John Andersen wrote:
But unless you are going to be setting up some sort of split horizon DNS scheme, its seldom really necessary to have an in-house DNS server. When running windows, its never really necessary. When running linux you might have a problem finding other local linux machines by name (rather than IP) but running something like ddclient on each will allow you to resolve local names via Dyndns.org (or equivalent).
I use it primarily for IPv4 stuff with RFC1918 addresses. I could use any public DNS to find the IPv6 addresses on my local network. I installed dnsmasq, which is a caching dns server. It reads the hosts file for host names on my local network. The IPv6 addresses their are the same as on the outside DNS server. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org