Hi Joel, On Wed, Sep 22, 2021 at 10:12:26AM -0400, Joel Sommers wrote:
Besides the common "reserved" keyword in the FQDN, we also see names like "not-in-use.example.tld", again with quite a few addresses all mapped to that one name.
I assume you are seeing this by resolving the reverse DNS of each IP address in the range.
The naming appears to suggest that this is an on-the-cheap IP address management practice, but we are wondering if there are other operational reasons that might be behind what we observe.
The purpose is generally informational, for those without access to the internal address management system (or quick hint to those who do have access). If one sees traffic from such an IP address and then sees it being marked as reserved or not in use, then one knows that something is up, either with the presence of the traffic or the lack of an update to the reverse mapping. If there had been simply no reverse mapping then this information would not have been conveyed. It doesn't imply a lack of an address management system or an attempt to use DNS to manage "on the cheap" - though it doesn't exclude those possibilities either. Thanks, Andy