far as internet services were concerned, he
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could simply place an MX record such as
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IN MX 100 decel
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after his machine and any mail sent to chris@chris-mac.ecel.uwa.edu.au
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would be automatically rerouted to decel.
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The Reverse Mapping File
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The reverse name lookup is handled in a most bizarre fashion. Well it all
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makes sense, but it is not immediately obvious.
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All of the reverse name lookups are done by finding the PTR record
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associated with the name w.x.y.z.in-addr.arpa. So to find the name
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associated with the IP number 1.2.3.4, we look for information stored in
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the DNS under the name 4.3.2.1.in-addr.arpa. They are organised this way
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so that when you are allocated a B class subnet for example, you get all of
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the IP numbers in the domain 130.95. Now to turn that into a reverse name
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lookup domain, you have to invert the numbers or your registered domains
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will be spread all over the place. It is a mess and you need not understand
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the finer points of it all. All you need to know is that you put the
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reverse name lookup files back to front.
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Here is the sample reverse name lookup files to go with our example.
|
|
|
|
0.0.127.in-addr.arpa
|
|
--
|
|
; Reverse mapping of domain names 0.0.127.in-addr.arpa
|
|
; Nobody pays attention to this, it is only so 127.0.0.1 -> localhost.
|
|
@ IN SOA decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au. postmaster.ecel.uwa.edu.au. (
|
|
91061801 ; Serial (yymmddxx)
|
|
10800 ; Refresh 3 hours
|
|
3600 ; Retry 1 hour
|
|
3600000 ; Expire 1000 hours
|
|
86400 ) ; Minimum 24 hours
|
|
;
|
|
1 IN PTR localhost.ecel.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
4.95.130.in-addr.arpa
|
|
--
|
|
; reverse mapping of domain names 4.95.130.in-addr.arpa
|
|
;
|
|
@ IN SOA decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au. postmaster.ecel.uwa.edu.au. (
|
|
92050300 ; Serial (yymmddxx format)
|
|
10800 ; Refresh 3hHours
|
|
3600 ; Retry 1 hour
|
|
3600000 ; Expire 1000 hours
|
|
86400 ) ; Minimum 24 hours
|
|
2 IN PTR decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
3 IN PTR accfin.ecel.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
5 IN PTR chris-mac.ecel.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
It is important to remember that you must have a second start of authority
|
|
record for the reverse name lookups. Each reverse name lookup file must
|
|
have its own SOA record. The reverse name lookup on the 127 domain is
|
|
debatable seeing as there is likely to be only one number in the file and
|
|
it is blatantly obvious what it is going to map to.
|
|
|
|
The SOA details are the same as in the forward mapping.
|
|
|
|
Each of the numbers listed down the left hand side indicates that the line
|
|
contains information for that number of the subnet. Each of the subnets
|
|
must be the more significant digits. eg the 130.95.4 of an IP number
|
|
130.95.4.2 is implicit for all numbers mentioned in the file.
|
|
|
|
The PTR must point to a machine that can be found in the DNS. If the name
|
|
is not in the DNS, some versions of named just bomb out at this point.
|
|
|
|
Reverse name lookups are not compulsory, but nice to have. It means that
|
|
when people log into machines, they get names indicating where they are
|
|
logged in from. It makes it easier for you to spot things that are wrong
|
|
and it is far less cryptic than having lots of numbers everywhere. Also if
|
|
you do not have a name for your machine, some brain dead protocols such as
|
|
talk will not allow you to connect.
|
|
|
|
Since I had this I had one suggestion of an alternative way to do the
|
|
localhost entry. I think it is a matter of personal opinion so I'll
|
|
include it here in case anyone things that this is a more appropriate
|
|
method.
|
|
|
|
The following is courtesy of jep@convex.nl (JEP de Bie)
|
|
|
|
The way I did it was:
|
|
|
|
1) add in /etc/named.boot:
|
|
|
|
primary . localhost
|
|
primary 127.in-addr.ARPA. IP127
|
|
|
|
(Craig: It has been suggested by Mark Andrews that this is a bad practice
|
|
particularly if you have upgraded to Bind 4.9. You also run the risk of
|
|
polluting the root name servers. This comes down to a battle of idealogy
|
|
and practicality. Think twice before declaring yourself authorative for
|
|
the root domain.)
