no to 1) prolong the pain, 2) beat a horsey.. BUT, why are 1918 ips 'special' to any application? why are non-1918 ips 'special' in a different way?
i know this is hard to believe, but i was asked to review 1918 before it went to press, since i'd been vociferous in my comments about 1597. in the text (RFC 1918) we see the following: Because private addresses have no global meaning, routing information about private networks shall not be propagated on inter-enterprise links, and packets with private source or destination addresses should not be forwarded across such links. Routers in networks not using private address space, especially those of Internet service providers, are expected to be configured to reject (filter out) routing information about private networks. If such a router receives such information the rejection shall not be treated as a routing protocol error. well, so much for the importance of "shall not" in rfcspeak, huh? It is strongly recommended that routers which connect enterprises to external networks are set up with appropriate packet and routing filters at both ends of the link in order to prevent packet and routing information leakage. An enterprise should also filter any private networks from inbound routing information in order to protect itself from ambiguous routing situations which can occur if routes to the private address space point outside the enterprise. "blah, blah, blah, ginger, blah, blah." --what your dog hears (gary larson) If an enterprise uses the private address space, or a mix of private and public address spaces, then DNS clients outside of the enterprise should not see addresses in the private address space used by the enterprise, since these addresses would be ambiguous. One way to ensure this is to run two authority servers for each DNS zone containing both publically and privately addressed hosts. One server would be visible from the public address space and would contain only the subset of the enterprise's addresses which were reachable using public addresses. The other server would be reachable only from the private network and would contain the full set of data, including the private addresses and whatever public addresses are reachable the private network. In order to ensure consistency, both servers should be configured from the same data of which the publically visible zone only contains a filtered version. There is certain degree of additional complexity associated with providing these capabilities. yikes! i think i contributed some of that text. and i see now that it really does have to say something about dns forwarders. so i'll withdraw my suggestion that this thread be moved to bind-users@ -- it needs to go to dnsop@lists.uoregon.edu since it's not a BIND-specific issue at all.