IMHO the convention is stupid (and isn't really any convention - everyone does it differently, i've seen x.x.x.x.in-addr.arpa being CNAMEs to: x.128.x.x.x.in-addr.arpa, x.128/25.x.x.x.in-addr.arpa x.128-255.x.x.x.in-addr.arpa, x.128-25.x.x.x.in-addr.arpa or even x.x.x.x.revdns.company.com or x.revdns.company.com) and the only reason it's even there is because Bind is brain-dead. There's no need to use anything besides normal x.x.x.x.in-addr.arpa (especially if you use djbdns or if you're willing to put a little more work into bind). Cheers, MaZe. On Thu, 1 Sep 2005, Simone wrote: > Hi list, I first apologise because this is really off topic, but I would > really appreciate your opinion on this. > > I have had a very hard time configuring a DNS server to answer reverse dns > queries, and I would like to have your opinion on my provider behaviour. > We have 3 classless subnets and asked the provider to delegate reverse dns. > They configured their server and emailed me all was fine but i it didn't work > for one subnet, so I mailed back and they assure their side was all perfectly > configured. > I finally find out (spending lot of time and thanks to www.dnsstuff.com) that > they configured 2 zones like 128/27.x.x.x.in-addr.arpa and one as > 128-27.x.x.x.in-addr.arpa, so my server was not able to answer queries > because I had all zones 128/27.x.x.x.in-addr.arpa. > As said before it is my first time configuring Bind and I am sure the more > experienced would have notice and solved it quite soon, but still I wonder > why to use different convention (without telling us) and even if this is > correct (red the http://rfc.net/rfc2317.html and they always use "/" not "-" > ). > Hope I won't be banned from the list for this email...... > > Thanks for your time reading this > > Simone > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >