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Re: reverse DNS questions

From: Roland A. Dumas
Date: Saturday, September 6, 2003
Time: 11:48:53 pm

Good Luck, I've had my request into SBC for 3 years now. Always gets
lost

in the short run, I looked up what the reverse DNS shows (actually, a
covad domain) and told my accounts to use that as their smtp mail
server address so that it would match the reverse dns lookup.





On Thursday, September 4, 2003, at 07:06 PM, Michael Wise wrote:

> At 18:46 -0700 9/4/03, Hazlitt wrote:
>
>> I'm running two QDNS servers (ns1.zada.net, ns2.zada.net) on a DSL
>> line supplied by SBC (originally Pacific Bell). I provide hosting and
>> email forwarding for a handful of customers.
>>
>> rr.com recently started blocking messages that I'm forwarding to a
>> hosting customer of mine, who uses rr.com for his POP mailbox. I
>> inquired about the blocking and they replied [see below].
>>
>> I'm not quite sure how to proceed. Is there something I can do in
>> QDNS or do I need to contact SBC to get them to modify their reverse
>> DNS?
>
>
>
> I recently went through this with two of my SBC DSL-using clients.
>
> You need to send an email to: desccentral@sbis.sbc.com
>
> And ask them to reverse delegate your IP block (they will do it).
>
>
> Feel free to use my email to them as a template (using your info, of
> course):
>
>
>> Date: Thu, 21 Aug 2003 11:10:36 -0700
>> To: desccentral@sbis.sbc.com
>> From: Postmaster <postmaster@optsevents.com>
>> Subject: DNS Reverse Delegation Request
>> Cc:
>> Bcc:
>> X-Attachments:
>>
>> Greetings,
>>
>> Can you please reverse delegate our below SBC-assigned IP block:
>>
>> IP Block: 64.174.159.32/29
>>
>> PRI - NS1.OPTSEVENTS.COM 64.174.159.37
>> SEC - NS1.OKEAN.COM 64.142.30.114
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> OPTS Events BTN 415 332-6339
>> optsevents.com 64.174.159.32/29
>> Primary server: NS1.OPTSEVENTS.COM 64.174.159.37
>> Secondary server: NS1.OKEAN.COM 64.142.30.114
>>
>>
>> Cordially,
>>
>> Michael Wise
>> postmaster@optsevents.com
>
>
>
>
> Once SBC has done it (probably within 24-48 hours) you will need to
> set up the reverse zone in your QDNS. Pay close attention to their
> completion email, as data in it will be the key to setting up the
> reverse zone correctly. What I mean by this is most people might set
> up the reverse zone as 159.174.64.in-addr.arpa (using, as an example,
> the above data). However, because my client (and probably you as well)
> does not have an entire /24 allocated to them, the reverse zone will
> not be named as if it were a /24. In my clients' case it was
> "32.159.174.64.in-addr.arpa" (64.174.159.32 is the first address in
> their block). ...so your reverse zone will be "0.83.127.66
> ..in-addr.arpa"
>
>
>
> --Mike
>
> (thanks to Chris for helping me out with this issue a few weeks ago)
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>




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