I think you should be able to do this using BIND views with match-destinations. Have one view match destinations for 1.1.1.1 and 1.1.1.2 and the other for 1.1.1.3 and 1.1.1.4. Create a zone in one view for exampleA.com and one in the other for exampleB.com
Ryan
On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 1:08 PM, Dotan Cohen dotancohen@gmail.com wrote:
On a CentOS 5 server, I am having a hard time configuring BIND to answer to 4 IP addresses for 2 domain names.
Currently, I have four IP addresses, for sake of discussion they are: 1.1.1.1 1.1.1.2 1.1.1.3 1.1.1.4
Additionally, I have two domain names. For sake of discussion: exampleA.com exampleB.com
My goal is to have 1.1.1.1 & 1.1.1.2 as the nameservers for exampleA.com, and 1.1.1.3 & 1.1.1.4 as the nameservers for exampleB.com. Apache is running on this machine, and should of course serve pages for the sites.
I think that I've got the apache configuration down, but the BIND configuration is eluding me. I've read the following fine manual, but I am still stuck: http://www.centos.org/docs/5/html/Deployment_Guide-en-US/ch-bind.html
Additionally, I have googled for "how to configure bind for multiple domain names" and the like, but I see no mention of the IP addresses configuration. Can I simply configure any IP address that the server answers to as the nameservers? What am I missing?
Thank you in advance!
-- Dotan Cohen
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