this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2024
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Today in our newest take on "older technology is better": why NAT rules!

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[–] sep@lemmy.world 6 points 4 months ago (2 children)

But DNS rarely break. The meme about it beeing DNS's fault is more often then not just a symptom of the complexity of IPv4 NAT problem.

If i should guesstimate i think atleast 95% of the dns issues i have ever seen, are just confusion of what dns views they are in. confusion of inside and outside nat records. And forgetting to configure the inside when doing the outside or vice verca. DNS is very robust and stable when you can get rid of that complexity.

That beeing said, there are people that insist on obscurity beeing security (sigh) and want to keep doing dns views when using IPv6. But even then things are much easier when the result would be the same in either view.

[–] Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world 2 points 4 months ago

That beeing said, there are people that insist on obscurity beeing security (sigh) and want to keep doing dns views when using IPv6. But even then things are much easier when the result would be the same in either view.

OMG!!

This guys a bee! Everybody run!!!!

[–] Tja@programming.dev 2 points 4 months ago

I broke DNS plenty of times in my homelab independent from NAT. In the last few months:

  • didn't turn off DNS server in a wifi router set up as bridged access point
  • dnsmasq failing to start because I removed an interface
  • dnsmasq failing to start because the kernel/udev didn't rename an interface on time
  • dnsmasq failing to start because hostapd error didn't set proper interface settings
  • forgot to remove static DNS entries in /etc/hosts used for testing
  • forgot to remove DNS entries from /etc/resolve.conf after visiting a friend and working on his setup

Yes, most of them is my dumb ass making mistakes, but in the end it's something that constantly breaks and it helps knowing the IP addresses of my servers and routers.

Aditionally, obscurity is a security helper. The problem is relying only on obscurity. But if I have proper firewall rules in place and strong usernames and passwords I still prefer if you don't even know the IP addresses of my servers on top of that (in case I break some of the other security layers).