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freebsd/etc/namedb/named.boot
1997-05-08 15:23:28 +00:00

63 lines
2.6 KiB
Clojure

; $Id: named.boot,v 1.5 1997/02/23 09:21:09 peter Exp $
; From: @(#)named.boot 5.1 (Berkeley) 6/30/90
; Refer to the named(8) man page for details. If you are ever going
; to setup a primary server, make sure you've understood the hairy
; details of how DNS is working. Even with simple mistakes, you can
; break connectivity for affected parties, or cause huge amount of
; useless Internet traffic.
;
; Setting up secondaries is way easier and the rough picture for this
; is explained below.
;
; If you enable a local name server, don't forget to enter 127.0.0.1
; into your /etc/resolv.conf so this server will be queried first.
; Also, make sure to enable it in /etc/rc.conf.
; example sortlist config:
; sortlist 127.0.0.0
directory /etc/namedb
; type domain source host/file backup file
cache . named.root
primary 0.0.127.IN-ADDR.ARPA localhost.rev
; NB: Do not use the IP addresses below, they are faked, and only
; serve demonstration/documentation purposes!
;
; Example secondary config entries. It can be convenient to become
; a secondary at least for the zone where your own domain is in. Ask
; your network administrator for the IP address of the responsible
; primary.
;
; Never forget to include the reverse lookup (IN-ADDR.ARPA) zone!
; (This is the first bytes of the respective IP address, in reverse
; order, with ".IN-ADDR.ARPA" appended.)
;
; Before starting to setup a primary zone, better make sure you fully
; understand how DNS and BIND works, however. There are sometimes
; unobvious pitfalls. Setting up a secondary is comparably simpler.
;
; NB: Don't blindly enable the examples below. :-) Use actual names
; and addresses instead.
;
;type zone name IP of primary backup file name
;==================================================================
;secondary domain.com 192.168.1.1 domain.com.bak
;secondary 0.168.192.in-addr.arpa 192.168.1.1 0.168.192.in-addr.arpa.bak
;
;
; If you've got a DNS server around at your upstream provider, enter
; its IP address here, and enable the line below. This will make you
; benefit from its cache, thus reduce overall DNS traffic in the Internet.
;
;forwarders 127.0.0.1
;
; In addition to the "forwarders" clause, you can force your name
; server to never initiate queries of its own, but always ask its
; forwarders only, by enabling the following line:
;
;options forward-only