Problem accessing e-mail hosted by ISP using internal DNS

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oracle8202@gmail.com

I have kind of an interesting problem. I have set up a Windows 2003
SP2 standard server with Active Directory and DNS. I don't host an e-
mail server and instead use external e-mail provided by my ISP. My
internal domain name is the same as my registered domain name. So my
internal domain would be mydomain.com and my registered domain name is
also mydomain.com. The problem is my ISP requires me to check my e-
mail by going to http://mydomain.com/email. Of course if I try to go
to this address my internal DNS resolves the name and returns an
error. If I change my local machine to point to my ISP's DNS servers
instead of my internal DNS server everything works okay as expected.
I have discovered that I can also access my email from http://mail.mydomain.com/email.
I tried adding an A record into my DNS server pointing
mail.mydomain.com to the external IP address of my ISP's mail server
but for some reason this doesn't work. I have pinged
mail.mydomain.com and it returns the correct external IP address (when
using my internal server with an A record). I have even tried
accessing the external server directly by IP such as http://192.168.1.1/email.
For some reason as long as I am using my internal DNS server this just
won't work. When I change to my providers DNS server all of the above
work just fine. Any ideas? Oh, I have also set up forwarders in my
DNS server so I have no trouble accessing any other websites. Thank
you.
 
Oracle,
You are already on the right track. You just need to set up a record in your
internal DNS with the external IP address for mail.mydomain.com then access
it by http://mail.mydomain.com.
You should only use your internal DNS server, and set it to forward to the
ISP's. It sounds like you have this.
Then you need to flush the cache on the DNS server and on the client,
otherwise your testing is misleading. If you have done this and can ping the
mail server correctly, then your DNS is OK and you have a different problem.
Anthony -
http://www.airdesk.co.uk



<oracle8202@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1187062770.537331.277360@q3g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
>I have kind of an interesting problem. I have set up a Windows 2003
> SP2 standard server with Active Directory and DNS. I don't host an e-
> mail server and instead use external e-mail provided by my ISP. My
> internal domain name is the same as my registered domain name. So my
> internal domain would be mydomain.com and my registered domain name is
> also mydomain.com. The problem is my ISP requires me to check my e-
> mail by going to http://mydomain.com/email. Of course if I try to go
> to this address my internal DNS resolves the name and returns an
> error. If I change my local machine to point to my ISP's DNS servers
> instead of my internal DNS server everything works okay as expected.
> I have discovered that I can also access my email from
> http://mail.mydomain.com/email.
> I tried adding an A record into my DNS server pointing
> mail.mydomain.com to the external IP address of my ISP's mail server
> but for some reason this doesn't work. I have pinged
> mail.mydomain.com and it returns the correct external IP address (when
> using my internal server with an A record). I have even tried
> accessing the external server directly by IP such as
> http://192.168.1.1/email.
> For some reason as long as I am using my internal DNS server this just
> won't work. When I change to my providers DNS server all of the above
> work just fine. Any ideas? Oh, I have also set up forwarders in my
> DNS server so I have no trouble accessing any other websites. Thank
> you.
>
 
I kind of thought I was doing everything correctly. I tried
flushing the DNS cache on the server and client but that didn't seem
to do the trick. The thing I found weird was that I couldn't even
access the site using the IP address when I used the internal DNS
server so I figured it couldn't be solely a DNS problem. I noticed
when I typed http://mail.mydomain.com/email using the provider DNS
that the site redirected to http://mydomain.com/email. This doesn't
happen when I use the internal DNS but I assume something like that is
going on in the background. When using IE7 it just displays a page
cannot be displayed error. If I try in Navigator I get a mydomain.com
denied access error. So... what I think is happening is that the site
is redirecting from mail.mydomain.com to mydomain.com and my internal
DNS server is then trying to resolve mydomain.com and since I don't
have a web server (or port 80) open on that server it is just
failing. What do you think? Sound plausible?

