Cname/alias for external domain
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Make a host override in DNS forwarder > then just fill in a domain alias for that host. Doesn't have to be an IP. It works on my system.
The following input errors were detected:
The field 'IP address' is required.
not letting me proceed w/o an IP
the domain is not the same
oldhost.domaina.com
newhost.domainb.com
i need to set it up so that anytime oldhost.domaina.com is requested, pfsense redirects it to newhost.domainb.com
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I am on 2.1RC1. Could that be the difference?
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I am on 2.1RC1. Could that be the difference?
i am on:
2.1-RC1 (i386)
built on Sun Aug 18 19:11:13 EDT 2013
FreeBSD 8.3-RELEASE-p9You are on the latest version.
post a screen shot of how i should be setting it up, if you dont mind.
i dont need an IP address, but i cant save the changes w/o one, i am not sure how you are getting around that.
thanks.
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Maybe I discovered a feature. I am using Split DNS to point the domain name to an internal host. I left hostname blank.
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Maybe I discovered a feature. I am using Split DNS to point the domain name to an internal host. I left hostname blank.
unfortunately, that is not what i am trying to do.
i am trying to redirect a hostname to another hostname.
not hostname to IP.
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Ok, that's what I did whit the alias. Can't you use that function? You can use the hard coded hostname and the IP address and then make an alias, can't you?
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Ok, that's what I did whit the alias. Can't you use that function? You can use the hard coded hostname and the IP address and then make an alias, can't you?
i need the IP field blank, unless i am missing something.
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Maybe I am missing something :(
I did read again your first post and I now see I don't understand you. You said that you could connect with the new hostname, but then it defaults to the old hostname. What does that mean, or what do you see? Is it just a cosmetic thing? -
Maybe I am missing something :(
I did read again your first post and I now see I don't understand you. You said that you could connect with the new hostname, but then it defaults to the old hostname. What does that mean, or what do you see? Is it just a cosmetic thing?i have a computer that use to connect to oldhostname.domaina.com
the program defaults to that hostname since it was the one used when the program was initially setup.
in the recent days, i have a need to use a new hostname, newhostname.domainb.com
what i am looking to do is create an alias for the old hostname to point to the new host name so that when the computer is requesting the name oldhostname.domaina.com pfsense picks that up and redirects to newhostname.domainb.com
i can fix this issue by reinstalling the software and using the correct hostname (this is a flaw of the program), i was just hoping i could do something at the pfsense level.
thanks for your help, it is appreciated.
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I cannot see how's a program expecting oldhostname.domaina.com going to respond to requests to newhostname.domainb.com.
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I cannot see how's a program expecting oldhostname.domaina.com going to respond to requests to newhostname.domainb.com.
the program wont. when it looks to pfsense to connect out via the internet, pfsense will redirect it. basically, i'd like to enter a cname into pfsense.
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I have no idea what "program" are we talking about here. If you expect that pfsense DNS record will rewrite e.g. www.google.com to www.bing.com in your browser URL bar, then it's not what's gonna happen.
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I have no idea what "program" are we talking about here. If you expect that pfsense DNS record will rewrite e.g. www.google.com to www.bing.com in your browser URL bar, then it's not what's gonna happen.
on the client side (the program) it will use the original domain old.domaina.com
it is a cname, have you ever worked with cnames? that is what i am looking to do.
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Your CNAME will not work if the program somehow works with the requested hostname. Once again, see example above… It won't work either if we are talking about some IP camera with a webserver.
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Your CNAME will not work if the program somehow works with the requested hostname. Once again, see example above…
it works all the time in the scenarios where i am hosting my own domain and i can create a cname. it doesn't seem that i can do that in pfsense.
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Well, that's awesome. How about reinstalling the broken thing instead of inventing similar nonsense like hijacking nonexistant hostname with a DNS forwarder?
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Well, that's awesome. How about reinstalling the broken thing instead of inventing similar nonsense like hijacking nonexistant hostname with a DNS forwarder?
happens all the time with cnames, i guess it just isnt part of pfsense.
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Fail to see why it should do any such thing in the first place. It's a DNS forwarder.
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Fail to see why it should do any such thing in the first place. It's a DNS forwarder.
i wasn't referencing that section, specifically, just if pfsense could do it.
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Sure; install tinydns or bind, or another authoritative DNS server. Neither dnsmasq, nor unbound. Or finally stop wasting the time and invest 5 minutes into reinstalling whatever broken thing you have there, instead of discussing for two days how to work around it.