similar to: caching-nameserver network install failure

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 80 matches similar to: "caching-nameserver network install failure"

2005 Jan 12
0
CentOS-3 i386 errata : caching-nameserver 3.4 update causes problems
I have removed the updated caching-nameserver from the core OS repo of CentOS 3.4 i386 as there have been reports of nameservers losing their configuration and stopping when the update was applied. I have reverted caching-nameserver in the 3.4 core OS back to the CentOS 3.3 version caching-nameserver-7.2-7.noarch.rpm. The new version caching-nameserver-7.3-3_EL3.noarch.rpm is now in the testing
2005 Aug 08
3
Caching nameserver
I am having some issue with setting up a caching nameserver. here's the link: http://www.centos.org/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=150&forum=10&post_id=400#forumpost400 the OS is now CentOS4 -- My "Foundation" verse: Isa 54:17 No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper; and every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn. This is
2017 Apr 20
0
nameserver issue
--On Thursday, April 20, 2017 12:34 AM -0400 Fred Smith <fredex at fcshome.stoneham.ma.us> wrote: > works fine. until I fire up a vpn. having done that, looking in > /etc/resolv.conf (while the vpn is connected) it has reverted to > 192.168.2.1. > > after shutting down the vpn, 192.168.2.1 remains in resolv.conf Which VPN? It's not uncommon for VPN software to change
2017 Apr 21
0
nameserver issue
--On Thursday, April 20, 2017 9:10 AM -0400 Fred Smith <fredex at fcshome.stoneham.ma.us> wrote: > problem is, where is it getting the old address from? It isn't in > the resolv.conf before the vpn is started, and it is not in the NM > setups, anywhere, and it isn't in any of the files in > /etc/sysconfig/network*, so where is it coming from? And that particular >
2003 Jun 15
0
netbios nameserver nmbd doesn't work with non-standard subnets
It would appear that nmbd doesn't do what it's should on networks that used non-standard subnets. To reproduce just set up a 10.0.0.0/3 network and observe that nmbd doesn't operate correctly.
2024 Dec 03
1
Bind as nameserver
On Tue, 3 Dec 2024 19:46:27 +0100 Anders ?stling via samba <samba at lists.samba.org> wrote: > Good evening folks > > I read this statement in the wiki regarding Bind9 > > "You must not add the AD domain forward or reverse zone records to the > named.conf files, these zones are stored dynamically in Ad" > > This means that administration software like
2024 Dec 03
0
Bind as nameserver
Op 03-12-2024 om 20:44 schreef Anders ?stling: > >> On 3 Dec 2024, at 20:00, Kees van Vloten via samba <samba at lists.samba.org> wrote: >> >> >> Op 03-12-2024 om 19:46 schreef Anders ?stling via samba: >>> Good evening folks >>> >>> I read this statement in the wiki regarding Bind9 >>> >>> "You must not add the AD
2024 Dec 03
2
Bind as nameserver
Good evening folks I read this statement in the wiki regarding Bind9 "You must not add the AD domain forward or reverse zone records to the named.conf files, these zones are stored dynamically in Ad" This means that administration software like Webmin can't be used with the samba/bind combo, and zones must be managed exclusively with "samba-tool dns" . So what is the
2005 May 09
3
bind and caching-nameserver
i was thinking if is it possible to cache some urls in bind? I just want to do when you send the command "ping domain.com" even if you are disconnected to the internet it will still resolve the ip of domain.com -- Regards, Mark Quitoriano, CCNA http://www.atamanetworks.com
2011 Jun 08
1
[PATCH] Don't try to guess the nameserver in ipconfig.
klibcs ipconfig tries to guess the nameserver if no nameserver is provided. This may happen due to misconfigured dhcp or the use of the ip= parameter. This patch removes the guessing from ipconfig as it is not possible for any other script to determine if the provided nameserver is valid or a guessed one. If the old behavior is really needed this could be easily implemented in an external script.
