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Date:      Wed, 3 Jan 2007 21:26:24 -0800
From:      "Alex Teslik" <whereisalext@gmail.com>
To:        "Derek Ragona" <derek@computinginnovations.com>,  freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: DNS propagation problems - changed ip
Message-ID:  <d24a9c160701032126v64fc1b0ev23b11e361e36f257@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <6.0.0.22.2.20070103165658.024fd900@mail.computinginnovations.com>
References:  <d24a9c160701030830w1c99bb62x251312605dd10730@mail.gmail.com> <6.0.0.22.2.20070103165658.024fd900@mail.computinginnovations.com>

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Hi Derek,

   Thank you very much. Sure enough, a call to the registrar and the ips
finally became updated - seconds later everything started pouring in. Whew!
   I misunderstood DNS in this scenario. My understanding was that an update
of the DNS broadcast from my server would automatically update everything
out there. I suppose now that I think about it more a manual update to the
*authoritative* nameserver seems reasonable. I noticed that
non-authoritative nameservers for the other domains I host automatically
snapped into place once the authoritative one got back in line.
    Thanks again!


On 1/3/07, Derek Ragona <derek@computinginnovations.com> wrote:
>
>  Your registrar for the domain maintains actual IP's for your
> authoritative DNS servers.  If you moved those from one IP to another,
> update the registrars record to reflect the new addresses.
>
>         -Derek
>
>
> At 10:30 AM 1/3/2007, Alex Teslik wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
>    I changed the ip address of my server (physical move to a new location)
> and updated my dns. Logs show that everything is fine. I can get out to
> other sites just fine, send email, and internally everything is working
> fine. However, I updated on Jan 1st and the changes for the nameservers
> have
> still not propagated out anywhere. Logs show no one hitting the server.
> I'm
> starting to get worried.
>    The db file has this data:
>
>                2007010101      ; Serial (year,month,day,version_that_day)
>                86400           ; refresh (1 day)
>                7200            ; retry (2 hours)
>                8640000         ; expire (100 days)
>                86400 )         ; minimum (1 day)
>
> So after 1 day external DNS's should update to the new info.
>    The only other bit of info that I can't figure out is that in the logs
> I'm getting this message:
>
> Jan  2 02:44:16 gouda /kernel: arplookup 10.1.10.1 failed: host is not on
> local network
>
> but 10.1.10.1 has nothing to do with my network, so I have no idea which
> service is trying to get to this. I grepped all etc and usr/local/etc bu
> nothing have that ip.
>
> Finally, nslookup is working on any address including my own. Thats makes
> me
> think DNS is working properly... Any ideas on what else I can check that
> might not be right?
>
> Thanks
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