On Aug 14, 2:09 am, "Anthony" <anthony.s...@spammedout.com> wrote:
> Oracle,
> You are already on the right track. You just need to set up a record in your
> internal DNS with the external IP address for mail.mydomain.com then access
> it byhttp://mail.mydomain.com.
> You should only use your internal DNS server, and set it to forward to the
> ISP's. It sounds like you have this.
> Then you need to flush the cache on the DNS server and on the client,
> otherwise your testing is misleading. If you have done this and can ping the
> mail server correctly, then your DNS is OK and you have a different problem.
> Anthony -http://www.airdesk.co.uk
>
> <oracle8...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:1187062770.537331.277360@q3g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
> >I have kind of an interesting problem. I have set up a Windows 2003
> > SP2 standard server with Active Directory and DNS. I don't host an e-
> > mail server and instead use external e-mail provided by my ISP. My
> > internal domain name is the same as my registered domain name. So my
> > internal domain would be mydomain.com and my registered domain name is
> > also mydomain.com. The problem is my ISP requires me to check my e-
> > mail by going tohttp://mydomain.com/email. Of course if I try to go
> > to this address my internal DNS resolves the name and returns an
> > error. If I change my local machine to point to my ISP's DNS servers
> > instead of my internal DNS server everything works okay as expected.
> > I have discovered that I can also access my email from
> >http://mail.mydomain.com/email.
> > I tried adding an A record into my DNS server pointing
> > mail.mydomain.com to the external IP address of my ISP's mail server
> > but for some reason this doesn't work. I have pinged
> > mail.mydomain.com and it returns the correct external IP address (when
> > using my internal server with an A record). I have even tried
> > accessing the external server directly by IP such as
> >http://192.168.1.1/email.
> > For some reason as long as I am using my internal DNS server this just
> > won't work. When I change to my providers DNS server all of the above
> > work just fine. Any ideas? Oh, I have also set up forwarders in my
> > DNS server so I have no trouble accessing any other websites. Thank
> > you.- Hide quoted text -

>
> - Show quoted text -
 
You are right, that's exactly the problem. You should be able to ask them to
change it. They are running the external DNS for your zone so it should be
easy enough for them to do it,
Hope that helps,
Anthony -
http://www.airdesk.co.uk


<oracle8202@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1187135832.015128.151570@g12g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
> I kind of thought I was doing everything correctly. I tried
> flushing the DNS cache on the server and client but that didn't seem
> to do the trick. The thing I found weird was that I couldn't even
> access the site using the IP address when I used the internal DNS
> server so I figured it couldn't be solely a DNS problem. I noticed
> when I typed http://mail.mydomain.com/email using the provider DNS
> that the site redirected to http://mydomain.com/email. This doesn't
> happen when I use the internal DNS but I assume something like that is
> going on in the background. When using IE7 it just displays a page
> cannot be displayed error. If I try in Navigator I get a mydomain.com
> denied access error. So... what I think is happening is that the site
> is redirecting from mail.mydomain.com to mydomain.com and my internal
> DNS server is then trying to resolve mydomain.com and since I don't
> have a web server (or port 80) open on that server it is just
> failing. What do you think? Sound plausible?
>
> On Aug 14, 2:09 am, "Anthony" <anthony.s...@spammedout.com> wrote:
>> Oracle,
>> You are already on the right track. You just need to set up a record in
>> your
>> internal DNS with the external IP address for mail.mydomain.com then
>> access
>> it byhttp://mail.mydomain.com.
>> You should only use your internal DNS server, and set it to forward to
>> the
>> ISP's. It sounds like you have this.
>> Then you need to flush the cache on the DNS server and on the client,
>> otherwise your testing is misleading. If you have done this and can ping
>> the
>> mail server correctly, then your DNS is OK and you have a different
>> problem.
>> Anthony -http://www.airdesk.co.uk
>>
>> <oracle8...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>>
>> news:1187062770.537331.277360@q3g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
>>
>>
>>
>> >I have kind of an interesting problem. I have set up a Windows 2003
>> > SP2 standard server with Active Directory and DNS. I don't host an e-
>> > mail server and instead use external e-mail provided by my ISP. My
>> > internal domain name is the same as my registered domain name. So my
>> > internal domain would be mydomain.com and my registered domain name is
>> > also mydomain.com. The problem is my ISP requires me to check my e-
>> > mail by going tohttp://mydomain.com/email. Of course if I try to go
>> > to this address my internal DNS resolves the name and returns an
>> > error. If I change my local machine to point to my ISP's DNS servers
>> > instead of my internal DNS server everything works okay as expected.
>> > I have discovered that I can also access my email from
>> >http://mail.mydomain.com/email.
>> > I tried adding an A record into my DNS server pointing
>> > mail.mydomain.com to the external IP address of my ISP's mail server
>> > but for some reason this doesn't work. I have pinged
>> > mail.mydomain.com and it returns the correct external IP address (when
>> > using my internal server with an A record). I have even tried
>> > accessing the external server directly by IP such as
>> >http://192.168.1.1/email.
>> > For some reason as long as I am using my internal DNS server this just
>> > won't work. When I change to my providers DNS server all of the above
>> > work just fine. Any ideas? Oh, I have also set up forwarders in my
>> > DNS server so I have no trouble accessing any other websites. Thank
>> > you.- Hide quoted text -

