I am trying to get a handle on how to properly assign DNS PTR records, given these conditions: 1) Single machine containing: a) DNS Server b) Sendmail Server Forward zone contains: ====================== $TTL 172800 @ IN SOA ns1.domain.com. admin.domain.com. ( 3818 ; serial 3H ; refresh 15M ; retry 1W ; expiry 1D ) ; minimum ; ==========[Nameservers]================= @ IN NS ns1.domain.com. ; ==========[Mail Exchangers]============= @ IN MX 10 mx1.domain.com. ; ==========[Machines]==================== ns1 IN A 10.1.0.1 mx1 IN A 10.1.0.1 [...] Reverse zone contains: ====================== $TTL 172800 @ IN SOA ns1.domain.com admin.domain.com ( 3818 ; serial 3H ; refresh 15M ; retry 1W ; expiry 1D ) ; minimum ;============ Top-Level ================= @ IN NS ns1.domain.com. ;============ PTRS ====================== 1 IN PTR ns1.domain.com. 1 IN PTR mx1.domain.com. [...] The problem here is assigning the PTR, since only ONE reverse IP address is allowed. In the above case, which will it be, ns1.domain.com or mx1.domain.com? Discovery led to the last "scanned" entry, which is mx1.domain.com Why is this a potential problem? + One that I can think of, is security verification such as some programs do a reverse IP check to reduce phishing/spamming? How is this to be properly handled? + Separate out DNS and Sendmail services to it's own machine as hinted in "example.org"? Is it possible/sensible to have DNS and Sendmail on the same machine? Thanks! Dan -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines