On 23 Jul 2019, at 17:27, Daniel Shaw wrote:
~ ❯❯❯ dig +noall +answer NS mu. mu. 10765 IN NS udns2.tld.mu. mu. 10765 IN NS anycast1.irondns.net. mu. 10765 IN NS fork.sth.dnsnode.net. mu. 10765 IN NS udns1.tld.mu.
~ ❯❯❯ dig +noall +answer A udns1.tld.mu. udns1.tld.mu. 300 IN A 204.61.216.10
i still use: https://gist.github.com/techdad/9cbfefb9341ba295dc0d22051f35de5a
:-)
https://lg.mixp.org/index.php?server=rc.mixp&action=show+ip+bgp&args...
BGP routing table entry for 204.61.216.0/23 Paths: (3 available, best #3, table Default-IP-Routing-Table) {snip} 42 [42] 196.223.0.1 from 196.223.0.201 (196.223.0.201) Origin IGP, metric 0, localpref 100, valid, external, best As you can see the looking glass is learning this from a route-server, and so anyone peering to the route-servers has direct access to one of the NS for .mu!
unfortunately, there are many domestic networks in mauritius that still haven’t done this. if you are one of these, you are making your own network worse for your users :(
-n.