>>
>> - Show quoted text -

>
>
 
Thanks for your help Anthony I appreciate it. I'll contact my ISP and
get it changed.

On Aug 15, 2:08 am, "Anthony" <anthony.s...@spammedout.com> wrote:
> You are right, that's exactly the problem. You should be able to ask them to
> change it. They are running the external DNS for your zone so it should be
> easy enough for them to do it,
> Hope that helps,
> Anthony -http://www.airdesk.co.uk
>
> <oracle8...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:1187135832.015128.151570@g12g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
> > I kind of thought I was doing everything correctly. I tried
> > flushing the DNS cache on the server and client but that didn't seem
> > to do the trick. The thing I found weird was that I couldn't even
> > access the site using the IP address when I used the internal DNS
> > server so I figured it couldn't be solely a DNS problem. I noticed
> > when I typedhttp://mail.mydomain.com/emailusing the provider DNS
> > that the site redirected tohttp://mydomain.com/email. This doesn't
> > happen when I use the internal DNS but I assume something like that is
> > going on in the background. When using IE7 it just displays a page
> > cannot be displayed error. If I try in Navigator I get a mydomain.com
> > denied access error. So... what I think is happening is that the site
> > is redirecting from mail.mydomain.com to mydomain.com and my internal
> > DNS server is then trying to resolve mydomain.com and since I don't
> > have a web server (or port 80) open on that server it is just
> > failing. What do you think? Sound plausible?

>
> > On Aug 14, 2:09 am, "Anthony" <anthony.s...@spammedout.com> wrote:
> >> Oracle,
> >> You are already on the right track. You just need to set up a record in
> >> your
> >> internal DNS with the external IP address for mail.mydomain.com then
> >> access
> >> it byhttp://mail.mydomain.com.
> >> You should only use your internal DNS server, and set it to forward to
> >> the
> >> ISP's. It sounds like you have this.
> >> Then you need to flush the cache on the DNS server and on the client,
> >> otherwise your testing is misleading. If you have done this and can ping
> >> the
> >> mail server correctly, then your DNS is OK and you have a different
> >> problem.
> >> Anthony -http://www.airdesk.co.uk

>
> >> <oracle8...@gmail.com> wrote in message

>
> >>news:1187062770.537331.277360@q3g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

>
> >> >I have kind of an interesting problem. I have set up a Windows 2003
> >> > SP2 standard server with Active Directory and DNS. I don't host an e-
> >> > mail server and instead use external e-mail provided by my ISP. My
> >> > internal domain name is the same as my registered domain name. So my
> >> > internal domain would be mydomain.com and my registered domain name is
> >> > also mydomain.com. The problem is my ISP requires me to check my e-
> >> > mail by going tohttp://mydomain.com/email. Of course if I try to go
> >> > to this address my internal DNS resolves the name and returns an
> >> > error. If I change my local machine to point to my ISP's DNS servers
> >> > instead of my internal DNS server everything works okay as expected.
> >> > I have discovered that I can also access my email from
> >> >http://mail.mydomain.com/email.
> >> > I tried adding an A record into my DNS server pointing
> >> > mail.mydomain.com to the external IP address of my ISP's mail server
> >> > but for some reason this doesn't work. I have pinged
> >> > mail.mydomain.com and it returns the correct external IP address (when
> >> > using my internal server with an A record). I have even tried
> >> > accessing the external server directly by IP such as
> >> >http://192.168.1.1/email.
> >> > For some reason as long as I am using my internal DNS server this just
> >> > won't work. When I change to my providers DNS server all of the above
> >> > work just fine. Any ideas? Oh, I have also set up forwarders in my
> >> > DNS server so I have no trouble accessing any other websites. Thank
> >> > you.- Hide quoted text -

