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Talk:BIND, dynamic DNS

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(len)
 
(nope. see '''man nsupdate''')
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par non, complimenteré?
 
par non, complimenteré?
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== nope.  see '''man nsupdate''' ==
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nsupdate uses the -y or -k option (with an HMAC-MD5 key) to provide the
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shared secret needed to generate a TSIG record for authenticating
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Dynamic DNS update requests. These options are mutually exclusive. With
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the -k option, nsupdate reads the shared secret from the file keyfile,
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whose name is of the form '''K{name}.+157.+{random}.private'''.
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 +
Kinda confusing, I know, but I'm not the one who made the confusion.  (Note how the manpage itself refers to the file as "keyfile" in the argument examples; I'm just following the existing conventions by naming my own variable $KEYFILE.)
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Reading on in the manpage:
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For historical reasons, the file K{name}.+157.+{random}.key must also be
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present.
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So, there ya have it. =)
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--[[User:Jimbo|Jimbo]] 22:59, 19 August 2008 (EDT)

Revision as of 22:59, 19 August 2008

in set-ddns.pl:

$KEYFILE should probably point to the key file, not the private file.

$KEYFILE = 'Kclient.server.net.+157+15661.private'; should read $KEYFILE = 'Kclient.server.net.+157+15661.key';

par non, complimenteré?

nope. see man nsupdate

nsupdate uses the -y or -k option (with an HMAC-MD5 key) to provide the
shared secret needed to generate a TSIG record for authenticating
Dynamic DNS update requests. These options are mutually exclusive. With
the -k option, nsupdate reads the shared secret from the file keyfile,
whose name is of the form K{name}.+157.+{random}.private.

Kinda confusing, I know, but I'm not the one who made the confusion. (Note how the manpage itself refers to the file as "keyfile" in the argument examples; I'm just following the existing conventions by naming my own variable $KEYFILE.)

Reading on in the manpage:

For historical reasons, the file K{name}.+157.+{random}.key must also be
present. 

So, there ya have it. =)

--Jimbo 22:59, 19 August 2008 (EDT)

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