|
|
|
|
So I not only declare myself (falsely? - probably, but nobody is going to
|
|
listen anyway most likely [CPR]:-) athorative in the 127.in-addr.ARPA domain
|
|
but also in the . (root) domain.
|
|
|
|
2) the file localhost has:
|
|
|
|
$ORIGIN .
|
|
localhost IN A 127.0.0.1
|
|
|
|
3) and the file IP127:
|
|
|
|
$ORIGIN 127.in-addr.ARPA.
|
|
1.0.0 IN PTR localhost.
|
|
|
|
4) and I have in my own domain file (convex.nl) the line:
|
|
|
|
$ORIGIN convex.nl.
|
|
localhost IN CNAME localhost.
|
|
|
|
The advantage (elegancy?) is that a query (A) of localhost. gives the
|
|
reverse of the query of 1.0.0.127.in-addr.ARPA. And it also shows that
|
|
localhost.convex.nl is only a nickname to something more absolute.
|
|
(While the notion of localhost is of course relative :-)).
|
|
|
|
And I also think there is a subtle difference between the lines
|
|
|
|
primary 127.in-addr.ARPA. IP127
|
|
and
|
|
primary 0.0.127.in-addr.ARPA. 4.95.130.domain
|
|
=============
|
|
JEP de Bie
|
|
jep@convex.nl
|
|
=============
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Delegating authority for domains within your domain:
|
|
|
|
When you start having a very big domain that can be broken into logical and
|
|
seperate entities that can look after their own DNS information, you will
|
|
probably want to do this. Maintain a central area for the things that
|
|
everyone needs to see and delegate the authority for the other parts of the
|
|
organisation so that they can manage themselves.
|
|
|
|
Another essential piece of information is that every domain that exists
|
|
must have it NS records associated with it. These NS records denote the
|
|
name servers that are queried for information about that zone. For your
|
|
zone to be recognised by the outside world, the server responsible for the
|
|
zone above you must have created a NS record for your machine in your
|
|
domain. For example, putting the computer club onto the network and giving
|
|
them control over their own part of the domain space we have the following.
|
|
|
|
The machine authorative for gu.uwa.edu.au is mackerel and the machine
|
|
authorative for ucc.gu.uwa.edu.au is marlin.
|
|
|
|
in mackerel's data for gu.uwa.edu.au we have the following
|
|
|
|
@ IN SOA ...
|
|
IN A 130.95.100.3
|
|
IN MX mackerel.gu.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
IN MX uniwa.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
|
|
marlin IN A 130.95.100.4
|
|
|
|
ucc IN NS marlin.gu.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
IN NS mackerel.gu.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
|
|
Marlin is also given an IP in our domain as a convenience. If they blow up
|
|
their name serving there is less that can go wrong because people can still
|
|
see that machine which is a start. You could place "marlin.ucc" in the
|
|
first column and leave the machine totally inside the ucc domain as well.
|
|
|
|
The second NS line is because mackerel will be acting as secondary name
|
|
server for the ucc.gu domain. Do not include this line if you are not
|
|
authorative for the information included in the sub-domain.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Troubleshooting your named:
|
|
|
|
Named doesn't work! What is wrong?
|
|
|
|
Step 1: Run nslookup and see what nameserver it tries to connect you to.
|
|
If nslookup connects you to the wrong nameserver, create a /etc/resolv.conf
|
|
file that points your machine at the correct nameserver. If there is no
|
|
resolv.conf file, the the resolver uses the nameserver on the local
|
|
machine.
|
|
|
|
Step 2: Make sure that named is actually running.
|
|
|
|
Step 3: Restart named and see if you get any error messages on the
|
|
console and in also check /usr/adm/messages.
|
|
|
|
Step 4: If named is running, nslookup connects to the appropriate
|
|
nameserver and nslookup can answer simple questions, but other programs
|
|
such as 'ping' do not work with names, then you need to install resolv+
|
|
most likely.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I changed my named database and my local machine has noticed, but nobody
|
|
else has the new information?
|
|
|
|
Change the serial number in the SOA for any domains that you modified and
|
|
restart named. Wait an hour and check again. The information propogates
|
|
out. It won't change immediately.
