Date: Sun, 13 Feb 2005 13:24:36 +1030 From: "Paul A. Hoadley" <paulh@logicsquad.net> To: RL <rlurman@gmail.com> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Setting up own domain and mailserver Message-ID: <20050213025436.GB3936@grover.logicsquad.net> In-Reply-To: <e6ceb9d405021216524faf3a78@mail.gmail.com> References: <e6ceb9d405021216524faf3a78@mail.gmail.com>
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--Bn2rw/3z4jIqBvZU Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable On Sat, Feb 12, 2005 at 07:52:08PM -0500, RL wrote: > 1. I have adelphia cable internet. I would like to get a dyndns or > no-ip.com account to have a static IP for my new godaddy domain. I assume both of those services are dynamic DNS providers, and I'll assume your cable provider gives you a dynamic IP address. Dynamic DNS providers don't provide you with a static IP, but rather nameservice for your domain. The provider will nominate some subset of their nameservers for you to register (with the registrar that sold you the domain name) as providing DNS for your new domain. The idea is that whenever your IP address changes, you contact the dynamic DNS provider (in some provider-specific way---e.g., a web form, a local script) to update your A record. > Simple enough. However, I would like to also do my own DNS to learn > more about it. Will I be able to do this if I set my nameserver on > godaddy to my box's dyndns address? Almost certainly not, for two reasons. You need a static IP address to lodge with your registrar. (I guess it would be _possible_ to manually update the address with your registrar every time it changes, but quite impractical.) Further, you need to provide at least two nameservers for your domain. Again, it is _possible_ that you could personally provide one, and use a DNS provider as a secondary. > 2. What about reverse DNS? Could I possibly do that on my box? =20 Not unless you solve all of the problems above, and then discuss the issue with your ISP---since they own the IP address, they run the corresponding part of the in-addr.arpa zone, and the specific PTR record you will require. > 3. I would also like to run my own mailserver for that domain (again > to learn). Would I be able to do this and send receive email > from/to name@mynewdomain.com? This you'll be able to do. You need to add an MX record to your zone file at the dynamic DNS provider. You would want mail sent to the host named in the A record. > I know most ISPs block port 25 and no-ip.com has a pay service > called mail reflector that can get around this. Is this necessary? If _your_ ISP blocks port 25, then you'll have to do _something_ to get around that, but I don't know if that particular service is the right solution. > Why couldn't I just set up sendmail to use a port other than 25 like > 8080? There's certainly nothing _intrinsically_ special about port 25. However, it's the port that everyone's agreed to send mail to. If your sendmail was listening on port 8080, how would my sendmail know? --=20 Paul. w http://logicsquad.net/ h http://paul.hoadley.name/ --Bn2rw/3z4jIqBvZU Content-Type: application/pgp-signature Content-Disposition: inline -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (FreeBSD) iD4DBQFCDsFs730Z/jysbzIRAqwpAJY0qA3F2v+V7t+QDlRkFkbBL8uqAJ9jUXhe XnjmEc/emqj06M0AH3Ab2A== =UoRA -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --Bn2rw/3z4jIqBvZU--
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