Index: [Article Count Order] [Thread]

Date:  Tue, 7 Oct 2008 20:25:28 +0200
From:  "Steffan" <snoord (at mark) planet.nl>
Subject:  [coba-e:14150] Re: smbind
To:  <coba-e (at mark) bluequartz.org>
Message-Id:  <BD06EF0E7A1E41B7BF57447402635BDF@TikKlikPC11>
In-Reply-To:  <200810011706.53517.bq (at mark) solarspeed.net>
References:  <48E37444.3949.F04C450 (at mark) localhost> <200810011424.04089.bq (at mark) solarspeed.net> <2FD19E26C2124783A7CA6F9FEEDE0536 (at mark) TikKlikPC11> <200810011706.53517.bq (at mark) solarspeed.net>
X-Mail-Count: 14150

Hi Michael,

If i do this 
Dnsstuff reports that im a open dns server so that look snot the best way to
deal with that

Steffan

-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: Michael Stauber [mailto:bq (at mark) solarspeed.net] 
Verzonden: woensdag 1 oktober 2008 17:07
Aan: coba-e (at mark) bluequartz.org
Onderwerp: [coba-e:14133] Re: smbind

Hi Steffan,

> Michael says: It can be tied into another working
> DNS server to do recursive lookups, though
>
> That i didnt figure out i was missing that so look in to the manual i say
> to myself

In your /etc/mydns.conf there should be a line like this:

# recursive = X.X.X.X                      # Location of recursive resolver

Change the X.X.X.X to the IP of another DNS server that does recursive
lookups 
and uncomment this line. Then restart MyDNS.

Then whenever MyDNS can't resolve a query (because it has no records for
it), 
then it'll ask that external DNS server and will foward the response to 
whoever asked for it.

-- 
With best regards,

Michael Stauber