On Wed, Mar 05, 2014 at 07:52:10AM -0500, Rob Seastrom wrote:
"Paul S." <contact@winterei.se> writes:
For all it's worth, it might be Cox ignoring TTLs and enforcing their own update times instead.
Wait 24-48 hours, and it should probably fix it all up.
Possibly.
I'm not seeing anything majorly broken with your system except the SOA EXPIRE being ridiculously large.
Nowhere even close to ridiculously large. 3600000 (10000 hours, 41 days) is the historical example value in RFC 1035. It's a bit larger than current recommended practices (2-4 weeks) but I wouldn't fault anyone for using that value nor would I expect any nameserver software to malfunction when confronted it. Besides, that value only matters to secondary nameservers. Speaking of that...
;; ADDITIONAL SECTION: ns1.nineplanetshosting.com. 172800 IN A 199.73.57.122 ns2.nineplanetshosting.com. 172800 IN A 199.73.57.122
I think OP ought to approach his hoster with a cluebat. Not just on the same subnet but the same address? Really.
-r
haven't you heard about "anycast"?? /bill