Hi Colin, Well some people get creative when creating PTR records. Maybe they really want encode something like netmask as Stephane said to provide some additional info for their own helpdek? Chinese don't bother for multiply reasons, same probably apply to Russian part net, cheap Internet access. So when you asking them to fix bad traffic coming from home user they don't bother do anything with it as it cost money for them. On 14/04/15 17:00, Colin Johnston wrote:
Hi Nikolay, I have obvious hit a cultural nerve here, if so I am sorry. At least there is communication on some level, Chinese colleagues would not even bother to respond to aid debug.
Be that as it may, why not use either normal decimal numbers or normal characters to show what a normal person would understand instead of having to convert the shown output ?
Colin
On 14 Apr 2015, at 14:54, Nikolay Shopik <shopik@inblock.ru> wrote:
Are Roman numerals allowed in DNS? Because I know some people also do them.
dig -x 217.199.208.190
On 14/04/15 16:45, Chuck Church wrote:
Comic Book Guy would probably declare:
"Worst Naming Convention Ever"
Chuck
-----Original Message----- From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Colin Johnston Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2015 9:27 AM To: Nikolay Shopik Cc: <nanog@nanog.org> Subject: Re: macomnet weird dns record
Because looks strange especially if the traffic is 100% bad Best practice says avoid such info in records as does not aid debug since mix of dec and hex
Colin
On 14 Apr 2015, at 14:09, Nikolay Shopik <shopik@inblock.ru> wrote:
How its weird? All these chars allowed in DNS records.
On 14/04/15 15:36, Colin Johnston wrote:
never saw hex in host dns records before. host-242.strgz.87.118.199.240.0xfffffff0.macomnet.net
range is blocked non the less since bad traffic from Russia network ranges.
Colin