I just wanted to add that if you are a powerdns guy, then I guess what
you did is best for you. However, unbound is simple and ...well...
extremely simple to setup. It also has full DNSSEC support with no
configuration needed. Make sure that your powerdns recursor can do
that, else I would re-consider and recommend unbound.
...Todd
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 12:02 AM, <other@???> wrote:
> Thanks for the suggestion :)
>
> Support @ the VPS provider were useless... with the script monkey asking for
> my root password so he could 'play' with my server and see why server
> couldn't "send" email....................
>
> I gave powerdns-recursor a go.. It wasn't as frightening as I thought it
> would be, took me in all about 10-20 mins to setup (compile from ports,
> configure, start). I created a network sub interface with a private IP
> address and set the recursor to listen on it, updated resolv.conf and
> tested. Magically all my problems are now gone. I'll check out unbound if
> pdns-recursor becomes a problem.
>
> Big lesson learned today for me.. Run your own resolver.
>
> Cheers,
> Alex.
>
>
> On 2013-05-29 15:24, Phil Pennock wrote:
>>
>> On 2013-05-29 at 14:10 +1000, other@??? wrote:
>>>
>>> I guess the local caching nameserver is one way out of this, an
>>> overkill one, but an option... I was really hoping to avoid it if I can.
>>
>>
>> Install unbound. It's simple to set up and configure and it's very
>> simple to enable DNSSEC validation, should you choose to do so.
>>
>> http://www.unbound.net/
>>
>> -Phil
>
>
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