|
|
|
|
|
|
My local machine knows about all the name server information, but no other
|
|
sites know about me?
|
|
|
|
Find an upstream nameserver (one that has an SOA for something in your
|
|
domain) and ask them to be a secondary name server for you. eg if you are
|
|
ecel.uwa.edu.au, ask someone who has an SOA for the domain uwa.edu.au.
|
|
Get NS records (and glue) added to your parent zone for your zone. This is
|
|
called delegating. It should be done formally like this or you will get
|
|
inconsistant answers out of the DNS. ALL NAMSERVERS FOR YOUR ZONE SHOULD
|
|
BE LISTED IN THIS MANNER.
|
|
|
|
|
|
My forward domain names work, but the backward names do not?
|
|
|
|
Make sure the numbers are back to front and have the in-addr.arpa on the
|
|
end.
|
|
Make sure you reverse zone is registered. For Class C nets this can be done
|
|
by mailing to hostmaster@internic.net. For class A & B nets make sure that
|
|
you are registeres with the primary for your net and that the net itself
|
|
is registered with hostmaster@internic.net.
|
|
|
|
|
|
How to get useful information from nslookup:
|
|
|
|
Nslookup is a very useful program but I'm sure there are less than 20
|
|
people worldwide who know how to use it to its full usefulness. I'm most
|
|
certainly not one of them. If you don't like using nslookup, there is at
|
|
least one other program called dig, that has most/all(?) of the
|
|
functionality of nslookup and is a hell of a lot easier to use.
|
|
|
|
I won't go into dig much here except to say that it is a lot easier to get
|
|
this information out of. I won't bother because nslookup ships with almost
|
|
all machines that come with network software.
|
|
|
|
To run nslookup, you usually just type nslookup. It will tell you the
|
|
server it connects to. You can specify a different server if you want.
|
|
This is useful when you want to tell if your named information is
|
|
consistent with other servers.
|
|
|
|
Getting name to number mappings.
|
|
|
|
Type the name of the machine. Typing 'decel' is enough if the machine is
|
|
local.
|
|
|
|
(Once you have run nslookup successfully)
|
|
> decel
|
|
Server: ecel.uwa.edu.au
|
|
Address: 130.95.4.2
|
|
|
|
Name: decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au
|
|
Address: 130.95.4.2
|
|
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
One curious quirk of some name resolvers is that if you type a
|
|
machine name, they will try a number of permutations. For example if my
|
|
machine is in the domain ecel.uwa.edu.au and I try to find a machine
|
|
called fred, the resolver will try the following.
|
|
|
|
fred.ecel.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
fred.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
fred.edu.au.
|
|
fred.au.
|
|
fred.
|
|
|
|
This can be useful, but more often than not, you would simply prefer a good
|
|
way to make aliases for machines that are commonly referenced. If you are
|
|
running resolv+, you should just be able to put common machines into the
|
|
host file.
|
|
|
|
DIG: dig <machine name>
|
|
|
|
Getting number to name mappings.
|
|
|
|
Nslookup defaults to finding you the Address of the name specified. For
|
|
reverse lookups you already have the address and you want to find the
|
|
name that goes with it. If you read and understood the bit above where it
|
|
describes how to create the number to name mapping file, you would guess
|
|
that you need to find the PTR record instead of the A record. So you do
|
|
the following.
|
|
|
|
> set type=ptr
|
|
> 2.4.95.130.in-addr.arpa
|
|
Server: decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au
|
|
Address: 130.95.4.2
|
|
|
|
2.4.95.130.in-addr.arpa host name = decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
nslookup tells you that the ptr for the machine name
|
|
2.4.95.130.in-addr.arpa points to the host decel.ecel.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
|
|
DIG: dig -x <machine number>
|
|
|
|
Finding where mail goes when a machine has no IP number.
|
|
|
|
When a machine is not IP connected, it needs to specify to the world, where
|
|
to send the mail so that it can dial up and collect it every now and then.
|
|
This is accomplished by setting up an MX record for the site and not giving
|
|
it an IP number. To get the information out of nslookup as to where the
|
|
mail goes, do the following.
