To add a reverse master zone, click the Add
button and select . Enter
the first three octets of the IP address range that you want to
configure. For example, if you are configuring the IP address range
192.168.10.0/255.255.255.0, enter 192.168.10 in the IP Address
(first 3 Octets) text area.
A new window will appear, as shown in Figure 12-3, with the following options:
IP Address — The first three octets that
you just entered in the previous window.
Reverse IP Address — Non-editable.
Pre-populated based on the IP Address entered.
File Name — File name of DNS database
file in the /var/named directory.
Primary Name Server (SOA) — State of
authority (SOA) record. This specifies the name server that is the
best resource of information for this domain. The default value is
@, which means that the SOA is the same as the domain name entered
in the Name field above.
Time Settings — The
Refresh, Retry,
Expire, and Minimum TTL
(Time to Live) values that are stored in the DNS database file.
Name Servers — Add, edit, and delete name
servers for for the reverse master zone. At least one name server is
required.
Reverse Address Table — List of IP
addresses within the reverse master zone and their hostnames. For
example, for the reverse master zone 1.2.3, you can add 1.2.3.100 in
the Reverse Address Table with the hostname
foo.example.com. The hostname must end with a period (.) to specify
that it is a full hostname.
The configuration shown in Figure 12-3
creates the following entry in /etc/named.conf:
zone "3.2.1.in-addr.arpa" {
type master;
file "3.2.1.in-addr.arpa.zone";
}; |
It also creates the file
/var/named/3.2.1.in-addr.arpa.zone with the
following information:
$TTL 86400
@ IN SOA @ root.localhost (
2 ; serial
28800 ; refresh
7200 ; retry
604800 ; expire
86400 ; ttk
)
@ IN NS ns.example.com.
1 IN PTR one.example.com.
2 IN PTR two.example.com. |
After configuring the Reverse Master Zone, click
OK to return to the main window, as shown in
Figure 12-1. From the pulldown menu, choose
=> to write the
/etc/named.conf configuration file, write all the
individual zone files in the /var/named directory,
and have the daemon reload the configuration files.