DNS will respect any changes in this file above remote addresses. You can use this to add custom domains each pointing to Add each entry on a new row you can use comma separated lists, but I prefer one per row for clarity in the format. Then save the file. Now if you try to reach that domain, it will resolve to localhost and you can use it in your app. The downside to this approach is that you need to edit the hosts file for each domain you want to use, including every subdomain you might want.
I would rather not edit each config file on each machine. I just need to know how to set it up. I will check the links that lethe has left for me and see if that helps. Originally posted by lethe after you figure out how to make your named. Click to expand Originally posted by krokodilen can send you some example files.
I have about the same number of machines 14 macs, 4pcs and i just want to run this for name resolution to the server for ease of use for the users. Excalibur Registered. If you want a GUI for bind, and more. Try Webmin. Anyway - you look at it - DNS setup is always a bit mindboggling. Theoretically you could create a zone and a machine record for each host in the domain, but the right way to do things is probably going to be to create a zone for the domain name instead of the host name.
If you will be making a lot of changes this value should be as low as possible the minimum value here is 5 minutes. Once changes are made, the TTL can be set for a larger number in order to reduce the amount of traffic hitting the server DNS traffic is really light, so probably not a huge deal in most environments using a Yosemite Server as their DNS server. Here, provide a hostname along with an IP address and indicate the Zone that the record lives in. The IP Addresses field seems to allow for multiple IPs, which is common in round robin DNS, or when one name points to multiple servers and lookups rotate amongst the servers.
Therefore, for now at least, you might want to stick with one IP address per name. Note that the above screen has a match for the host name to the zone name, including the zone name.
This is not to be done for manually created records. Enter the name of a record, such as www for the zone called, for example, krypted. Click Done to commit the changes or create the new record. To create the MX for the domain, click on the plus sign at the list of records. Select the appropriate zone in the Zone field if you have multiple zones. Then type the name of the A record that you will be pointing mail to. Select the new zone, in the Primary Zone Name field enter the zone name, or the domain name you wish to host on your Snow Leopard Server f.
Enter the email address of the zones administrator g. Finish configuring the zone. Add records. Select the zone you just created b. Add your domain as the Machine Name with a trailing. Alias Name: www h. Destination: Your domain name with a trailing. This zone was only created for web hosting not for email or any other services for the domain mikemix. Snow Leopard Server will attempt to obtain rdns entries for your domain and will add them above the zone you just created.
Select information or debug for the most information. Enable all port 53 traffic. In Server Admin, Select Firewall b. Click [Settings] c. Click Services d. Click next to both DNS entries, Inbound queries and outbound queries. You should now proceed to setup Web service and setup a Site. This process is pretty straight forward, I will create a guide for it next. Starting fresh Is DNS service not responding or acting strange?
0コメント