DNS Help

Daniel Siemens Dsiemens at kcimplants.com
Sat Jun 26 14:50:04 CDT 2004


Another option is if you have a friend with DNS servers that can create
and maintain the zone for you.   You can get together with them and buy
them a beer, the creation of zone and a few hosts is a trivial task in
most systems.   With dynamic IP's this will be a bit more effort.     

One of the problems that I would expect is the reverse lookups on the
mail servers failing.   Many of the email services will do a reverse
lookup on incoming email connections to verify that the mail is coming
from the domain in the email.   With ISP's using Classless Internet
Domain routing (CIDR), they have to create reverse DNS records as they
own the block of IP's.   The logic is this; when the receiving mail
server does a reverse lookup and sees that sbcglobal.net owns the ip's
and it's reverse DNS is adslIpaddress.kc.sbcglobal.net it expects a
sbcglobal.net email.  I know SBC will create a PTR record for you if you
have static IP's.   I don't know how they will do this for you with a
dynamic IP.   Without these records, expect some email to fail.   AOL
comes to mind.  

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-kclug at kclug.org [mailto:owner-kclug at kclug.org] On Behalf Of
Brian Kelsay
Sent: Saturday, June 26, 2004 8:43 AM
Cc: kclug at kclug.org
Subject: Re: DNS Help

Rusty wrote:

> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-kclug Behalf Of Brian Kelsay
> 
> I have a domain I purchased at godaddy.com and I was using free
hosting
> at 1and1.com, but I want to just put the site on my server at home.
> Here's the dilemma. GoDaddy will do DNS if you use one of their
hosting
> plans or if you just want to park a domain, otherwise you have to
> provide your own DNS. When I was trying to build a site at 1&1 I was
> using their DNS, but I switched it back to just a parked domain at
> godaddy until I figured out what I wanted to do.
> 
> Any recommendations as to where I can get free DNS to point
> mydomain.com to my home IP? I already know how to setup the firewall
to
> redirect port 80 to the webserver. I previously used dyndns.org for a
> free subdomain account, but they charge about 24.95/yr for basic DNS
of
> your own domain. That's a bit much for something I'm just screwing
> around w/ at home. I also want to be able to direct the MX.
> 
> Brian Kelsay
> 
>  
> 
> I really don't want to sound like a dick, but do you honestly think
> <$.07/day is really unreasonable, even if you are "just screwing
> around" with something?
> 
	> __________________________________
> Do you Yahoo!?
> Yahoo! Mail is new and improved - Check it out!
> http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail
> 

Well Rusty, why do you use free webmail?  If I am running a 
non-commercial site to learn some stuff and there is a free DNS service 
and I can get a cheap domain, why wouldn't I want to use the cheap and 
free combination?  I've done some stupid and expensive stuff in the past

that I am now recovering from and I don't have a lot of duckets to throw

around.   My fastest PC is a PIII-500.

----------------------------------------------
Somewhere there is a village missing an idiot.




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