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Re: Forwarding QuestionFrom: Men & Mice Support Date: Wednesday, September 24, 2003
Time: 3:05:57 pmA better question is, do you need to forward at all?
Usually, even from behind a firewall, a DNS server can resolve
outside domain names just fine. It's possible to configure a firewall
to block outgoing queries, and in such cases, forwarding is necessary
- you would forward to a server that can get through the firewall.
Also, in cases where there's a performance problem (i.e. the server
can't resolve names fast enough to suit client web browsers),
forwarding can often alleviate the problem.
____________________________________________________________________
Chris Buxton Men & Mice
Customer Support Specialist Making DNS Easy
At 3:36 PM -0600 9/24/03, Mac McClellan wrote:
>I have two sets of DNS servers. Each set has a Primary and Secondary:
>
>ns1.nameservercorporate.com
>ns2.nameservercorporate.com
>
>and
>
>ns1.nameserverclient.com
>ns2.nameserverclient.com
>
>The scenario is this...
>
>ns1 and ns2.nameserverclient.com have forwarders that point to ns1 &
>ns1.nameservercorporate.com. Can I also put forwarders on ns1 &
>ns2.nameservercorporate.com pointing to ns1 & ns2.nameserverclient.com
>or would that create a "DNS loop"?
>
>Thanks!
>
>
>
>Mac McClellan
>Sr. Network Engineer
>Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc.
>75 West Center Street
>Provo, Utah 84601
>801-437-7295
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