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Re: zone transfer from 193.0.0.63]

From: Men & Mice Support
Date: Thursday, May 8, 2003
Time: 12:17:18 pm

A /23 subnet is two adjacent class C's, starting with an even number
in the third octet.

The way you enter a subnet in this window varies by server type. For
classic Mac OS, the syntax uses asterisks, like this:

193.0.0.*
193.0.1.*

(You would enter both of these.)

For a BIND-based server, you would enter it exactly as they showed,
using the network-address/mask-length notation.
____________________________________________________________________
Chris Buxton Men & Mice
support@menandmice.com Making DNS Easy

At 8:53 PM +0200 5/8/03, Gabriele Polidori wrote:
>Hello,
>
>please tell me how to add the IP range below to allow zone transfer.
>I do know where to click, but I have no idea for a range vs single IP.
>
>I'm using 3.5.3 on OS 9.1
>
>Oh yes, what does /23 means ? (an url for a tutorial about this
>would be appreciated)
>
>Thank you,
>Mr Gabriele Polidori
>
>-------- Original Message --------
>Subject: Re: [ripe.net #64926] zone transfer from 193.0.0.63
>Date: Thu, 8 May 2003 15:48:40 +0200
>From: Mally McLane via RT <ops@ripe.net>
>Reply-To: ops@ripe.net
>To: webmaster@onenet.it
>
>Hi Gabriele,
>
>--On Thursday, May 8, 2003 3:46 PM +0200 Gabriele Polidori
><webmaster@onenet.it> wrote:
>
>> we saw some zone transfer requests from 193.0.0.63 (which we refused),
>> and our upstream (spin.it, in the person of Mr Furio Ercolessi) told us
>> this is one of your NS and we should allow the requests.
>>
>> So, we'd like to know which IP to grant the access on our dns server.
>
>This is part of our hostcount project:
>
><http://www.ripe.net/hostcount/>
>
>If you could allow access for 193.0.0.0/23, we would appreciate it.
>
>Regards,
>
>
>
>Mally Mclane
>RIPE NCC - Operations




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