|
|
|
|
> set type=mx
|
|
> dialix.oz.au
|
|
Server: decel.ecel.uwa.oz.au
|
|
Address: 130.95.4.2
|
|
|
|
Non-authoritative answer:
|
|
dialix.oz.au preference = 100, mail exchanger = uniwa.uwa.OZ.AU
|
|
dialix.oz.au preference = 200, mail exchanger = munnari.OZ.AU
|
|
Authoritative answers can be found from:
|
|
uniwa.uwa.OZ.AU inet address = 130.95.128.1
|
|
munnari.OZ.AU inet address = 128.250.1.21
|
|
munnari.OZ.AU inet address = 192.43.207.1
|
|
mulga.cs.mu.OZ.AU inet address = 128.250.35.21
|
|
mulga.cs.mu.OZ.AU inet address = 192.43.207.2
|
|
dmssyd.syd.dms.CSIRO.AU inet address = 130.155.16.1
|
|
ns.UU.NET inet address = 137.39.1.3
|
|
|
|
You tell nslookup that you want to search for mx records and then you give
|
|
it the name of the machine. It tells you the preference for the mail
|
|
(small means more preferable), and who the mail should be sent to. It also
|
|
includes sites that are authorative (have this name in their named database
|
|
files) for this MX record. There are multiple sites as a backup. As can
|
|
be seen, our local public internet access company dialix would like all of
|
|
their mail to be sent to uniwa, where they collect it from. If uniwa is
|
|
not up, send it to munnari and munnari will get it to uniwa eventually.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: For historical reasons Australia used to be .oz which was changed to
|
|
.oz.au to move to the ISO standard extensions upon the advent of IP. We
|
|
are now moving to a more normal heirarchy which is where the .edu.au comes
|
|
from. Pity, I liked having oz.
|
|
|
|
DIG: dig <zone> mx
|
|
|
|
Getting a list of machines in a domain from nslookup.
|
|
|
|
Find a server that is authorative for the domain or just generally all
|
|
knowing. To find a good server, find all the soa records for a given
|
|
domain. To do this, you set type=soa and enter the domain just like in the
|
|
two previous examples.
|
|
|
|
Once you have a server type
|
|
|
|
> ls gu.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
[uniwa.uwa.edu.au]
|
|
Host or domain name Internet address
|
|
gu server = mackerel.gu.uwa.edu.au
|
|
gu server = uniwa.uwa.edu.au
|
|
gu 130.95.100.3
|
|
snuffle-upagus 130.95.100.131
|
|
mullet 130.95.100.2
|
|
mackerel 130.95.100.3
|
|
marlin 130.95.100.4
|
|
gugate 130.95.100.1
|
|
gugate 130.95.100.129
|
|
helpdesk 130.95.100.180
|
|
lan 130.95.100.0
|
|
big-bird 130.95.100.130
|
|
|
|
To get a list of all the machines in the domain.
|
|
|
|
If you wanted to find a list of all of the MX records for the domain, you
|
|
can put a -m flag in the ls command.
|
|
|
|
> ls -m gu.uwa.edu.au.
|
|
[uniwa.uwa.edu.au]
|
|
Host or domain name Metric Host
|
|
gu 100 mackerel.gu.uwa.edu.au
|
|
gu 200 uniwa.uwa.edu.au
|
|
|
|
This only works for a limited selection of the different types.
|
|
|
|
DIG: dig axfr <zone> @<server>
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Appendix A
|
|
|
|
|
|
;
|
|
; This file holds the information on root name servers needed to
|
|
; initialize cache of Internet domain name servers
|
|
; (e.g. reference this file in the "cache . <file>"
|
|
; configuration file of BIND domain name servers).
|
|
;
|
|
; This file is made available by InterNIC registration services
|
|
; under anonymous FTP as
|
|
; file /domain/named.root
|
|
; on server FTP.RS.INTERNIC.NET
|
|
; -OR- under Gopher at RS.INTERNIC.NET
|
|
; under menu InterNIC Registration Services (NSI)
|
|
; submenu InterNIC Registration Archives
|
|
; file named.root
|
|
;
|
|
; last update: April 21, 1993
|
|
; related version of root zone: 930421
|
|
;
|
|
. 99999999 IN NS NS.INTERNIC.NET.
