Sid RAMDANE wrote:
I have configured an internal DNS as catching only using the dns I have been given by my registrar and using as well DNS of my ISP. However all incoming traffic, ftp and www seems to end up somewhere in my ISP network. It never reaches my IP address 10.10.10.10/32 When the command nslookup is executed on my address 10.10.10.10, I got answer that it is for my ISP and not for my domain *fedora.com. I am using Fedora C3 and I believe everything works ok. From my network I can have access to my ftp server, my web server and can send e-mail as well and receive e-mail as well from my pop ISP account. However ftp and www from outside doe not work. Is there anyway to by pass this issue? Do you think it caused by the fact that there is no reverse resolution for my IP 10.10.10.10/32? Any type/help will be welcomed! Also do you know why the "Ask Mr DNS" site is not accessible anymore? Many thanks in advance and, Kind regards Sid
Try these free DNS checking tools
www.dnsstuff.com & www.DNSreport.com
Hope this helps
Dean Plant
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 10:07 +0000, Plant, Dean wrote:
Sid RAMDANE wrote:
I have configured an internal DNS as catching only using the dns I have been given by my registrar and using as well DNS of my ISP. However all incoming traffic, ftp and www seems to end up somewhere in my ISP network. It never reaches my IP address 10.10.10.10/32 When the command nslookup is executed on my address 10.10.10.10, I got answer that it is for my ISP and not for my domain *fedora.com. I am using Fedora C3 and I believe everything works ok. From my network I can have access to my ftp server, my web server and can send e-mail as well and receive e-mail as well from my pop ISP account. However ftp and www from outside doe not work. Is there anyway to by pass this issue? Do you think it caused by the fact that there is no reverse resolution for my IP 10.10.10.10/32? Any type/help will be welcomed! Also do you know why the "Ask Mr DNS" site is not accessible anymore? Many thanks in advance and, Kind regards Sid
Try these free DNS checking tools
www.dnsstuff.com & www.DNSreport.com
Hope this helps
Dean Plant
--
It helped me, thanks for the links. I found some errors so I sent it off to my ISP. So if your sick as a dog at 2 AM and you're checking on your DNS does that make you a geek?
Tim...
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 02:40 -0800, Timothy Payne wrote:
-- It helped me, thanks for the links. I found some errors so I sent it off to my ISP. So if your sick as a dog at 2 AM and you're checking on your DNS does that make you a geek?
Tim...
hmm... it's 4am and I'm buried in iptables on one of my public boxes and on another box I just finished reconfiguring SSH so I can remote in to that network segment when I head out of town this weekend and on another window of this box I'm pages into a script.
So that probably qualifies me as a geek. you're sick and have an excuse to be up.
but, you're welcome to wear the title with pride.
zeb