This stackoverflow describes a similar situation;On Tue, 20 May 2014 01:44:29 +0100, Robert McKay wrote:
> On Mon, 19 May 2014 19:49:52 -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
>> On Mon, May 19, 2014 at 4:36 PM, Robert McKay <robert@mckay.com>
>> wrote:
>>> It should be possible to configure bind as a DNS forwarder.. this
>>> can
>>> be done in a zone context.. then you can forward the different
>>> zones
>>> to
>>> different dnsseed daemons running on different non-public IPs or
>>> two
>>> different ports on the same IP (or on one single non-public IP
>>> since
>>> there's really no reason to expose the dnsseed directly daemon at
>>> all).
>>
>> Quite the opposite. dnsseed data rotates through a lot of addresses
>> if available. Using the bind/zone-xfer system would result in fewer
>> total addresses going through to the clients, thanks to the addition
>> of caching levels that the bind/zone-xfer system brings.
>>
>> That said, if the choice is between no-service and bind, bind it is
>> ;p
>
> Setting it up as a zone forwarder causes each request to go through
> to
> the dnsseed backend for each request.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15338232/how-to-forward-a-subzone
you can additionally specify the port to forward too;
http://www.zytrax.com/books/dns/ch7/queries.html#forwarders
it should be possible to forward to different ports on 127.0.0.1 for
each dnsseed instance.
Rob
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