|
|
NS.INTERNIC.NET. 99999999 A 198.41.0.4
|
|
. 99999999 NS KAVA.NISC.SRI.COM.
|
|
KAVA.NISC.SRI.COM. 99999999 A 192.33.33.24
|
|
. 99999999 NS C.NYSER.NET.
|
|
C.NYSER.NET. 99999999 A 192.33.4.12
|
|
. 99999999 NS TERP.UMD.EDU.
|
|
TERP.UMD.EDU. 99999999 A 128.8.10.90
|
|
. 99999999 NS NS.NASA.GOV.
|
|
NS.NASA.GOV. 99999999 A 128.102.16.10
|
|
99999999 A 192.52.195.10
|
|
. 99999999 NS NS.NIC.DDN.MIL.
|
|
NS.NIC.DDN.MIL. 99999999 A 192.112.36.4
|
|
. 99999999 NS AOS.ARL.ARMY.MIL.
|
|
AOS.ARL.ARMY.MIL. 99999999 A 128.63.4.82
|
|
99999999 A 192.5.25.82
|
|
. 99999999 NS NIC.NORDU.NET.
|
|
NIC.NORDU.NET. 99999999 A 192.36.148.17
|
|
; End of File
|
|
|
|
|
|
Appendix B
|
|
|
|
An Excerpt from
|
|
RFC 1340 Assigned Numbers July 1992
|
|
|
|
|
|
MACHINE NAMES
|
|
|
|
These are the Official Machine Names as they appear in the Domain Name
|
|
System HINFO records and the NIC Host Table. Their use is described in
|
|
RFC-952 [53].
|
|
|
|
A machine name or CPU type may be up to 40 characters taken from the
|
|
set of uppercase letters, digits, and the two punctuation characters
|
|
hyphen and slash. It must start with a letter, and end with a letter
|
|
or digit.
|
|
|
|
ALTO DEC-1080
|
|
ALTOS-6800 DEC-1090
|
|
AMDAHL-V7 DEC-1090B
|
|
APOLLO DEC-1090T
|
|
ATARI-104ST DEC-2020T
|
|
ATT-3B1 DEC-2040
|
|
ATT-3B2 DEC-2040T
|
|
ATT-3B20 DEC-2050T
|
|
ATT-7300 DEC-2060
|
|
BBN-C/60 DEC-2060T
|
|
BURROUGHS-B/29 DEC-2065
|
|
BURROUGHS-B/4800 DEC-FALCON
|
|
BUTTERFLY DEC-KS10
|
|
C/30 DEC-VAX-11730
|
|
C/70 DORADO
|
|
CADLINC DPS8/70M
|
|
CADR ELXSI-6400
|
|
CDC-170 EVEREX-386
|
|
CDC-170/750 FOONLY-F2
|
|
CDC-173 FOONLY-F3
|
|
CELERITY-1200 FOONLY-F4
|
|
CLUB-386 GOULD
|
|
COMPAQ-386/20 GOULD-6050
|
|
COMTEN-3690 GOULD-6080
|
|
CP8040 GOULD-9050
|
|
CRAY-1 GOULD-9080
|
|
CRAY-X/MP H-316
|
|
CRAY-2 H-60/68
|
|
CTIWS-117 H-68
|
|
DANDELION H-68/80
|
|
DEC-10 H-89
|
|
DEC-1050 HONEYWELL-DPS-6
|
|
DEC-1077 HONEYWELL-DPS-8/70
|
|
HP3000 ONYX-Z8000
|
|
HP3000/64 PDP-11
|
|
IBM-158 PDP-11/3
|
|
IBM-360/67 PDP-11/23
|
|
IBM-370/3033 PDP-11/24
|
|
IBM-3081 PDP-11/34
|
|
IBM-3084QX PDP-11/40
|
|
IBM-3101 PDP-11/44
|
|
IBM-4331 PDP-11/45
|
|
IBM-4341 PDP-11/50
|
|
IBM-4361 PDP-11/70
|
|
IBM-4381 PDP-11/73
|
|
IBM-4956 PE-7/32
|
|
IBM-6152 PE-3205
|
|
IBM-PC PERQ
|
|
IBM-PC/AT PLEXUS-P/60
|
|
IBM-PC/RT PLI
|
|
IBM-PC/XT PLURIBUS
|
|
IBM-SERIES/1 PRIME-2350
|
|
IMAGEN PRIME-2450
|
|
IMAGEN-8/300 PRIME-2755
|
|
IMSAI PRIME-9655
|
|
INTEGRATED-SOLUTIONS PRIME-9755
|
|
INTEGRATED-SOLUTIONS-68K PRIME-9955II
|
|
INTEGRATED-SOLUTIONS-CREATOR PRIME-2250
|
|
INTEGRATED-SOLUTIONS-CREATOR-8 PRIME-2655
|
|
INTEL-386 PRIME-9955
|
|
INTEL-IPSC PRIME-9950
|
|
IS-1 PRIME-9650
|
|
IS-68010 PRIME-9750
|
|
LMI PRIME-2250
|
|
LSI-11 PRIME-750
|
|
LSI-11/2 PRIME-850
|
|
LSI-11/23 PRIME-550II
|
|
LSI-11/73 PYRAMID-90
|
|
M68000 PYRAMID-90MX
|
|
MAC-II PYRAMID-90X
|
|
MASSCOMP RIDGE
|
|
MC500 RIDGE-32
|
|
MC68000 RIDGE-32C
|
|
MICROPORT ROLM-1666
|
|
MICROVAX S1-MKIIA
|
|
MICROVAX-I SMI
|
|
