Chris,
Locally we have been using a scheme to map such reverse lookups into a single common zone, described at
http://people.pwf.cam.ac.uk/cet1/prune-reverse-zones
To take full advantage of this, however, requires promoting DNAMEs into the parent reverse zone.
for this particular list it might be advised to focus the discussion on the reverse mapping case (for both v4, still, and v6). Not sure I understand what the implicit problem statement is, but it seems there are two stages: 1) You want to maintain zone data in only one place "first derivative", changes to zone data 2) You also want to set up as few zones as possible "second derivative", changes to zone meta data The proposal/suggestion/hack linked above optimizes all this for a subset of scenarios and all towards the provisioning side. Can it be done? Sure. Would it scale, i.e., what would be the effects if 10%, 50% or 90% of the reverse zones would be replaced by this? I have no idea. Should it be recommended? Probably premature to ask pending understanding of the side effects. Just some questions to chew on, in no particular order and without being exhaustive: o (How) would this work with the parent zone determination for DNS Dynamic Updates? o Would this impose more or less load on the "parents'" name servers? o What would be the scaling effects on (validating) resolvers? o Is the maintenance of multiple zones, including data maintenance and infrastructure maintenance (setting up, checking and changing slaves) really an operational issue of significance? o Will this become better or worse for IPv6 reverse? o To what extent are today's tools, scripts, IPAM solutions _not_ solving the task? o What are the side effects of putting all PTRs in one basket^Wzone?
As DNAMEs do not redirect the name itself, there would be a problem for reverse zones containing significant records at the apex, e.g. PTR records pointing to a gateway host. (I think that practice, recommended in RFC 1033, has pretty much fallen into disuse.) If the
That's probably section 3.3 of RFC1101. Not widely used since CIDR times. There's little to find except meta data at the apex of most v4 reverse zones and that should also be true for v6. -Peter {no hat}