downloadkid Posted October 6, 2011 Posted October 6, 2011 Afternoon everyone, came across this site, thought I'd ask the question. I work in a school, we have a .gov.uk domain name, we recently employed a company to build a VLe - virtual learing environment in short a web based interface that allows students, parents and teachers access to configured resources. Moodle. Anyway, annoyingly the builders haven't followed the spec originally layed out. Externally we have a domain name of www.xschoolvle.co.uk this has been associated with an IP on the VLe server to which external trafic is forwarded - no problems. However they, the builders, have configured the VLe in such a way that the content of the VLe can only be accessed when a user types www.xschool.co.uk in the browser. If you access the VLe server via IP you don't get the content. They say I need to configure an internal DNS pointer to point to the IP of the server which normally is a simple thing to do however the suffix like I said is xxxxx.go.uk, if I create a pointer is ends up like this www.xschool.co.uk.xxxxxxx.xxxxxxxx.gov.uk !! I don't want to use rDNS, the reason we are hosting it on site is that the County provided internet service / WAN is at best unreliable - so as I understand it if the net goes down rDNS would not be able to resolve etc. So ......................is there a way of adding a pointer into DNS that has just the co.uk suffix? Thank you Quote
ICTCity Posted October 7, 2011 Posted October 7, 2011 Hi, You must configure a REVERSE (or INVERSE) ZONE (ARPA) which will point from IP to NAME. This is not DNS pointer, is an ARPA... which is different. Anyway... it doesn't make sense... which should I block incoming connection directed to specific IP?! Quote -------------------------------------------------------- Tu peux aussi crire en franais. Du kannst auch auf Deutsch schreiben. Puoi scrivere anche in italiano. --------------------------------------------------------
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