Help on DNS

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I am fairly new to setting up DNS - but can do it on 1 machine.. Now, I have a complex problem - and I just need a push in the right direction.

I have 2 servers - connected together by a T1 and Cisco Routers - I can see both sides of the network - and even connect from site B to site A's broadband.

Now my next question - What in DNS, do I have to put - for me to log onto site B's server from site A

here is more info
Site A subnet is(example):100.100.100.
Site B sub net is: 192.168.1.x

thank you in advance
 
Hello,

If you have two seperate domains seperated via a dedicated connection as
follows:

Domain A--------Cisco Router---------T1 Connection----------Cisco
Router----------Domain B

In order for machines in Domain A to be able to logon to Domain B, you will
need to setup
a trust relationship between the two domains.

This article should help:

308195 HOW TO: Establish Trusts with a Windows NT-Based Domain in Windows
2000
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=308195

306733 HOW TO: Create a Trust Between a Windows 2000 Domain and a Windows NT
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=306733
--
Regards,
Mohanchand Koduri [MSFT]

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Logix said:
I am fairly new to setting up DNS - but can do it on 1 machine.. Now, I
have a complex problem - and I just need a push in the right direction..
I have 2 servers - connected together by a T1 and Cisco Routers - I can
see both sides of the network - and even connect from site B to site A's
broadband..
 
Do you have primary zones setup for each subnet on your
DNS server? Is server a and b members of the same domain?
IS this a routing issue? Can you ping from one side to
the other and reverse? Are there ACL's on your routers?

The only thing DNS does is resolve host names to IP
addresses. Access to resources on servers and routers are
controlled through ACL's. If both servers are member
servers of the same domain check the policy settings for
user rights. DNS should not play any role in logging in
or access resources. If setup is under a single domain
check to make the subnets are authorized in active
directory sites and services. If these are mulitple
domains, set up trust relationships between the sites.

There could be a single issue or multiple issues. These
are just some things that come to mind.
-----Original Message-----
I am fairly new to setting up DNS - but can do it on 1
machine.. Now, I have a complex problem - and I just
need a push in the right direction..
I have 2 servers - connected together by a T1 and Cisco
Routers - I can see both sides of the network - and even
connect from site B to site A's broadband..
Now my next question - What in DNS, do I have to put -
for me to log onto site B's server from site A?
 
Thank You both! I answered some of the questions below

Do you have primary zones setup for each subnet on your
DNS server?

Is server a and b members of the same domain? - No they are different domain
IS this a routing issue? - N
Can you ping from one side to the other and reverse? - Ye

I think it may be a trust issue - I will have to try that out tommorrow.. Thank you both once again
 
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