You could try setting up your machine to be a slave for the zone.  It
would still carry authorative information so it wouldn't have to do a
lookup every time...you'd just have to do a lookup when Bind wanted to
update the zone from the primary.

zone "hearing.org" {
	type slave;
	file "sec/hearing.org";
	masters {
		primary.dns.server
	};
};



Adam Maloney
Systems Administrator
Sihope Communications

On Wed, 6 Sep 2000, Ben Luey wrote:

> We have a registered domain that we use for e-mail. I want e-mail send
> from the intranet to go to the server and be processed without triggering
> our internet link (dial on demand), but don't want to be a master dns for
> the domain name since the web site and stuff has a real internet addresses
> and is contorled by other people. I just want to have hearingsociety.org
> have a local MX record and all other dns requests handled by the
> forwarders.
> 
> I currently have in my domain.hosts:
> 
> @               IN SOA        hearing.org. server.hearing.org.  (
>                               1997080600    ; serial number
>                               10800         ; refresh rate (3 hours)
>                               1800          ; retry (30 minutes)
>                               1209600       ;  expire (2 weeks)
>                               604800 )      ;  minium (1 week)
>                 MX 5       server.hearing.org.
>                 NS         server.hearing.org.
> #                NS         hearing.org.
> hearingsociety.org.    MX 3 server.hearing.org.
> server          A          192.168.1.1
> finance          A          192.168.1.211
> 
> giving hearingsociety.org a MX record; however, since in /etc/named.conf,
> domain.hosts is only in the zone for hearing.org 
> 
> zone "hearing.org" {
>         type master;
>         file "domain.hosts";
> };
> 
> This works, but when our internet access stopped, local mail would not get
> delivered I think because the dns lookup somehow needed outside access to
> resolve the MX on hearingsociety.org -- when I shut down named and added a
> line to the /etc/hosts it fixed the problem, but that messes up website
> dns lookups.
> 
> Any ideas?
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Ben
> 
> 
> 
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