MV/8000 SEQUENT-BALANCE-8000
|
|
NAS3-5 SIEMENS
|
|
NCR-COMTEN-3690 SILICON-GRAPHICS
|
|
NEXT/N1000-316 SILICON-GRAPHICS-IRIS
|
|
NOW SGI-IRIS-2400
|
|
SGI-IRIS-2500 SUN-3/50
|
|
SGI-IRIS-3010 SUN-3/60
|
|
SGI-IRIS-3020 SUN-3/75
|
|
SGI-IRIS-3030 SUN-3/80
|
|
SGI-IRIS-3110 SUN-3/110
|
|
SGI-IRIS-3115 SUN-3/140
|
|
SGI-IRIS-3120 SUN-3/150
|
|
SGI-IRIS-3130 SUN-3/160
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/20 SUN-3/180
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/20G SUN-3/200
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/25 SUN-3/260
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/25G SUN-3/280
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/25S SUN-3/470
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/50 SUN-3/480
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/50G SUN-4/60
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/50GT SUN-4/110
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/60 SUN-4/150
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/60G SUN-4/200
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/60T SUN-4/260
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/60GT SUN-4/280
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/70 SUN-4/330
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/70G SUN-4/370
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/70GT SUN-4/390
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/80GT SUN-50
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/80S SUN-100
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/120GTX SUN-120
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/120S SUN-130
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/210GTX SUN-150
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/210S SUN-170
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/220GTX SUN-386i/250
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/220S SUN-68000
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/240GTX SYMBOLICS-3600
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/240S SYMBOLICS-3670
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/280GTX SYMMETRIC-375
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4D/280S SYMULT
|
|
SGI-IRIS-CS/12 TANDEM-TXP
|
|
SGI-IRIS-4SERVER-8 TANDY-6000
|
|
SPERRY-DCP/10 TEK-6130
|
|
SUN TI-EXPLORER
|
|
SUN-2 TP-4000
|
|
SUN-2/50 TRS-80
|
|
SUN-2/100 UNIVAC-1100
|
|
SUN-2/120 UNIVAC-1100/60
|
|
SUN-2/130 UNIVAC-1100/62
|
|
SUN-2/140 UNIVAC-1100/63
|
|
SUN-2/150 UNIVAC-1100/64
|
|
SUN-2/160 UNIVAC-1100/70
|
|
SUN-2/170 UNIVAC-1160
|
|
UNKNOWN
|
|
VAX-11/725
|
|
VAX-11/730
|
|
VAX-11/750
|
|
VAX-11/780
|
|
VAX-11/785
|
|
VAX-11/790
|
|
VAX-11/8600
|
|
VAX-8600
|
|
WANG-PC002
|
|
WANG-VS100
|
|
WANG-VS400
|
|
WYSE-386
|
|
XEROX-1108
|
|
XEROX-8010
|
|
ZENITH-148
|
|
|
|
SYSTEM NAMES
|
|
|
|
These are the Official System Names as they appear in the Domain Name
|
|
System HINFO records and the NIC Host Table. Their use is described
|
|
in RFC-952 [53].
