On 08/26/2015 03:50 PM, Rowland Penny wrote:> On 26/08/15 20:39, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 08/26/2015 03:26 PM, Rowland Penny wrote:
>>> On 26/08/15 20:14, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
>>>> One of the Centos 7 arm developers built the sernet 4.2 for me
to
>>>> start testing.
>>>>
>>>> http://repo.shivaserv.fr/centos/7/shivaserv-sernet.repo
>>>>
>>>> and
>>>>
>>>> http://repo.shivaserv.fr/centos/7/sernet/armv7hl/
>>>>
>>>> Since these were built on qemu, not requiring specific armv7
>>>> hardware, Perhaps at some point they can be adopted by Sernet.
But
>>>> for now, how to test....
>>>>
>>>> I don't see any specific Sernet documentation. Like what
is here
>>>> and how to set it up, perhaps different, from generic Samba 4.
>>>>
>>>> I searched the sernet web site and this list and came up empty,
but
>>>> my search foo is weak.
>>>>
>>>> thanks
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> If Sernet just built samba for ARM, I do not think that it should
be
>>> any different to set up, so just follow the relevant documentation
>>> on the samba wiki:
>>>
>>> https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Main_Page
>>
>> I was thinking that PERHAPS te sernet build could have specific
>> configs for BIND and DHCP at the least. Unless Samba has already
>> included these. For things like DYNDNS.
>>
>
> Could you be a bit more specific, you can use Bind with samba4 but it
> is up to the sysadmin to set this up, though there is a page on the
> samba wiki. DHCP, again the sysadmin will have to set this, but there
> is not much on the wiki about this, but if all else fails, I can help
> with this. Finally, I don't see where DYNDNS comes in here.
Plowing through the wiki...
I see where if I use the internal DNS provided, I will have to set up a
forwarder. No problem, I have done that a lot. But I plan on using a
private tld, htt. and the zone home.htt. I want these zones known to
other systems on my network, so I want to slave them to my main DNS
internal servers (I actually have a production and 2 distinct test DNS
servers). Perhaps I will find in the wiki how to do this, or find my
old notes.
Are workstations assigned DNS entries when they get their DHCP lease?
So that 'den' becomes den.home.htt and diningroom becomes
diningroom.home.htt? That is what I would think DYNDNS would be doing.
Of course the file servers, nevia and vega would be nevia.home.htt and
vega.home.htt? But since these are statically assigned, again, I am
assuming there are ways to get them into the internal DNS.
Finally I am testing on one RFC1918 subnet (check out the authors of
1918) and then will move all the servers to another one. what will I
need to do for this migration?