Which of the following options is the correct reverse lookup zone for the ABC.com network?

You work as an administrator at ABC.com. The ABC.com network consists of a single domain
named ABC.com. All servers in the ABC.com domain have Windows Server 2012 R2 installed.
The ABC.com network uses the network ID 192.168.1.0/26 and has a single DNS server named
ABC_SR07. ABC_SR07 has a Standard Primary DNS zone.
Which of the following options is the correct reverse lookup zone for the ABC.com network?

You work as an administrator at ABC.com. The ABC.com network consists of a single domain
named ABC.com. All servers in the ABC.com domain have Windows Server 2012 R2 installed.
The ABC.com network uses the network ID 192.168.1.0/26 and has a single DNS server named
ABC_SR07. ABC_SR07 has a Standard Primary DNS zone.
Which of the following options is the correct reverse lookup zone for the ABC.com network?

A.
192.168.1-0.in-addr.arpa

B.
192.168.1.26.in-addr.arpa

C.
26.1.168.192.in-addr.arpa

D.
1.168.192-26.in-addr.arpa

E.
0.1.168.192.in-addr.arpa

Explanation:
Octets specified in reverse order
<subnet-specific label> . <octet> . <octet> . <octet> . in-addr .arpa
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc961414.aspx



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Stedlar

Stedlar

I’ve wasted to much time on this. Looks like answer is 0.1.168.192.in-addr.arpa

E

Fabio

Fabio

Agree with Stedlar

B-Art

B-Art

Although subnet-specific label could be comprised of any characters allowed by the authoritative DNS server, the most commonly used formats include the following:

/

Subnet specifies which segment of the class C IP address this network is using. Subnet mask bit count specifies how many bits the network is using for its subnet mask. Subnet ID specifies a name the administrator has chosen for the subnet.

For example, suppose that an ISP has a class C address 192.168.100.0 and has divided that address into four subnets of 62 hosts per network, with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.192, and given the first 62 host addresses to a company with the DNS name Reskit.com. The name of the classless reverse lookup zone can use any of the following syntax lines:

0 – 26.100.168.192.in – addr.arpa

0/26.100.168.192.in – addr.arpa

Subnet1.100.168.192.in – addr.arpa

B-Art

B-Art

Although subnet-specific label could be comprised of any characters allowed by the authoritative DNS server, the most commonly used formats include the following:

&st minimum value of the subnet range &gt – &st maximum value of the subnet range &gt

&st subnet &gt / &st subnet mask bit count &gt

&st subnet ID &gt

Subnet specifies which segment of the class C IP address this network is using. Subnet mask bit count specifies how many bits the network is using for its subnet mask. Subnet ID specifies a name the administrator has chosen for the subnet.

For example, suppose that an ISP has a class C address 192.168.100.0 and has divided that address into four subnets of 62 hosts per network, with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.192, and given the first 62 host addresses to a company with the DNS name Reskit.com. The name of the classless reverse lookup zone can use any of the following syntax lines:

0 – 63.100.168.192.in – addr.arpa

0/26.100.168.192.in – addr.arpa

Subnet1.100.168.192.in – addr.arpa