Full Disclosure mailing list archives

Re: Re: Reverse dns (whether you want it or not)


From: Danny <nocmonkey () gmail com>
Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2005 14:27:06 -0500

On Fri, 11 Mar 2005 13:48:05 -0000, Dave Korn
<davek_throwaway () hotmail com> wrote:
"TheGesus" wrote in message news:5e70f65305031013083747d7b () mail gmail com...
On this subject (marginally), last year we moved a rather large CIDR
block from one ISP to another.

The new ISP took it upon themselves to give *ALL* our unused IP
addresses a bogus reverse lookup in the (general) format of

10.20.30.40.abc.domain.com

No one asked them to do this (or, at least if they did, they won't
admit to it), and none of the reverse lookups can be looked up
"forwardly".

Is this a common practice?  It doesn't seem like a good idea, but the
ISP insisted it was a "value-added" service.  In my opinion, a dead
address should remain dead.

  It's common.  ISPs don't want to have to update their DNS records with
every single client that logs on or off their network, that would be a lot
of churn and general overhead for no great purpose.

A lot of churn and general overhead? 

Configure them properly the first time:

123.123.123.123 = host123.clients.nameofyourisp.com

No need to constantly update the DNS records.

...D
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