2010 Aug 31
1
Bug#594638: klibc-utils: ipconfig assumes dhcp server is nameserver
On Fri, 27 Aug 2010, Vagrant Cascadian wrote: > > ipconfig apparently assumes that the dhcp server's ip address is the > nameserver when dhcp gives it no nameservers, dhcp gives the nameserver > 0.0.0.0, or the nameservers are not ip addresses (i.e. ns1.example.org). > while these scenarios are probably not extremely common, i'm not sure > this is a good default with no
2017 Apr 20
2
nameserver issue
Hi all! This question is, at best, somewhat peripheral to Centos, but I'm hoping to be forgiven, and that someone here can give me a clue. I've just brought up a nameserver on my household LAN, bind9 on a Raspberry Pi. The connection with Centos is this: my main desktop is C7, and its hardwired network is also manual, not dhcp. I've edited the ipv4 config (in NM) and changed the DNS
2017 Apr 20
2
nameserver issue
On Thu, Apr 20, 2017 at 12:32:41AM -0700, Kenneth Porter wrote: > --On Thursday, April 20, 2017 12:34 AM -0400 Fred Smith > <fredex at fcshome.stoneham.ma.us> wrote: > > >works fine. until I fire up a vpn. having done that, looking in > >/etc/resolv.conf (while the vpn is connected) it has reverted to > >192.168.2.1. > > > >after shutting down the vpn,
2017 Oct 31
1
Secondary Nameserver not working
I've configured a secondary slave nameserver based on what I consider rather expert advice, but it's not working as expected. I'm trying to determine if I've done something wrong with basic configuration or if there are AD/DC nuances afoot. The main nameserver is the domain Active Directory/Domain Controller running Samba 4.4.16 on Slackware64 14.2. This has been running for a few
2009 Jul 02
3
Configure a local DNS caching nameserver: partial success
Hi, The subject says it all. On my "server" machine in the local LAN (192.168.1.252 in a 192.168.1.0/24 network), I setup Bind. I installed the 'caching-nameserver' package, which provides a set of configuration files for Bind so it can be used as a caching nameserver out of the box. On the server : I start bind (service named start), and try it out. # host www.google.fr
2008 Jul 07
3
how do I find out which nameserver returns a DNS query?
Hi all If I do a "dig mydomain.co.za" from a Linux server, how do I know which DNS nameserver returns the queries? I seem to have a faulty DNS server, but can't see which one, so I want to find out which nameserver (if there's 4 - ns1.myserver, ns2.myserver, ns3.myserver & ns4.myserver) returns the queries? -- Kind Regards Rudi Ahlers CEO, SoftDux Web:
2011 Apr 27
3
Help: issues about hostname & nameserver
Dear developers: I'm using Samba-3.5.8 on Linux (Gentoo, amd64) as a file server, and using some Windows based OSes as clinet. And something strange happened to me. Things went as follows: 1. If there was no dot (".") in the hostname of server, then no matter whether the DNS server (in /etc/resolv.conf) was set correctly or not, everything went fine. Client can access shares
2005 May 14
10
alternative nameserver from local network
hi, I have a debian system with shorewall acting as a router between my adsl line and my local network. One of the things on that local network is my playstation, and I''m having trouble playing an online game with it - the game tries to access the internet, and then fails at the stage where it tries to find the game servers. The debian machine is 192.168.0.3, and the playstation is
2008 Mar 10
1
/etc/resolv.conf - Number of Nameservers
What is the maximum number of nameservers mentioned in /etc/resolv.conf which will be queried while looking up a hostname or IP address in the present version ? Earlier implementations had a ceiling of 3 name servers which could be queried. Has there been any increase ? Thanks, Manish
2008 Oct 10
1
looking for good web based DNS script to check nameservers
Hi all, I'm looking for a good web based script / website that can do a full ananlysis on DNS & namservers. Can someone please recommend something good to use? And if possible, if it could show any errors, or even make suggestions (like "TTL is too high", or " you don't have an MX, please ad one", etc) -- Kind Regards Rudi Ahlers