|
|
|
|
A system name may be up to 40 characters taken from the set of upper-
|
|
case letters, digits, and the three punctuation characters hyphen,
|
|
period, and slash. It must start with a letter, and end with a
|
|
letter or digit.
|
|
|
|
AEGIS LISP SUN OS 3.5
|
|
APOLLO LISPM SUN OS 4.0
|
|
AIX/370 LOCUS SWIFT
|
|
AIX-PS/2 MACOS TAC
|
|
BS-2000 MINOS TANDEM
|
|
CEDAR MOS TENEX
|
|
CGW MPE5 TOPS10
|
|
CHORUS MSDOS TOPS20
|
|
CHRYSALIS MULTICS TOS
|
|
CMOS MUSIC TP3010
|
|
CMS MUSIC/SP TRSDOS
|
|
COS MVS ULTRIX
|
|
CPIX MVS/SP UNIX
|
|
CTOS NEXUS UNIX-BSD
|
|
CTSS NMS UNIX-V1AT
|
|
DCN NONSTOP UNIX-V
|
|
DDNOS NOS-2 UNIX-V.1
|
|
DOMAIN NTOS UNIX-V.2
|
|
DOS OS/DDP UNIX-V.3
|
|
EDX OS/2 UNIX-PC
|
|
ELF OS4 UNKNOWN
|
|
EMBOS OS86 UT2D
|
|
EMMOS OSX V
|
|
EPOS PCDOS VM
|
|
FOONEX PERQ/OS VM/370
|
|
FUZZ PLI VM/CMS
|
|
GCOS PSDOS/MIT VM/SP
|
|
GPOS PRIMOS VMS
|
|
HDOS RMX/RDOS VMS/EUNICE
|
|
IMAGEN ROS VRTX
|
|
INTERCOM RSX11M WAITS
|
|
IMPRESS RTE-A WANG
|
|
INTERLISP SATOPS WIN32
|
|
IOS SCO-XENIX/386 X11R3
|
|
IRIX SCS XDE
|
|
ISI-68020 SIMP XENIX
|
|
ITS SUN
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Appendix C Installing DNS on a Sun when running NIS
|
|
|
|
====================
|
|
2) How to get DNS to be used when running NIS ?
|
|
|
|
First setup the appropriate /etc/resolv.conf file.
|
|
Something like this should do the "trick".
|
|
|
|
;
|
|
; Data file for a client.
|
|
;
|
|
domain local domain
|
|
nameserver address of primary domain nameserver
|
|
nameserver address of secondary domain nameserver
|
|
|
|
where: "local domain" is the domain part of the hostnames.
|
|
For example, if your hostname is "thor.ece.uc.edu"
|
|
your "local domain" is "ece.uc.edu".
|
|
|
|
You will need to put a copy of this resolv.conf on
|
|
all NIS(YP) servers including slaves.
|
|
|
|
Under SunOS 4.1 and greater, change the "B=" at the top
|
|
of the /var/yp/Makefile to "B=-b" and setup NIS in the
|
|
usual fashion.
|
|
|
|
You will need reboot or restart ypserv for these changes
|
|
to take affect.
|
|
|
|
Under 4.0.x, edit the Makefile or apply the following "diff":
|
|
|
|
*** Makefile.orig Wed Jan 10 13:22:11 1990
|
|
--- Makefile Wed Jan 10 13:22:01 1990
|
|
***************
|
|
*** 63 ****
|
|
! | $(MAKEDBM) - $(YPDBDIR)/$(DOM)/hosts.byname; \
|
|
--- 63 ----
|
|
! | $(MAKEDBM) -b - $(YPDBDIR)/$(DOM)/hosts.byname; \
|
|
***************
|
|
*** 66 ****
|
|
! | $(MAKEDBM) - $(YPDBDIR)/$(DOM)/hosts.byaddr; \
|
|
--- 66 ----
|
|
! | $(MAKEDBM) -b - $(YPDBDIR)/$(DOM)/hosts.byaddr; \
|
|
====================
|
|
|