On Tue, 2005-11-15 at 13:14 -0800, Michael Rock wrote: > > Ok guys ... this is ONLY an issue IF you have > > caching-nameserver AND > > bind installed ... and if you used the named.conf > > from caching- > > nameserver. > > > > RH says to NOT install caching-nameserver and a real > > name server on the > > same machine ... > > > > Excuse my ignorance on this subject, been looking for > a link that explains the policy and why? Right now I > have primary and secondary name servers hosting many > domains and web server applications that need to > resolve DNS from these servers. Then I have a handful > of workstations that use these servers for regular DNS > queries. > > This will be significant work/expense and to find > space for it just to separate the caching name server > to a separate box just so the stations can have DNS > queries. > > Been doing it this way for years without a problem, so > any info you can pass on. > A real name server doesn't also need caching-nameserver installed ... it will lookup zones it doesn't control. caching-nameserver is what you would install if you didn't need to control any domains and wanted a local DNS server. caching-nameserver is just bind and some config files that don't have any zones in the named.conf file If you install caching-nameserver you are saying that you want a DNS machine that doesn't control zones. If you remove the package caching-nameserver, it will save your named.custom and named.conf files as rpmsave files ... just move them back into place afterwards and leave caching-nameserver removed. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20051115/6fecd5bb/attachment-0005.sig>