>
> >> - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -

>
> - Show quoted text -
 
Good luck with it,
Anthony

<oracle8202@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1187399988.063356.167500@x35g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
> Thanks for your help Anthony I appreciate it. I'll contact my ISP and
> get it changed.
>
> On Aug 15, 2:08 am, "Anthony" <anthony.s...@spammedout.com> wrote:
>> You are right, that's exactly the problem. You should be able to ask them
>> to
>> change it. They are running the external DNS for your zone so it should
>> be
>> easy enough for them to do it,
>> Hope that helps,
>> Anthony -http://www.airdesk.co.uk
>>
>> <oracle8...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>>
>> news:1187135832.015128.151570@g12g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
>>
>>
>>
>> > I kind of thought I was doing everything correctly. I tried
>> > flushing the DNS cache on the server and client but that didn't seem
>> > to do the trick. The thing I found weird was that I couldn't even
>> > access the site using the IP address when I used the internal DNS
>> > server so I figured it couldn't be solely a DNS problem. I noticed
>> > when I typedhttp://mail.mydomain.com/emailusing the provider DNS
>> > that the site redirected tohttp://mydomain.com/email. This doesn't
>> > happen when I use the internal DNS but I assume something like that is
>> > going on in the background. When using IE7 it just displays a page
>> > cannot be displayed error. If I try in Navigator I get a mydomain.com
>> > denied access error. So... what I think is happening is that the site
>> > is redirecting from mail.mydomain.com to mydomain.com and my internal
>> > DNS server is then trying to resolve mydomain.com and since I don't
>> > have a web server (or port 80) open on that server it is just
>> > failing. What do you think? Sound plausible?

>>
>> > On Aug 14, 2:09 am, "Anthony" <anthony.s...@spammedout.com> wrote:
>> >> Oracle,
>> >> You are already on the right track. You just need to set up a record
>> >> in
>> >> your
>> >> internal DNS with the external IP address for mail.mydomain.com then
>> >> access
>> >> it byhttp://mail.mydomain.com.
>> >> You should only use your internal DNS server, and set it to forward to
>> >> the
>> >> ISP's. It sounds like you have this.
>> >> Then you need to flush the cache on the DNS server and on the client,
>> >> otherwise your testing is misleading. If you have done this and can
>> >> ping
>> >> the
>> >> mail server correctly, then your DNS is OK and you have a different
>> >> problem.
>> >> Anthony -http://www.airdesk.co.uk

>>
>> >> <oracle8...@gmail.com> wrote in message

>>
>> >>news:1187062770.537331.277360@q3g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

>>
>> >> >I have kind of an interesting problem. I have set up a Windows 2003
>> >> > SP2 standard server with Active Directory and DNS. I don't host an
>> >> > e-
>> >> > mail server and instead use external e-mail provided by my ISP. My
>> >> > internal domain name is the same as my registered domain name. So
>> >> > my
>> >> > internal domain would be mydomain.com and my registered domain name
>> >> > is
>> >> > also mydomain.com. The problem is my ISP requires me to check my e-
>> >> > mail by going tohttp://mydomain.com/email. Of course if I try to go
>> >> > to this address my internal DNS resolves the name and returns an
>> >> > error. If I change my local machine to point to my ISP's DNS
>> >> > servers
>> >> > instead of my internal DNS server everything works okay as expected.
>> >> > I have discovered that I can also access my email from
>> >> >http://mail.mydomain.com/email.
>> >> > I tried adding an A record into my DNS server pointing
>> >> > mail.mydomain.com to the external IP address of my ISP's mail server
>> >> > but for some reason this doesn't work. I have pinged
>> >> > mail.mydomain.com and it returns the correct external IP address
>> >> > (when
>> >> > using my internal server with an A record). I have even tried
>> >> > accessing the external server directly by IP such as
>> >> >http://192.168.1.1/email.
>> >> > For some reason as long as I am using my internal DNS server this
>> >> > just
>> >> > won't work. When I change to my providers DNS server all of the
>> >> > above
>> >> > work just fine. Any ideas? Oh, I have also set up forwarders in my
>> >> > DNS server so I have no trouble accessing any other websites. Thank
>> >> > you.- Hide quoted text -

>>
>> >> - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -

>>
>> - Show quoted text -

>
>
 
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