Running BIND for home network name resolution

Stephen cryptworks at gmail.com
Thu Aug 12 07:00:32 MST 2010


a very simple reason comes to my mind, one i am wanting to use

so i can learn bind to add it to my list of skills.

On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 6:12 PM, Eric Shubert <ejs at shubes.net> wrote:
> Eric Cope wrote:
>>
>> Hello all,
>> I want to setup FQDNs for my home network.
>
> Why? What do you intend to accomplish?
> (Too often people try implementing a solution for a problem they don't
> really understand.)
>
>> Does anyone have a good tutorial on setting up BIND for a Mac/Windows/*nix
>> environment? I was hoping to keep DHCP from my router (it supports static
>> DHCP - yes I know that's contradictory).
>> I have a dynDNS account, <mynet>.dyndns.org <http://dyndns.org>.
>>
>> I want to be able to assign names like
>>
>> macbook.<mynet>.dyndns.org <http://dyndns.org> for my macbook
>> crappy.<mynet>.dyndns.org <http://dyndns.org> for my windows machine
>> e-server.<mynet>.dyndns.org <http://dyndns.org> for my freebsd server
>> ...
>
> To be able to do this from the outside/wan, you simply need a client program
> that tells dyndns.org what your (router's if you have cable, or  DSL modem's
> if you use DSL) public IP address is, and when it changes. See
> http://www.dyndns.com/support/clients/. That program (there are several from
> which to choose, some of which are already built-in to firewalls such as
> IPCop) can run on your router or any one of your computers behind it. There
> are several ways you can do this, none of which directly involve bind.
> DynDNS handles all the bind stuff for you on the public side.
>
> On the lan side of things, you can set up a private DNS server if you'd
> like, but for a handful of computers, it's often easier to just edit the
> hosts file on each machine.
>
>> My googling has come up short, mostly because my search terms are lame.
>> Anyone have any ideas? tips? tutorials? good search terms? I don't want to
>> rely on hosts files.
>
> Again, why (not)?
>
> Personally, I use IPCop, which takes care of all of this (and much more) for
> me. IPCop is relatively simple, and very reliable.
>
> --
> -Eric 'shubes'
>
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-- 
A mouse trap, placed on top of your alarm clock, will prevent you from
rolling over and going back to sleep after you hit the snooze button.

Stephen


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